Kavanaugh seeks new tone after bitter
court confirmation fight
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[October 09, 2018]
By Jeff Mason
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Supreme Court
Justice Brett Kavanaugh sought to put a bruising confirmation battle
behind him on Monday at a White House ceremony in which President Donald
Trump declared him innocent of sexual misconduct and apologized for the
heated process.
Kavanaugh, whose bid to join the top U.S. court nearly failed after a
California professor accused him of assaulting her when they were in
high school, said he would enter his new job without bitterness despite
a political fight that he told lawmakers had destroyed his family and
his name.
"The Senate confirmation process was contentious and emotional. That
process is over. My focus now is to be the best justice I can be," he
said at the White House, with his wife and children standing nearby.
Kavanaugh said he would aim to be a force for stability and unity on the
court, whose other eight members all attended the ceremony.
"Although the Senate confirmation process tested me as it has tested
others, it did not change me," he said.
Kavanaugh, who served as part of special counsel Kenneth Starr's team
that investigated Democratic President Bill Clinton in the 1990s and
testified that the sexual misconduct accusations were funded by
left-wing groups seeking revenge on behalf of the Clintons, said the
Supreme Court was not a partisan body.
"The Supreme Court is an institution of law. It is not a partisan or
political institution," he said. "The Supreme Court is a team of nine,
and I will always be a team player on the team of nine."
Kavanaugh's confirmation proceedings exploded in controversy after
Christine Blasey Ford went public with allegations that Kavanaugh
sexually assaulted her in 1982.
Kavanaugh gave a forceful, emotional denial of those allegations during
testimony before lawmakers that some Democrats said showed a lack of
judicial temperament.
The U.S. Senate voted 50-48 on Saturday to confirm him, with just one
Democrat supporting him.
His confirmation to the lifetime job was a victory for Trump and locked
in a conservative majority on the court.
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U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh speaks during
his ceremonial public swearing-in as U.S. President Donald Trump and
Kavanaugh's wife Ashley and daughters Liza and Margaret, and retired
Justice Anthony Kennedy look on in the East Room of the White House
in Washington, U.S., October 8, 2018. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
TRUMP APOLOGIZES FOR PROCESS
"On behalf of our nation, I want to apologize to Brett and the
entire Kavanaugh family for the terrible pain and suffering you have
been forced to endure," Trump said at the start of a ceremonial
swearing-in.
"Those who step forward to serve our country deserve a fair and
dignified evaluation, not a campaign of political and personal
destruction based on lies and deception," he said.
Trump, under pressure from moderate Republican senators, had ordered
a brief FBI investigation, whose results Republicans viewed as
failing to corroborate the allegations and which Democrats saw as
insufficient.
Trump, who drew criticism for mocking Ford at a rally, said
Kavanaugh had been cleared.
"A man or a woman must always be presumed innocent unless and until
proven guilty," Trump said to applause. "And with that I must state
that you, sir, under historic scrutiny, were proven innocent."
Kavanaugh has cited his mother, a former state judge in Maryland, as
an inspiration, and emphasized his commitment to the advancement of
women. He noted that his newly hired law clerks were all women,
which he said was a historic first at the Supreme Court.
He will hear his first arguments as a justice on Tuesday.
(Reporting by Jeff Mason; Additional reporting by Eric Beech, David
Alexander and Mohammad Zargham; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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