The Latest: Senate Panel Plans To Vote Friday On Kavanaugh
Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, Sept. 27, 2018. (Jim Bourg/Pool Photo via AP)
WASHINGTON (AP) ā The Latest on the Supreme Court nomination of Brett Kavanaugh (all times local):
8:10 p.m.
Republican senators say the Judiciary Committee plans to vote Friday morning on Brett Kavanaughās nomination to the Supreme Court.
Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, the second ranking-Republican, had said Thursday that the GOP conference would meet and āsee where we are.ā After meeting, Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham said, āThere will be a vote tomorrow morning.ā
Kavanaugh and a woman accusing him of sexual assault, California psychologist Christine Blasey (BLAHā-zee) Ford, spent hours testifying Thursday before the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Ford told senators that one night in the summer of 1982, a drunken Kavanaugh forced her down on a bed, groped her and tried to take off her clothes. Kavanaugh, testifying second, forcefully denied the accusation and said heās never sexually assaulted anyone.
8:05 p.m.
A Democratic senator who is undecided on Brett Kavanaughās nomination to the Supreme Court says she needs to āfully digestā the committee hearing on a sexual assault allegation against him.
Sen. Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota praised the ācourageā of Christine Blasey Ford, who testified to the Senate that Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her in a bedroom when they were teens. Kavanaugh in his own testimony denied ever sexually assaulting anyone.
Heitkamp also said it was important that the Senate Judiciary Committee heard Kavanaughās side of the story.
She stressed that a nonpartisan FBI investigation should be conducted to ābring greater clarityā to Fordās claim and Kavanaughās denial.
Heitkamp is running for re-election this year in a state where President Donald Trump is popular, and she is under pressure over her vote on Kavanaugh. She is facing Rep. Kevin Cramer in a race seen as critical for Republicansā chances to keep the Senate.
7:30 p.m.
A lawyer for Mark Judge says he ādoes not recall the eventsā described by Christine Blasey (BLAHā-zee) Ford during her dramatic testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Ford accused Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh of sexually assaulting her at a gathering more than 30 years ago. She says Kavanaughās classmate Judge was in the bedroom when the assault took place.
Judgeās lawyer, Barbara Van Gelder, said Thursday that he ādoes not want to comment about these events publiclyā and āwill not respond to any media inquiries.ā
Van Gelder says Judge āis willing to answer written questions, and he has. In addition, he is willing to participate in a confidential, fact-finding investigation.ā
Kavanaugh has denied Fordās allegation.
7:15 p.m.
Senate Republicans are huddling to discuss the next steps on Brett Kavanaughās nomination to the Supreme Court.
Kavanaugh and a woman accusing him of sexual assault, California psychologist Christine Blasey (BLAHā-zee) Ford, spent hours testifying Thursday before the Senate Judiciary Committee. Ford told senators that one night in the summer of 1982, a drunken Kavanaugh forced her down on a bed, groped her and tried to take off her clothes. Kavanaugh, testifying second, forcefully denied the accusation and said heās never sexually assaulted anyone.
The Senate Judiciary Committee is scheduled to vote Friday morning on Kavanaughās nomination, unless Republicans decide to postpone it.
Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, the second ranking-Republican, says the GOP conference will meet and āsee where we are.ā But he says the plan is still to have the vote.
7:10 p.m.
The final question to Brett Kavanaugh at the Senate Judiciary Committee was a spiritual one.
Republican Sen. John Kennedy of Louisiana asked the Supreme Court nominee on Thursday if he believed in God.
When Kavanaugh said he did, Kennedy told him this was a ālast opportunityā to testify before āGod and country.ā
The senator asked the judge to look him in the eye. Then he asked Kavanaugh if the allegations of sexual assault from Christine Blasey (BLAHā-zee) Ford were true.
Kavanaugh says, āTheyāre not accurate.ā
Kavanaugh says he doesnāt question Fordās testimony that she had been assaulted āby someone, some place.ā
But Kavanaugh says he has ānever done this to anyone, including her.
7 p.m.
Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh says he didnāt watch Christine Blasey (BLAHā-zee) Ford testify about her accusation that he sexually assaulted her when they were teens.
Both Kavanaugh and Ford spent hours testifying Thursday before the Senate Judiciary Committee, with Ford going first. Ford told senators that one night in the summer of 1982, a drunken Kavanaugh forced her down on a bed, groped her and tried to take off her clothes. Kavanaugh, testifying second, forcefully denied the accusation and said heās never sexually assaulted anyone.
Kavanaugh was asked by Democratic Sen. Kamala Harris near the end of the hearing whether he had watched Fordās testimony.
Kavanaugh responded: āI plan to, but I did not. I was preparing mine.ā
6:55 p.m.
President Donald Trump is backing Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, calling the judgeās testimony during a Senate hearing āpowerful, honest, and riveting.ā Trump is declaring, āThe Senate must vote!ā
Trump defended his nominee on Twitter on Thursday shortly after the extraordinary hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee concluded.
The president says the Democratsā āsearch and destroy strategy is disgraceful and this process has been a total sham and effort to delay, obstruct, and resist.ā
Kavanaugh defiantly denied allegations he sexually assaulted Christine Blasey (BLAHā-zee) Ford when they were high school students. Ford testified earlier in the day that she was ā100 percentā certain Kavanaugh assaulted her.
6:50 p.m.
The Senate Judiciary Committee hearing featuring Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh and a woman accusing him of sexual assault when they were teenagers has adjourned after more than eight hours.
California psychology professor Christine Blasey Ford testified first Thursday, saying that she had been terrified to come forward but felt that it was her civic duty. She says Kavanaugh pinned her against a bed when they were in high school, grinded against her and tried to take off her clothes. She says she considers it attempted rape.
Kavanaugh testified afterward, forcefully denying that he had sexually assaulted anyone and saying Democrats were trying to ruin his life.
The panel is set to vote Friday on whether to recommend Kavanaughās nomination move forward to the full Senate.
6:25 p.m.
President Donald Trump is encouraged by Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaughās passionate denials of Christine Blasey (BLAHā-zee) Fordās claims that he sexually assaulted her in high school.
A White House official told The Associated Press on Thursday that the West Wing saw the judgeās opening statement as āgame changingā and said Trump appeared to be reacting positively.
Trump watched the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on Air Force One as he traveled from New York, then resumed monitoring back at the White House.
Two Republicans close to the White House say Trump expressed sympathy for Kavanaugh and his family for having to listen to Fordās tearful recounting of allegations. After seeing Fordās testimony, White House aides and allies expressed concern that Kavanaugh would have an uphill climb to deliver a strong enough showing.
But they say Trump was encouraged by Kavanaughās performance.
ā Jonathan Lemire, Zeke Miller and Catherine Lucey.
5:50 p.m.
Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh has apologized after tangling with Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar (KLOHā-buh-shar) over his drinking in high school.
The senator from Minnesota asked Kavanaugh on Thursday about his drinking habits during a hearing on sexual assault allegations. Christine Blasey (BLAHā-zee) Ford says Kavanaugh was drunk at the time he sexually assaulted her.
Klobuchar said Kavanaugh wrote in testimony that he sometimes had too many drinks. Klobuchar asked whether he ever drank so much that he couldnāt remember what happened or part of what happened the night before. Kavanaugh answered āno.ā
In a back-and-forth, he added, āHave you?ā and followed up a second time.
Klobuchar said: āI have no drinking problem, Judge.ā Kavanaugh responded: āNor do I.ā
After returning from a break, he apologized for asking her that question.
5:05 p.m.
Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham says the Democratsā treatment of Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh is the āmost despicable thingā he has seen in politics.
Graham said Thursday that Democrats sat on allegations against Kavanaugh and then sprung them on the nominee at the last minute in a desperate attempt to prevent his confirmation.
The South Carolina senator says Democrats want to ādestroyā Kavanaughās life and hold the seat open in the hope of winning the White House in 2020.
Graham says a vote against Kavanaugh would ālegitimize the most despicable thing I have ever seen in politics.ā He also called the Democratsā tactics āthe most unethical sham.ā
Graham supported Republicansā ultimately successful efforts to block action on President Barack Obamaās Supreme Court nomination of Judge Merrick Garland.
5 p.m.
In a heated exchange with a Democratic senator, Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh dismissed the scrutiny of his high school yearbook as an āabsurdity.ā
Democratic senators have been bringing up Kavanaughās yearbook as they question him about Christine Blasey (BLAHā-zee) Fordās allegation of sexual assault when they were teens. Kavanaugh denies the allegation.
Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont asked Kavanaugh about his yearbook and the ādrinkingā and āsexual exploitsā it mentions. As Kavanaugh started to respond, Leahy tried to cut him off.
Kavanaugh retorted, āIām going to talk about my high school record if youāre going to sit here and mock me.ā
After Kavanaugh talked about how he ābusted his buttā on academics and played sports in high school, Leahy said: āWe got a filibuster but not a single answer.ā
4:35 p.m.
Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh is calling certain allegations against him a ājokeā and a āfarce.ā
Kavanaugh made the statements while testifying Thursday before the Senate Judiciary Committee following allegations by Christine Blasey Ford that he sexually assaulted her in high school. Allegations by other women followed those by Ford.
Kavanaugh was referring specifically to allegations by Julie Swetnick, whose name and allegations became public Wednesday, a day before the hearings. Swetnick said in a sworn statement that she witnessed Kavanaugh āconsistently engage in excessive drinking and inappropriate contact of a sexual nature with women in the early 1980s.ā
Kavanaugh was responding to questions from Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein when he said: āThe Swetnick thing is a joke, thatās a farce.ā
Feinstein asked Kavanaugh if he wanted to say more about Swetnickās allegations. Kavanaugh responded: āNo.ā
4:15 p.m.
Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh is apologizing to a high school acquaintance whose name was in a yearbook entry written by him and others with the word āalumnusā after.
Kavanaugh called Renate (reh-NAHā-tah) Schroeder Dolphin āa good female friendā whom people in his social circle āwould admire and went to dances with.ā He said the yearbook reference āwas clumsily intended to show affection and that she was one of us.ā
He says the media has falsely interpreted the term āalumnusā as being related to sex. He said it was not, adding that he and Dolphin ānever had any sexual interaction at all.ā
He says, āSo sorry to her for that yearbook reference.ā
According to reports, Dolphin had initially been one of 65 women to endorse Kavanaugh after the
WASHINGTON (AP) ā The Latest on the Supreme Court nomination of Brett Kavanaugh (all times local):
8:10 p.m.
Republican senators say the Judiciary Committee plans to vote Friday morning on Brett Kavanaughās nomination to the Supreme Court.
Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, the second ranking-Republican, had said Thursday that the GOP conference would meet and āsee where we are.ā After meeting, Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham said, āThere will be a vote tomorrow morning.ā
Kavanaugh and a woman accusing him of sexual assault, California psychologist Christine Blasey (BLAHā-zee) Ford, spent hours testifying Thursday before the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Ford told senators that one night in the summer of 1982, a drunken Kavanaugh forced her down on a bed, groped her and tried to take off her clothes. Kavanaugh, testifying second, forcefully denied the accusation and said heās never sexually assaulted anyone.
8:05 p.m.
A Democratic senator who is undecided on Brett Kavanaughās nomination to the Supreme Court says she needs to āfully digestā the committee hearing on a sexual assault allegation against him.
Sen. Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota praised the ācourageā of Christine Blasey Ford, who testified to the Senate that Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her in a bedroom when they were teens. Kavanaugh in his own testimony denied ever sexually assaulting anyone.
