'Fully confident' White House receives
FBI report on Kavanaugh
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[October 04, 2018]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The White
House received the Federal Bureau of Investigation's report on sexual
misconduct allegations against U.S. Supreme Court nominee Brett
Kavanaugh and is "fully confident" the Senate will approve his
nomination, a spokesman said.
The chamber was expected to receive the report early on Thursday, two
sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.
Senators were to be granted access to review it during the day before a
procedural vote, Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said on Wednesday.
Senators had been given ample time to review the background
investigation and the White House was "fully confident" they would
endorse Kavanaugh, the administration's Deputy Press Secretary Raj Shah
said in a tweet early on Thursday.
Several people with information related to allegations against Kavanaugh
told Reuters they had not heard from the FBI, suggesting its report may
be narrower than was desired by some of the lawmakers who demanded it
just days ago.
With the report's conclusions as yet unclear, a partisan struggle over
it has been developing.
U.S. President Donald Trump and the Senate Republican leadership are
battling to corral enough support for a majority vote for Kavanaugh, a
conservative federal appeals court judge, while Democrats are in near
unanimity against him.
McConnell, a Republican, filed a petition for a cloture vote, which if
successful would limit debate on the nomination and start the clock
ticking on a final 30-hour waiting period before a Senate confirmation
vote.
After filing a cloture petition, lawmakers must wait one legislative day
before proceeding to a vote, according to Senate rules. That means a
cloture vote could come on Friday morning at the soonest.
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Judge Brett M. Kavanaugh testifies in front of the Senate Judiciary
committee regarding sexual assault allegations at the Dirksen Senate
Office Building on Capitol Hill in Washington DC, U.S., September
27, 2018. Gabriella Demczuk/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
Christine Blasey Ford, a college professor from California who
accused Kavanaugh of assaulting her in 1982 when they were high
school students, has not been contacted by the FBI, her attorneys
said.
As Senate Republican leaders marched toward a final vote on
Kavanaugh's nomination, the three Republicans who could be key to
whether Kavanaugh is confirmed - Senators Jeff Flake, Susan Collins
and Lisa Murkowski - criticized Trump for mocking Ford at a
political rally in Mississippi on Tuesday.
Ford, who testified last week at an extraordinary Senate Judiciary
Committee hearing, said she could not remember the precise date or
location of the alleged assault or how she got home later, but
offered a detailed account of the incident.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien, Amanda Becker and Richard Cowan;
Additional reporting by Nathan Layne, Sarah N. Lynch, Lisa Lambert,
Lawrence Hurley and David Alexander; editing by John Stonestreet)
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