New Kavanaugh Allegations Give Republicans Only One Choice

New Kavanaugh Allegations Give Republicans Only One Choice

Jonathan Bernstein’s morning links.
Walk away. Photographer: Win McNamee/Getty Images.

Jonathan Bernstein is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering politics and policy. He taught political science at the University of Texas at San Antonio and DePauw University and wrote A Plain Blog About Politics.

Senate Republicans, and the Republican Party in general, now face exactly the same choice with the Supreme Court vacancy they faced a week ago when Christine Blasey Ford’s story went public. It’s just more obvious now that the New Yorker has detailed a second accusation.

Let’s put aside the damage to the Supreme Court if a second justice is confirmed despite serious allegations of sexual misconduct. Let’s also put aside the injustice to Brett Kavanaugh if he’s actually innocent of these charges, as he says he is. Those are serious questions, but this is a political nomination for a political position, so let’s just focus for a moment on the immediate politics of the situation.

Republicans can theoretically bull ahead, with at least 50 of the 51 Senate Republicans agreeing to support an unpopular nominee with now two serious accusations of sexual assault against him.

It they do, they risk additional evidence emerging that would make one or both of these allegations appear to be true. They risk additional stories showing up. They risk the likelihood that one or more Republican politicians will say something incredibly offensive and potentially electorally damaging, the way North Dakota Senate candidate Kevin Cramer did over the weekend. They risk the possibility that their party winds up on the wrong end of a national split between those who take sexual assault seriously and those who don’t. They risk a backlash from supporting a nominee who has been unpopular throughout the process and has become more unpopular.

They’re already guilty, if reporting from Ronan Farrow and Jane Mayer is correct, of rushing to confirm the nominee before a story they knew was coming went public. How many more ugly-looking steps will they take if they push ahead?

If they drop the nomination, they get the chance to confirm an entirely different Supreme Court nominee with virtually the same positions on everything. There’s no shortage of such folks.

There is another option: They could wait for a full, proper investigation to be conducted. But the downside risk is even worse than confirming him despite everything, because the clock is ticking on confirming a replacement during the current Congress: If Democrats win a Senate majority, they would (at the very least) insist on a compromise nominee. Republicans certainly have very strong incentives to avoid that possibility.

This isn’t a criminal trial. It’s politics. The Framers gave nomination power to the politician in the White House and confirmation power to politicians in the Senate. Legal presumption of innocence doesn’t apply. Kavanaugh certainly wouldn’t be the first high-ranking political figure to lose an opportunity due to accusations of misconduct. That’s not to say there would be no injustice to him involved (if he is telling the truth); political parties make decisions all the time to select one candidate and not another, with very little concern for fairness. Indeed, it wouldn’t be surprising if there’s some Republican appellate court judge right now who lost out on this nomination thanks to unconfirmed rumors about something that might look bad during confirmation.

And don’t tell me that Democrats will just smear the next candidate because they supposedly always do. As several people have pointed out, no such charges surfaced against Neil Gorsuch, John Roberts or Samuel Alito — either when they were nominated or, for that matter, since then. Nor have there been any against Donald Trump’s nominees for circuit court positions, or, if I recall correctly, for any of George W. Bush’s, either. Nor have there been such allegations against any of Trump’s cabinet officials. That of course isn’t evidence that what two women have said about Kavanaugh is true. But it does mean that there’s no reason to believe that if Republicans sink this nomination that Democrats will respond with smears of other Republicans.

I continue to believe that the injustice of putting Kavanaugh on the Supreme Court if what Ford and Deborah Ramirez say is true outweigh the injustice of withdrawing the nomination if he is innocent. Withdrawing the nomination is the right thing to do.

But never mind that: It’s clearly in the political interests of the Republican Party to cut their losses here and move on. How? All it would take is for three or four Republican senators to tell Mitch McConnell — privately if possible, publicly if necessary — that they plan to vote against the nomination. He’d have no choice but to pull the plug. And if that doesn’t happen, it will be just the latest evidence of serious dysfunction within the party.

Avenatti Claims to Have Evidence That Brett Kavanaugh Was Involved in ‘Gang Rapes’ in High School

People

Avenatti Claims to Have Evidence That Brett Kavanaugh Was Involved in ‘Gang Rapes’ in High School

Tierney McAfee, People        September 24, 2018 

Brett Kavanaugh Accused of Sexual Misconduct by Second Woman

Variety

Brett Kavanaugh Accused of Sexual Misconduct by Second Woman

Erin Nyren, Variety       September 23, 2018 

 

This oil-absorbing sponge could revolutionize ocean clean-up.

In The Know Innovation

This oil-absorbing sponge could revolutionize ocean clean-up.

Scientists at the Argonne National Laboratory invented a reusable super sponge to fix clean oil spills.

Super sponge cleans up oil spills

Scientists at the Argonne National Laboratory invented a reusable super sponge to fix clean oil spills.

