Opposition to Kavanaugh grows, support at
historic low: Reuters/Ipsos poll
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[September 20, 2018]
By Maria Caspani
(Reuters) - A growing number of Americans
said they opposed President Donald Trump’s Supreme Court nominee, Brett
Kavanaugh, as the candidate's confirmation hearings took place and as he
fended off a sexual assault claim, a Reuters/Ipsos poll showed.
The Sept. 11-17 poll found that 36 percent of adults surveyed did
not want Kavanaugh in the Supreme Court, up 6 points from a similar poll
conducted a month earlier.
Only 31 percent of U.S. adults polled said they were in favor of
Kavanaugh's appointment.
If support for his nomination remains this weak, Trump's pick would rank
among the lowest-supported Supreme Court nominees to later be confirmed,
according to historical data from Gallup.
"Not after the sexual charges," said Jeffrey Schmidt, 56, from Colorado,
who opposes President Trump and his policies. "Before the allegations, I
was not sure."
Kavanaugh has denied the claim that he assaulted a woman while in high
school in 1982, calling it "completely false."
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Support for Kavanaugh was higher among Republicans, but fewer than two
out of three, or 64 percent, said they were in favor of his nomination.
Thirty-five-year-old Karis Reeves, a Republican-leaning professional
from Arizona, said he supported Kavanaugh's nomination, but added he
wasn't "informed enough" and that the timing of the sexual misconduct
allegation was "conspicuous."
More women -- 33 percent -- opposed Kavanaugh's nomination in the latest
Reuters/Ipsos poll, up seven percentage points from a month earlier.
"It was already a 'no' but now it's a stronger 'no,'" said Bonnie Mann,
29, when asked about whether her view of Kavanaugh's nomination had
changed since the allegation.
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Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh testifies during the third day
of his confirmation hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee on
Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., September 6, 2018. REUTERS/Alex
Wroblewski
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Christine Blasey Ford, a university professor in California whose
sexual assault allegations have roiled a confirmation process that
once seemed smooth for Kavanaugh, wants her claim to be investigated
by the FBI before she appears at a Senate hearing, her lawyers said
on Tuesday.
Trump has stepped up his defense of Kavanaugh and expressed sympathy
toward his nominee, saying on Wednesday that it was hard for him "to
imagine anything happened."
The Reuters/Ipsos poll surveyed 2,196 adults online across the
United States and has a credibility interval, a measure of
precision, of 2 percentage points.
(Reporting by Maria Caspani, Editing by Bernadette Baum)
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