Heitkamp also said it was important that the Senate Judiciary Committee heard Kavanaughās side of the story.
She stressed that a nonpartisan FBI investigation should be conducted to ābring greater clarityā to Fordās claim and Kavanaughās denial.
Heitkamp is running for re-election this year in a state where President Donald Trump is popular, and she is under pressure over her vote on Kavanaugh. She is facing Rep. Kevin Cramer in a race seen as critical for Republicansā chances to keep the Senate.
7:30 p.m.
A lawyer for Mark Judge says he ādoes not recall the eventsā described by Christine Blasey (BLAHā-zee) Ford during her dramatic testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Ford accused Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh of sexually assaulting her at a gathering more than 30 years ago. She says Kavanaughās classmate Judge was in the bedroom when the assault took place.
Judgeās lawyer, Barbara Van Gelder, said Thursday that he ādoes not want to comment about these events publiclyā and āwill not respond to any media inquiries.ā
Van Gelder says Judge āis willing to answer written questions, and he has. In addition, he is willing to participate in a confidential, fact-finding investigation.ā
Kavanaugh has denied Fordās allegation.
7:15 p.m.
Senate Republicans are huddling to discuss the next steps on Brett Kavanaughās nomination to the Supreme Court.
Kavanaugh and a woman accusing him of sexual assault, California psychologist Christine Blasey (BLAHā-zee) Ford, spent hours testifying Thursday before the Senate Judiciary Committee. Ford told senators that one night in the summer of 1982, a drunken Kavanaugh forced her down on a bed, groped her and tried to take off her clothes. Kavanaugh, testifying second, forcefully denied the accusation and said heās never sexually assaulted anyone.
The Senate Judiciary Committee is scheduled to vote Friday morning on Kavanaughās nomination, unless Republicans decide to postpone it.
Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, the second ranking-Republican, says the GOP conference will meet and āsee where we are.ā But he says the plan is still to have the vote.
7:10 p.m.
The final question to Brett Kavanaugh at the Senate Judiciary Committee was a spiritual one.
Republican Sen. John Kennedy of Louisiana asked the Supreme Court nominee on Thursday if he believed in God.
When Kavanaugh said he did, Kennedy told him this was a ālast opportunityā to testify before āGod and country.ā
The senator asked the judge to look him in the eye. Then he asked Kavanaugh if the allegations of sexual assault from Christine Blasey (BLAHā-zee) Ford were true.
Kavanaugh says, āTheyāre not accurate.ā
Kavanaugh says he doesnāt question Fordās testimony that she had been assaulted āby someone, some place.ā
But Kavanaugh says he has ānever done this to anyone, including her.
7 p.m.
Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh says he didnāt watch Christine Blasey (BLAHā-zee) Ford testify about her accusation that he sexually assaulted her when they were teens.
Both Kavanaugh and Ford spent hours testifying Thursday before the Senate Judiciary Committee, with Ford going first. Ford told senators that one night in the summer of 1982, a drunken Kavanaugh forced her down on a bed, groped her and tried to take off her clothes. Kavanaugh, testifying second, forcefully denied the accusation and said heās never sexually assaulted anyone.
Kavanaugh was asked by Democratic Sen. Kamala Harris near the end of the hearing whether he had watched Fordās testimony.
Kavanaugh responded: āI plan to, but I did not. I was preparing mine.ā
6:55 p.m.
President Donald Trump is backing Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, calling the judgeās testimony during a Senate hearing āpowerful, honest, and riveting.ā Trump is declaring, āThe Senate must vote!ā
Trump defended his nominee on Twitter on Thursday shortly after the extraordinary hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee concluded.
The president says the Democratsā āsearch and destroy strategy is disgraceful and this process has been a total sham and effort to delay, obstruct, and resist.ā
Kavanaugh defiantly denied allegations he sexually assaulted Christine Blasey (BLAHā-zee) Ford when they were high school students. Ford testified earlier in the day that she was ā100 percentā certain Kavanaugh assaulted her.
