BFF-05,06 Key lawmakers rebuke Trump for mocking Kavanaugh accuser

297

ZCZC

BFF-05

US-POLITICS-COURT WRAP

Key lawmakers rebuke Trump for mocking Kavanaugh accuser

WASHINGTON, Oct 4, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Three Republican senators key to Brett Kavanaugh’s approval to the US Supreme Court blasted Donald Trump Wednesday for mocking the woman accusing his nominee of sexual assault, as he played to a crowd of thousands at a political rally.

Still undecided on backing the conservative judge — whose appointment to the crucial, lifelong post has fuelled a bitter partisan clash — Senator Susan Collins weighed in to denounce the president’s comments ridiculing Christine Blasey Ford as “just plain wrong.”

The Kavanaugh controversy comes ahead of November congressional elections in which Trump’s Republican Party will battle to keep control of Congress.

Senator Lisa Murkowski called Trump’s speech “wholly inappropriate” and “unacceptable” while Senator Jeff Flake, the third Republican swing vote, said there was “no time and no place for remarks like that.”

“To discuss something this sensitive at a political rally is just not right. I wish he hadn’t done it. It’s kind of appalling,” Flake said.

The stern lawmaker reactions raised fresh doubts over the fate of Kavanaugh, as the Federal Bureau of Investigation reviews allegations by three women that the appeals court judge drank heavily and engaged in sexually abusive behavior while he was a student in the 1980s.

The FBI was last Friday given a week to probe the accusations — with a vote in the Senate pushed back accordingly — but top lawmakers on the Senate Judiciary Committee said they now expected the investigators to report back as early as Wednesday.

Trump stirred the furious backlash when, at a Mississippi election rally late Tuesday, he ridiculed Blasey Ford’s accusation that Kavanaugh drunkenly tried to rape her in 1982, when both attended elite private high schools in suburban Washington.

The White House denied that Trump had derided the university professor.

“The president was simply stating facts that Dr Ford herself laid out in her testimony,” spokeswoman Sarah Sanders told journalists.

MORE/AU/08:15 hrs

ZCZC

BFF-06

US-POLITICS-COURT-2-LAST

Senior Trump advisor Kellyanne Conway likewise argued that Trump’s comments were in-bounds in the political battle over Kavanaugh.

“Excuse me, she’s been treated like a Faberge egg by all of us, beginning with me and the president,” Conway said of Blasey Ford.

– ‘Vile and soulless attack’ –

But Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer, calling Trump’s remarks “reprehensible,” said the president owes Blasey Ford “an immediate apology.”

In searing testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee last week, Blasey Ford told lawmakers she recalled some important details of the incident at a party in a private home, and was absolutely certain that Kavanaugh was the attacker.

She could not remember other aspects however — prompting Trump to mock her before an auditorium of supporters.

“I had one beer, right?” Trump said, echoing one point Blasey Ford did recall.

“‘How did you get home?’ I don’t remember. ‘How did you get there?’ I don’t remember. ‘Where was the place?’ I don’t remember. ‘How many years ago was it?’ I don’t know. I don’t know. I don’t know. I don’t know,” he added, to cheers from supporters.

“But I had one beer. That’s the only thing I remember.” Trump said.

Michael Bromwich, one of Blasey Ford’s attorneys, slammed “a vicious, vile and soulless attack” on his client.

“Is it any wonder that she was terrified to come forward, and that other sexual assault survivors are as well? She is a remarkable profile in courage. He is a profile in cowardice.”

– Law profs against Kavanaugh –

It was not clear whether the remarks shifted the dynamic in the battle over Kavanaugh, whose appointment Republicans hope could shift the balance in the Supreme Court decisively to conservatives.

Democrats say Kavanaugh cannot be confirmed with the still-unproven accusations hanging over his head. Kavanaugh steadfastly denies the allegations.

With Republicans holding a slim 51-49 majority in the Senate, the loss of any two of their senators would doom Kavanaugh.

None of the three undecided Republicans would say if their views had solidified, one way or another.

– Final vote this week-

Media reports Wednesday said the FBI was under constraints from the White House on how far it could go in interviewing witnesses.

Sanders insisted Trump had given the investigators as much rein as needed, but added that it was the Senate which dictates the scope of the probe.

Senate leader Mitch McConnell insisted that a final vote on Kavanaugh would take place this week.

Outside the US Supreme Court, several hundred people protested against Kavanaugh on Wednesday, carrying signs with messages such as, “We will not be silent” and “I believe survivors. No on Kavanaugh.”

“We’ve spent all day in senators’ offices just throwing ourselves in front of them and saying, ‘Please don’t do this, this is a disgrace, this is an embarrassment’,” said Lorraine Tripoli, 58.

“We’re standing together against Judge Kavanaugh,” Democratic Senator Kirsten Gillibrand told demonstrators.

More than 650 law professors signed a letter to the Senate, published in The New York Times on Wednesday, saying that at the Judiciary Committee hearing Kavanaugh “did not display the impartiality and judicial temperament” required for the Supreme Court, and urged that he not be confirmed.

BSS/AFP/AU/08:20 hrs