Senate Votes 50 – 48 To Confirm Brett Kavanaugh To U.S. Supreme Court

PHOTO CREDIT: Associated Press

BY SCOTT A. LEADINGHAM

Update, Oct. 6, 1 p.m. PT

The U.S. Senate voted 50 to 48 Saturday afternoon to confirm Brett Kavanaugh as a Supreme Court justice.

Lisa Murkowski of Alaska was the only Republican senator to break rank, voting “present” instead of an expected “no.” She did so as a favor to fellow Republican Steve Daines of Montana, who was absent to attend his daughter’s wedding.

Joe Manchin of West Virginia, currently in a tight re-election race in a Republican-heavy state, was the only Democrat to vote in favor of Kavanaugh’s nomination.

The vote was interrupted multiple times as protesters inside the public Senate gallery yelled and caused disturbances. Vice President Mike Pence, acting in his role as president of the Senate, called multiple times for the sergeant at arms to “restore order in the gallery” as protesters were removed.

Both Washington state senators Patty Murray and Maria Cantwell voted against Kavanaugh’s confirmation.

Republican Congresswoman Cathy McMorris Rodgers, who represents Washington’s 5th District and is in a tight re-election race, released a statement after the vote praising Kavanaugh’s tenure as a judge and “decades of public service.”

“I am confident that Justice Brett Kavanaugh will faithfully uphold the Constitution that we cherish as citizens of this great country, which is why I support the Senate’s action to confirm him to the U.S. Supreme Court,” the statement read in part.

Her statement went on to call the confirmation process “dysfunctional and divisive” and called for an end to an “‘us versus them’ mentality.”

Original Story:

BY BRIAN NAYLOR, NPR

The Senate is expected to vote Saturday on the Supreme Court nomination of Judge Brett Kavanaugh and — barring a major unforeseen development — in all likelihood, he will be confirmed by the narrowest of margins.

In a tweet Saturday morning, President Trump suggested the final vote will happen in the afternoon or early evening, adding that the day is a “Big day for America!”

Asked about the #MeToo movement and her husband’s recent comments about its potential impact on men, first lady Melania Trump weighed in on Kavanaugh’s controversial nomination. “I would say if we’re talking about the Supreme Court and Judge Kavanaugh, I think he’s highly qualified for the Supreme Court,” Trump said while speaking to reporters in Egypt during a solo international trip to Africa. “I’m glad that Dr. Ford was heard, I’m glad that Judge Kavanaugh was heard. FBI investigation was done, is completed and Senate voted.”

But when asked whether she believed Christine Blasey Ford who alleged that Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her more than three decades ago when they were both in high school, the first lady would not answer directly. “I will move on that and I think that all the victims they need — we need to help all the victims no matter what kind of abuse they had, but I am against any kind of abuse or violence,” the first lady explained.

In the hours before the vote, police arrested demonstrators who had broken through barriers around the Capitol and tried to climb the building’s steps.

Senate Majority leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., told the Washington Post the protests against Kavanaugh “were a great political gift” for Republicans. “I want to thank the mob, because they’ve done the one thing we were having trouble doing, which was energizing our base.”

On Friday, after the nomination cleared a key procedural hurdle with a 51-49 vote, two previously undecided senators, Susan Collins, R-Maine, and Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., announced they would support Kavanaugh. That support all but assures Republicans of the votes they need to push the nomination across the finish line.

In a much anticipated speech on the Senate floor Friday afternoon, Collins said that she believed that Ford was a survivor of sexual assault. Still, Collins said, the allegations “fail to meet the ‘more likely than not’ standard,” and “I do not believe that these charges can fairly prevent Judge Kavanaugh from serving on the court.”

And in a statement issued soon after Collins spoke, Manchin explained he was supporting Kavanaugh notwithstanding the “serious accusations” leveled against the judge and lingering questions about Kavanaugh’s temperament.

“I have reservations about this vote given the serious accusations against Judge Kavanaugh and the temperament he displayed in the hearing,” Manchin said. “And my heart goes out to anyone who has experienced any type of sexual assault in their life. However, based on all of the information I have available to me, including the recently completed FBI report, I have found Judge Kavanaugh to be a qualified jurist who will follow the Constitution and determine cases based on the legal findings before him. I do hope that Judge Kavanaugh will not allow the partisan nature this process took to follow him onto the court.”

Speaking to NPR on Friday, a lawyer for Ford said the California professor’s goal was never to derail the nomination. “Dr. Ford’s goal here was never to impact the process to derail a nomination,” attorney Lisa Banks said on All Things Considered. “What she was trying to do was what she thought was the right thing to do as a citizen, which is to provide the information to the U.S. Senate so they could make the most informed decision possible. Her goal wasn’t to derail this nomination, it was to inform the nomination and she’s done that.”

If the vote goes as expected, Kavanaugh will become President Trump’s second appointment to the Supreme Court, creating a conservative 5-4 majority on the nation’s highest court for years to come.

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