6:50 p.m.
The Senate Judiciary Committee hearing featuring Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh and a woman accusing him of sexual assault when they were teenagers has adjourned after more than eight hours.
California psychology professor Christine Blasey Ford testified first Thursday, saying that she had been terrified to come forward but felt that it was her civic duty. She says Kavanaugh pinned her against a bed when they were in high school, grinded against her and tried to take off her clothes. She says she considers it attempted rape.
Kavanaugh testified afterward, forcefully denying that he had sexually assaulted anyone and saying Democrats were trying to ruin his life.
The panel is set to vote Friday on whether to recommend Kavanaughās nomination move forward to the full Senate.
6:25 p.m.
President Donald Trump is encouraged by Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaughās passionate denials of Christine Blasey (BLAHā-zee) Fordās claims that he sexually assaulted her in high school.
A White House official told The Associated Press on Thursday that the West Wing saw the judgeās opening statement as āgame changingā and said Trump appeared to be reacting positively.
Trump watched the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on Air Force One as he traveled from New York, then resumed monitoring back at the White House.
Two Republicans close to the White House say Trump expressed sympathy for Kavanaugh and his family for having to listen to Fordās tearful recounting of allegations. After seeing Fordās testimony, White House aides and allies expressed concern that Kavanaugh would have an uphill climb to deliver a strong enough showing.
But they say Trump was encouraged by Kavanaughās performance.
ā Jonathan Lemire, Zeke Miller and Catherine Lucey.
5:50 p.m.
Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh has apologized after tangling with Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar (KLOHā-buh-shar) over his drinking in high school.
The senator from Minnesota asked Kavanaugh on Thursday about his drinking habits during a hearing on sexual assault allegations. Christine Blasey (BLAHā-zee) Ford says Kavanaugh was drunk at the time he sexually assaulted her.
Klobuchar said Kavanaugh wrote in testimony that he sometimes had too many drinks. Klobuchar asked whether he ever drank so much that he couldnāt remember what happened or part of what happened the night before. Kavanaugh answered āno.ā
In a back-and-forth, he added, āHave you?ā and followed up a second time.
Klobuchar said: āI have no drinking problem, Judge.ā Kavanaugh responded: āNor do I.ā
After returning from a break, he apologized for asking her that question.
5:05 p.m.
Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham says the Democratsā treatment of Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh is the āmost despicable thingā he has seen in politics.
Graham said Thursday that Democrats sat on allegations against Kavanaugh and then sprung them on the nominee at the last minute in a desperate attempt to prevent his confirmation.
The South Carolina senator says Democrats want to ādestroyā Kavanaughās life and hold the seat open in the hope of winning the White House in 2020.
Graham says a vote against Kavanaugh would ālegitimize the most despicable thing I have ever seen in politics.ā He also called the Democratsā tactics āthe most unethical sham.ā
Graham supported Republicansā ultimately successful efforts to block action on President Barack Obamaās Supreme Court nomination of Judge Merrick Garland.
5 p.m.
In a heated exchange with a Democratic senator, Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh dismissed the scrutiny of his high school yearbook as an āabsurdity.ā
Democratic senators have been bringing up Kavanaughās yearbook as they question him about Christine Blasey (BLAHā-zee) Fordās allegation of sexual assault when they were teens. Kavanaugh denies the allegation.
Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont asked Kavanaugh about his yearbook and the ādrinkingā and āsexual exploitsā it mentions. As Kavanaugh started to respond, Leahy tried to cut him off.
Kavanaugh retorted, āIām going to talk about my high school record if youāre going to sit here and mock me.ā
After Kavanaugh talked about how he ābusted his buttā on academics and played sports in high school, Leahy said: āWe got a filibuster but not a single answer.ā
4:35 p.m.
Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh is calling certain allegations against him a ājokeā and a āfarce.ā
Kavanaugh made the statements while testifying Thursday before the Senate Judiciary Committee following allegations by Christine Blasey Ford that he sexually assaulted her in high school. Allegations by other women followed those by Ford.
Kavanaugh was referring specifically to allegations by Julie Swetnick, whose name and allegations became public Wednesday, a day before the hearings. Swetnick said in a sworn statement that she witnessed Kavanaugh āconsistently engage in excessive drinking and inappropriate contact of a sexual nature with women in the early 1980s.ā
Kavanaugh was responding to questions from Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein when he said: āThe Swetnick thing is a joke, thatās a farce.ā
Feinstein asked Kavanaugh if he wanted to say more about Swetnickās allegations. Kavanaugh responded: āNo.ā
4:15 p.m.
Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh is apologizing to a high school acquaintance whose name was in a yearbook entry written by him and others with the word āalumnusā after.
Kavanaugh called Renate (reh-NAHā-tah) Schroeder Dolphin āa good female friendā whom people in his social circle āwould admire and went to dances with.ā He said the yearbook reference āwas clumsily intended to show affection and that she was one of us.ā
He says the media has falsely interpreted the term āalumnusā as being related to sex. He said it was not, adding that he and Dolphin ānever had any sexual interaction at all.ā
He says, āSo sorry to her for that yearbook reference.ā
According to reports, Dolphin had initially been one of 65 women to endorse Kavanaugh after the
sexual assault allegations came to light from Christine Blasey (BLAHā-zee) Ford. Kavanaugh forcefully denied the accusation.
Dolphin withdrew her endorsement after Fordās accusation came to light.
4:05 p.m.
Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh says Democratsā actions in the past couple of weeks may mean he will never again get to do two things he loves, teach law and coach basketball.
Kavanaughās comments Thursday came in an extraordinary, 45-minute opening statement in which he repeatedly expressed rancor toward Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Kavanaugh is blaming Democrats for the fraught environment stemming from allegations of sexual misconduct made by Christine Blasey Ford and two other women. He denied sexually assaulting anyone, including Ford when they were teenagers in high school.
The 53-year-old nominee gestured toward the Democrats seated to his right when he said that āthanks to what some of you on this side of the committee have unleashed, I may never be able to teach again.ā He repeated that formulation when talking about coaching his daughters in basketball.
4 p.m.
Brett Kavanaugh says he never imagined the topic of sex would come up in a confirmation hearing, but he wants lawmakers to know he never had sexual intercourse or anything close to it during high school or for many years after that.
He said Thursday that for him and the girls he was friends with, the lack of major rampant sexual activity in high school āwas a matter of faith and respect and caution.ā
He says the committee has a letter from 65 women who knew him in high school and they said he always treated them with dignity and respect.
He says that letter came together in one night 35 years after graduation. He says they knew they would be vilified if they defended him.
Kavanaugh tells senators āthink about that. They put themselves on the line for me. Those are some awesome women.ā
3:45 p.m.
Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh says the sexual allegations against him are a ācalculated and orchestrated political hit.ā
California psychology professor Christine Blasey Ford testified Thursday that Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her during a gathering while they were in high school. She says sheās 100 percent certain it was him. Kavanaugh denies the allegations.
Both are testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee.
He says part of the reason for the allegations is anger by some about President Donald Trump and the 2016 election, and out of revenge on ābehalf of the Clintons.ā In the 1990s, Kavanaugh was on the team that investigated President Bill Clinton as part of special prosecutor Kenneth Starrās investigation. The report led to Clintonās impeachment, though he was not removed from office.
Kavanaugh said Thursday that the allegations are also the result of money from left-wing opposition groups.
3:40 p.m.
Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh is choking up before the Senate Judiciary Committee as he fights back against allegations of sexual assault.