Posted by In The Know Innovation on Wednesday, May 2, 2018

Germany Has Launched the World’s First Hydrogen Powered Train

EcoWatch

September 20, 2018

So exciting! Read more: ecowatch.com/hydrogen-fuel-train

Germany has launched the world’s first hydrogen-powered train

So exciting! Read more: ecowatch.com/hydrogen-fuel-train

Posted by EcoWatch on Thursday, September 20, 2018

Some Men Just Don’t Get It!

Associated Press

North Dakota Candidate: Kavanaugh allegation ‘absurd’ !

    Associated Press       September 22, 2018

Republicans Are Waging War on Women—and Two Women Can Stop Them

Harper’s Bazaar – Politics

Republicans Are Waging War on Women—and Two Women Can Stop Them

Alyssa Milano, Harper’s Bazaar        September 20, 2018  

Georgetown Prep president says school has been soul-searching in wake of Kavanaugh allegations

Yahoo News

Georgetown Prep president says school has been soul-searching in wake of Kavanaugh allegations

 Dylan Stableford       September 21, 2018 

Student debt is forcing millennials to delay life milestones

Yahoo Finance

Student debt is forcing millennials to delay life milestones

Alyssa Pry and Jeanie Ahn        September 21, 2018

Mazie Hirono Is a Legitimate Badass of the Senate

Esquire

Mazie Hirono Is a Legitimate Badass of the Senate

It’s about time someone in elected office called “bullshit” on this process.

By Charles P. Pierce      September 21, 2018

Senate Holds Confirmation Hearing For Brett Kavanaugh To Be Supreme Court JusticeGetty ImagesZach Gibson.

To be honest, all I ever previously thought of Senator Mazie Hirono, Democrat of Hawaii, was that she seemed to be a smart, pleasant person who largely voted in ways of which I approved. (There are a number of smart, pleasant people who largely vote in ways of which I don’t approve, and there are colossal dicks who vote in ways of which I approve, and there are colossal dicks who vote in ways of which I do not approve. Humans are a mystery.) I don’t recall her being terribly involved in the confirmation hearings for Justice Neil Gorsuch. However, starting about two weeks ago, or roughly the same time as Brett Kavanaugh dropped by the Senate Judiciary Committee on which she serves, Mazie Hirono decided it was time to unleash hell.

On Tuesday, frustrated at the piddling, dilatory response to the charges against Kavanaugh, Hirono said this:

 

“Guess who’s perpetuating all of these kinds of actions? It’s the men in this country. I just want to say to the men in this country: Just shut up and step up. Do the right thing for a change.”

Then, on Thursday, responding to Republican assertions that they were doing all they could to accommodate Dr. Christine Blasey Ford, and that they were taking her charges seriously, Hirono said this to ABC News:

“We’re not consulted at all. I would like to have us come together and figure out what is the best way to proceed. Not this seat of the pants stuff, and the latest being a letter from the chairman to the Democrats saying we have done everything we can to contact her—that is such bullshit I can hardly stand it.”

(I should note that the senator is welcome to swing on by the shebeen at any time. She seems to be a blogging natural.)

Sens Hirono And Gillibrand Accept Letter Supporting Christine Blasey Ford

“I’ve been fighting these fights for a — I was going to say f-ing long time,” Hirono said in the interview, glancing over at an aide before uttering the expletive a few moments later as the interview continued.

Go for the gold, senator. Say it out loud.

President Trump's Supreme Court Justice Pick Brett Kavanaugh's Nomination In Jeopardy Over Past Accusations

The Senate’s only immigrant takes that fight to President Trump, whom she openly calls “xenophobic” and a “liar.” “To call the president a liar, that is not good, but it happens to be the truth,” the soft-spoken Hawaii senator told Time recently. The Democrat also takes that fight to Senate Judiciary Committee, as it weekly considers a tranche of Trump judicial nominees, abandoning long-standing rules that guaranteed significant time to examine each nominee’s record. There are lots of big-gun Democrats on the committee, senators who get a lot more attention than Hirono. But she is perhaps the most dogged, albeit polite, questioner.

She also has a remarkable personal story, as Totenberg relates. She is the only true immigrant in the Senate, having been hauled off to Hawaii from Japan by her mother to get the family away from an alcoholic ne’er-do-well father. She also apparently ran against the grain of the Hawaiian political establishment to get where she is today, a newly recognized legitimate badass in the Senate.

After a long day, this reporter asked her why her skepticism about Trump judicial nominees is any different from Republican skepticism of Obama nominees. Her reply was that what she wants are judges who are fair and qualified and “care about individual and civil rights.” And then, without missing a beat, she added, “If that’s considered liberal, as opposed to what I call justice and fairness, as I am wont to say, ‘F*** them!’ “

And, one presumes, the horses on which they rode in.