Hundreds arrested in multi-day protests
of Supreme Court nominee
Send a link to a friend
[September 08, 2018]
By Amanda Becker
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Supreme Court
nominee Brett Kavanaugh's confirmation hearing in the Senate this week
was frequently disrupted as protesters were removed from the hearing
room by police, with more than 200 people arrested.
In an unusually intense episode of civil disobedience on Capitol Hill,
the four-day Senate Judiciary Committee hearing was targeted for
"creative resistance" by liberal activist groups, said Linda Sarsour,
Women's March board member.
"This is a travesty of justice! Adjourn the hearing!" Sarsour, 38,
yelled on Tuesday morning as she was the first to be taken out of the
hearing room by police officers.
Minutes later, three more women - the activists were nearly all women -
were removed as they shouted "Vote no on Kavanaugh!" and "My daughter
has the right to choose!"
Fears that Kavanaugh, if confirmed to the court by the Senate, could
open the door to scaling back abortion access, were a key focus at the
hearing.
Sarsour told Reuters that her group's members accounted for 209 of the
212 arrests made Tuesday through Thursday, including nearly all of the
177 arrests within the hearing room. The majority of those arrested were
charged with disorderly conduct, paid a $35 fine and released.
Women's March grew from a January 2017 demonstration that drew more than
500,000 people to Washington to oppose the Donald Trump's inauguration
to the U.S. presidency.
Sarsour said the arrests during the hearing showed the "level of
dissent" over Trump's nomination of Kavanaugh, a conservative judge, for
a lifetime Supreme Court seat.
The activists were trained in nonviolent civil disobedience and got
legal support. "We are not engaging in some sort of charade; we believe
this is a matter of life and death," Sarsour said.
Women's March organized the protests with the Center for Popular
Democracy, a left-learning nonprofit, and We Demand Justice, a group
formed to oppose Trump's judicial nominations.
Congress holds hundreds of hearings every year that are typically staid
proceedings. Sometimes though, they attract noisy demonstrations.
At the Kavanaugh sessions, the disruptions began several minutes after
Republican Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley gaveled the
hearing open on Tuesday.
[to top of second column]
|
Protesters are removed during the fourth day of Senate Judiciary
Committee confirmation hearings for U.S. Supreme Court nominee Judge
Brett Kavanaugh on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., September 7,
2018. REUTERS/Chris Wattie
Each day, members of the public arrived by 7 a.m. to queue up for
hearing tickets. They then waited in line for 20 to 30 minutes
within the hearing room. One after another, activists stood to
protest Kavanaugh's positions on healthcare, abortion, gun rights or
the proceeding itself, interrupting lines of questioning and
irritating some Republican committee members.
"I don't know that the committee should have to put up with the type
of insolence," Senator Orrin Hatch, a Republican committee member,
said on Tuesday morning.
"I think we ought to have this loudmouth removed," he added as
another activist interrupted the hearing.
Carla Beddard, 34, was one of 15 women who silently walked the halls
outside Kavanaugh's hearing dressed in the red cloaks and white
bonnets worn by persecuted women in "The Handmaid's Tale," a
dystopian novel and television series.
Beddard, a graduate student, said that she was drawn to protest
Kavanaugh's nomination due to his stance on Roe v. Wade, a 1973
Supreme Court ruling that legalized abortion nationwide.
"The fact we could be adding a justice to the court that has
indicated he's not too sure terrified me," Beddard said.
Kavanaugh testified this week that Roe v. Wade is Supreme Court
precedent but declined to say whether he believed the case was
correctly decided.
On Wednesday, Beddard and two other "handmaids" removed their
costumes to go into the hearing room. She stood up and raised her
hands, where she had written "We Dissent." She was one of 73
arrested that day.
(Reporting by Amanda Becker; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Cynthia
Osterman)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |