I actually agree with 99 percent of the argument Jonah Goldberg is making at the National Review. He’s very gently trying to talk some sense to his very conservative audience and explain why it is most definitely in the nominee’s and the nation’s and the Republican Party’s interests to back down on the objection to having the FBI do a quick investigation of the allegations that have been aimed Brett Kavanaugh.
His assumption, of course, is that the FBI would not find anything conclusive or damning, and the net result would be to make his accusers look like smear merchants. That may be an optimistic prediction, but certainly Kavanaugh would be a better place if he had some kind of bill of good health from the FBI. If, on the other hand, he is confirmed without the FBI clearing him, this controversy will dog him and the entire court for his entire tenure, which could be several decades long. And, as Goldberg points out, even if Kavanaugh drops out and is vindicated later, that will be too late to salvage any portion of his reputation. It no longer makes sense to resist the FBI’s involvement.
There are a variety of problems with this argument, but the primary one is that the whole context of it is that the Democrats have been engaged in an entirely bad faith endeavor from the beginning and that the request for an FBI investigation was simply a way of trying to delay a vote. This is taken as given by Goldberg and his audience, so his first job is to explain why this tactic should no longer be resisted.
I don’t think that’s an accurate way of looking at what happened in this case. The original complaint was delivered by Dr. Christine Blasey Ford prior to Kavanaugh being named as the nominee. The motivation seems to have been to prevent Kavanaugh from being nominated in the first place. As for the delay in it becoming public, that seems related to Dr. Ford’s desire to remain anonymous. It’s not clear who leaked her name to reporters, but it made little sense to wait until after the hearings had concluded to do so if the object was to stop Kavanaugh’s confirmation. In any case, the reason people called for an FBI investigation was because Dr. Ford decided to go public with her allegations after she realized her identity had become widely known and reporters came after her asking questions.
The Democrats do have reason to want to delay the vote on Kavanaugh and to defeat his nomination if possible, and that would be true even if there were no allegations against him. But it just seems wrongheaded to interpret the call for FBI involvement as a simple delaying tactic. To my mind, the same logic Goldberg is applying now also applied the moment Dr. Ford came forward. Nothing has really changed about how Kavanaugh can and cannot clear his name, or about the politics of trying to plow forward without doing a serious investigation. It’s true that more information has emerged making Kavanaugh’s position even more precarious, but that hasn’t really changed what the response should have been at the start.
My suspicion from the beginning was quite different from Goldberg’s. I thought that the Republicans believed that Kavanaugh could weather Dr. Ford’s allegations but were concerned that more information would come out if they allowed a delay to investigate her claims. In other words, I was giving them credit for foresight and an accurate appraisal of Kavanaugh’s character. Maybe I shouldn’t have.
I just asked Sen. Lisa Murkowski, key GOP swing vote, if there should be a full FBI investigation into allegations from Kavanaugh’s past. “It would sure clear up all the questions, wouldn’t it?” she said
— Manu Raju (@mkraju) September 25, 2018
In any case, I’m seeing multiple reports now on Twitter from folks who cover the Republican side in Congress that Mitch McConnell does not currently have the votes he needs to confirm Kavanaugh. Goldberg concurs in that assessment. For this reason, it doesn’t look like it will be possible to confirm him without an FBI investigation.
If the Dems are at least line-level competent in terms of real politics (Of course, on the evidence of the last 8 years or so this is at best a questionable concept.) but if they are, they will finesse this question for as long as they can possibly do so…as close to the Nov. elections as they can manage to position themselves. Leave the Ratpubs dangling in the wind, struggling mightily to convince U.S. voters that:
1-Trump is not a total asshole.
and
2-Even if he is, they’re not.
Every day that goes by…the U.N. breaking out in laughter at Trump’s claims of unparalleled success, this Kavanaugh thing, Beto O’Rourke running at least neck and neck with Senator Ted “Cruella” Cruz in the biggest red state in the country (What, you never noticed the resemblance?)…RatPub stock goes further down.
Senate, anyone?
AG
It would be nice if he wasn’t confirmed.
So, GOP Senators are terrified of conducting the questioning themselves, so who do you think they’ve tapped to conduct their prosecution of Ford? A female prosecutor who has prosecuted sex crimes in the past!
So, they are picking a woman lawyer to prosecute Blasey Ford while they duck behind and throw spitballs! Ford’s lawyers are objecting to this inquisition, and rightly so. So, we’ll see what happens.
More like THEIR safety! They are conducting this like a total ambush! If I were Ford’s lawyer there is flat no way I would subject my client to this! I would insist that the Senators themselves conduct the questioning.
She’s not on trial here and Republican Senator’s attempts to make it a trial of Ford by hiring a prosecutor to “question” her are even more offensive than their blatant disregard for women throughout this entire investigation!
. . . has been apparent all along.
From their initial insistence that Ford testify at a hearing the next day, even though she was in California.
Through the moment they refused to call for an FBI investigation (an obvious next step under the circumstances).
Through the moment they made even clearer that they were engaged in a coverup for Bart via Anita-Hill-styled character assassination of Ford by suppressing likely corroborative evidence, i.e., by NOT compelling Mark Judge to testify via congressional subpoena, a power they possess.
All of which I presume Ford and her lawyers fully understand, yet my hope is that she’ll go through with it anyway, because I think there remains a good possibility that the attempted ambush will substantively fail. Even if O’Kav’s rammed through, good will have been accomplished by her coming forward and then testifying; possibly including the good of impeaching him after the fact, though that probably remains a long shot.
A lot is being made of the fact that the woman hired is a sex crimes prosecutor. There is an assumption that she will approach the questioning as if she were prosecuting Ford.
But this assumption is flawed. For one thing, sex crimes prosecutors generally put the victim, usually female, on as their witness. So the approach is to essentially vouch for the woman, not destroy her. (That would be the defense attorney’s job.)
For another thing, defendants don’t often take the stand in such trials – the defense relies on reasonable doubt, not the ability of their often-guilty client to convince the jury he didn’t do those horrible things the victim is saying. Again, this is a defense function, not a prosecution one.
If this attorney has never done defense work, that will be an added disadvantage. And if she’s a federal prosecutor, the odds of her having done any sex crime prosecutions ever are vanishingly small. Sex crimes are handled almost exclusively at the state court level, not in federal court. So she is probably a state prosecutor, or one who does the few sex crime prosecutions the feds ever handle. Either way, she will be in a different position than she has been in before, and thereby disadvantaged.
You know, the deeply -ingrained second-class status of Repub ladies is on display here. Why not simply exert your (obvious) power, Sen Murkowski, and tell Dimwit Grassley & The Judiciary Boyz that you want them to ask Der Trumper for an FBI investigation, yesterday? You do actually have incredible power here to basically call the tune for the entire nation and make Judge Bart dance. Yet you use the rhetorical question method: “an investigation would sure clear up all the questions, wouldn’t it Boyz?” WTF.
Also comical is The Boyz delegating their questioning to the designated Madame Prosecutor. Even these egotistical goofs know they can’t avoid stepping in the dog shit if they were allowed to speak–including Mr Arrogance, the honorable Canada Cruz. Frankly I’ll believe they’ll meekly sit mute when I see it; these guys CAN’T keep their mouth shut on anything.
I must confess that having a (female) sex crimes prosecutor handle the questioning is not obviously unfair to Ford, as (in theory) a sex crimes prosecutor would be expected to be quite sensitive to protecting the female victims of these crimes, who usually have to testify. In this instance, Ford is the alleged victim and O’Kavanaugh is the perp. The bigger problem is that Grassley’s hearing is making no real effort to get at the truth by calling all possible witnesses, and the prosecutor seems to be on board with this scam.
I guess we’ll see how the woman handles the assignment, but it’s not obvious (to me) that she will clearly be insensitive to Ford. What I’d like to know is whether the prosecutor is a partisan member of Team Conservative. But anything’s better than listening to Cruz’s crapola, Lindsey’s libels and Grassley’s gas…..
I have no doubt she’ll be a partisan Republican. They probably picked her from binders full of women.
Never underestimate unadorned, unbridled ambition.
They made her an offer she could not refuse.
.
(via digby)
That faint sound you hear across hundreds/thousands of miles?
Mitch McConnell screaming “Sarah, you ignorant slut! STFU!”
Plus Merrick Garland going: “Oh, yes, do please tell me about it, Sarah!”
Attorney Michael Avenatti on Wednesday dropped a new bombshell in the Brett Kavanaugh Supreme Court case — a woman who claims she was the victim of a gang rape by Kavanaugh and others in his social circle.
Yeah, he might want that FBI.