Senate heads to final vote on Kavanaugh
Supreme Court nomination
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[October 06, 2018]
By Richard Cowan and Amanda Becker
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Brett Kavanaugh, the
embattled U.S. Supreme Court nominee put forward by President Donald
Trump, looked likely to win final Senate confirmation on Saturday,
weathering sexual misconduct allegations and attacks on his character
and temperament.
After weeks of intense debate that has gripped the nation, the
conservative appeals court judge on Friday won vows of support from two
centrist senators, leaving no clear path in the Senate for Kavanaugh's
opponents to block him.
He barely survived a procedural test on Friday, when senators voted
51-49 to advance his nomination to a final vote, which is expected to
occur around 5 p.m. (2100 GMT) on Saturday.
Confirmation of Kavanaugh would give Trump a clear win in his drive to
cement conservative dominance of the high court, a bitter outcome for
Democrats who could not get their own liberal nominee confirmed due to
Republican delaying tactics in 2016.
Republicans held open an empty seat that year, which Trump filled in
2017 with conservative Justice Neil Gorsuch. Justice Anthony Kennedy,
who Kavanaugh will replace, retired this year after decades of being a
swing vote on the court.
With divisive cases on abortion rights, immigration, transgender rights
and business regulation headed for the court, Kavanaugh likely would
give conservatives the upper hand.
His confirmation would also allow Trump to hit the campaign trail ahead
of the Nov. 6 elections bragging that he has kept his 2016 promise to
push the American judiciary rightward.
"I will vote to confirm Judge Kavanaugh," Republican Senator Susan
Collins of Maine declared on the Senate floor on Friday.
She praised his judicial record and argued there was no corroboration of
sexual assault charges made against him by psychology professor
Christine Blasey Ford. Two other women also accused Kavanaugh of sexual
misconduct decades ago. Kavanaugh has denied all the allegations.
Moments after Collins pledged to back Kavanaugh, Democratic Senator Joe
Manchin, in a tough race for re-election in West Virginia where Trump is
popular, also declared his support.
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U.S. Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh arrives for his Senate
Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing in Washington, U.S.,
September 27, 2018. REUTERS/Mary F. Calvert/File Photo
Senate Republicans, except for Lisa Murkowski, have stood by him in
a move that could resonate, particularly with women voters, in the
Nov. 6 elections to determine control of the Senate and House of
Representatives.
Even before the lurid sexual assault charges surfaced, Democrats in
the Republican-controlled Senate were fighting hard to stop
Kavanaugh, saying his conservative judicial philosophy could result
in rolling back abortion rights, gay rights and protections for
immigrants. They also challenged the veracity of some of his
Judiciary Committee testimony.
Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer on Friday said Kavanaugh
represents "a hard-right, conservative jurisprudence, far, far away
from what average Americans believe."
Republican Leader Mitch McConnell led the nominee's defense, calling
him "one of the most impressive, stunningly qualified nominees in
our nation's history" and accusing Democrats of a "smear" campaign.
(Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh)
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