The judge sounded angry and tried to hold back tears Thursday as he told senators he was āinnocent of this charge.ā Christine Blasey (BLAHā-zee) Ford testified earlier that he groped her and held her down during a party when they were teens.
Kavanaugh ācategorically deniedā all aspects of her testimony, saying he never did those things years ago.
The father of two daughters says one of his girls said they should āpray for the womanā making the allegations.
Kavanaugh says, āThatās a lot of wisdom from a 10 year old.ā He says, āWe mean no ill will.ā
Kavanaugh continued his testimony, his voice rising and choking up, throughout.
3:37 p.m.
Melania Trump has not been watching the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing featuring Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh and Christine Blasey (BLAHā-zee) Ford.
Spokeswoman Stephanie Grisham says the first lady and members of her staff have been in meetings all day Thursday about her upcoming trip to Africa. The first lady is scheduled to depart Monday on a weeklong visit to Ghana, Malawi, Kenya and Egypt.
Ford has accused Kavanaugh of sexually assaulting her when they were teenagers.
Kavanaugh denies Fordās allegation. He has also denied claims of sexual misconduct against him a few other women.
3:35 p.m.
Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh says he ānever had any sexual or physical encounter of any kindā with Christine Blasey Ford.
Kavanaugh is testifying Thursday before the Senate Judiciary Committee. Ford testified earlier, telling senators that Kavanaugh assaulted her at a gathering in high school.
She says he and a friend barricaded her in a room and Kavanaugh got on top of her and covered her mouth so she could not cry out for help. She says she is ā100 percentā certain it was Kavanaugh who attacked her.
Kavanaugh said that he isnāt questioning whether Ford was sexually assaulted ā but he says he did not do that to her or anyone. He says heās āinnocent of this charge.ā
3:30 p.m.
Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh is telling a Senate panel that he āwill not be intimidatedā into withdrawing his nomination to the Supreme Court.
Kavanaugh told lawmakers Thursday in his opening statement to the Senate Judiciary Committee: āYou may defeat me in the final vote, but youāll never get me to quit. Never.ā
Kavanaugh was speaking following testimony by California psychology professor Christine Blasey Ford. She says that Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her when they were teens and that she is ā100 percentā certain it was him.
Kavanaugh told lawmakers he is āinnocent of this charge.ā
3:25 p.m.
Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh is giving a defiant opening statement at the Senate Judiciary Committee to clear his name of allegations of sexual assault.
Kavanaugh told senators on Thursday the allegations have left his family and his name ātotally and permanently destroyed.ā
The appellate court judge sounded angry, his voice rising. He says, āThis confirmation process has become a national disgrace.ā
He lashed out at the committee over the time it has taken to convene the hearing after Christine Blasey (BLAHā-zee) Fordās allegation first emerged. He says, āThis is a circus.ā
He urged senators to listen to the people who know him and not those making grotesque allegations against him.
3:15 p.m.
Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh has told a Senate panel that his family and his name āhave been totally and permanently destroyed.ā
Kavanaugh spoke at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on Thursday after Christine Blasey Ford testified that Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her when both were in high school. She said she was terrified to come forward but did so because she felt it was her civic duty.
He says his confirmation process has become āa national disgraceā and a ācharacter assassination.ā
Ford says the attack is seared in her memory and she is ā100 percentā certain that it was Kavanaugh who attacked her.
For more coverage of Brett Kavanaughās Supreme Court nomination, visit https://apnews.com/tag/Kavanaughnomination
Dolphin withdrew her endorsement after Fordās accusation came to light.
4:05 p.m.
Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh says Democratsā actions in the past couple of weeks may mean he will never again get to do two things he loves, teach law and coach basketball.
Kavanaughās comments Thursday came in an extraordinary, 45-minute opening statement in which he repeatedly expressed rancor toward Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Kavanaugh is blaming Democrats for the fraught environment stemming from allegations of sexual misconduct made by Christine Blasey Ford and two other women. He denied sexually assaulting anyone, including Ford when they were teenagers in high school.
The 53-year-old nominee gestured toward the Democrats seated to his right when he said that āthanks to what some of you on this side of the committee have unleashed, I may never be able to teach again.ā He repeated that formulation when talking about coaching his daughters in basketball.
4 p.m.
Brett Kavanaugh says he never imagined the topic of sex would come up in a confirmation hearing, but he wants lawmakers to know he never had sexual intercourse or anything close to it during high school or for many years after that.
He said Thursday that for him and the girls he was friends with, the lack of major rampant sexual activity in high school āwas a matter of faith and respect and caution.ā
He says the committee has a letter from 65 women who knew him in high school and they said he always treated them with dignity and respect.
He says that letter came together in one night 35 years after graduation. He says they knew they would be vilified if they defended him.
Kavanaugh tells senators āthink about that. They put themselves on the line for me. Those are some awesome women.ā
3:45 p.m.
Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh says the sexual allegations against him are a ācalculated and orchestrated political hit.ā
California psychology professor Christine Blasey Ford testified Thursday that Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her during a gathering while they were in high school. She says sheās 100 percent certain it was him. Kavanaugh denies the allegations.
Both are testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee.
He says part of the reason for the allegations is anger by some about President Donald Trump and the 2016 election, and out of revenge on ābehalf of the Clintons.ā In the 1990s, Kavanaugh was on the team that investigated President Bill Clinton as part of special prosecutor Kenneth Starrās investigation. The report led to Clintonās impeachment, though he was not removed from office.
Kavanaugh said Thursday that the allegations are also the result of money from left-wing opposition groups.
3:40 p.m.
Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh is choking up before the Senate Judiciary Committee as he fights back against allegations of sexual assault.
The judge sounded angry and tried to hold back tears Thursday as he told senators he was āinnocent of this charge.ā Christine Blasey (BLAHā-zee) Ford testified earlier that he groped her and held her down during a party when they were teens.
Kavanaugh ācategorically deniedā all aspects of her testimony, saying he never did those things years ago.
The father of two daughters says one of his girls said they should āpray for the womanā making the allegations.
Kavanaugh says, āThatās a lot of wisdom from a 10 year old.ā He says, āWe mean no ill will.ā
Kavanaugh continued his testimony, his voice rising and choking up, throughout.
3:37 p.m.
Melania Trump has not been watching the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing featuring Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh and Christine Blasey (BLAHā-zee) Ford.
Spokeswoman Stephanie Grisham says the first lady and members of her staff have been in meetings all day Thursday about her upcoming trip to Africa. The first lady is scheduled to depart Monday on a weeklong visit to Ghana, Malawi, Kenya and Egypt.
Ford has accused Kavanaugh of sexually assaulting her when they were teenagers.
Kavanaugh denies Fordās allegation. He has also denied claims of sexual misconduct against him a few other women.
3:35 p.m.
Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh says he ānever had any sexual or physical encounter of any kindā with Christine Blasey Ford.
Kavanaugh is testifying Thursday before the Senate Judiciary Committee. Ford testified earlier, telling senators that Kavanaugh assaulted her at a gathering in high school.
She says he and a friend barricaded her in a room and Kavanaugh got on top of her and covered her mouth so she could not cry out for help. She says she is ā100 percentā certain it was Kavanaugh who attacked her.
Kavanaugh said that he isnāt questioning whether Ford was sexually assaulted ā but he says he did not do that to her or anyone. He says heās āinnocent of this charge.ā
3:30 p.m.
Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh is telling a Senate panel that he āwill not be intimidatedā into withdrawing his nomination to the Supreme Court.
Kavanaugh told lawmakers Thursday in his opening statement to the Senate Judiciary Committee: āYou may defeat me in the final vote, but youāll never get me to quit. Never.ā
Kavanaugh was speaking following testimony by California psychology professor Christine Blasey Ford. She says that Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her when they were teens and that she is ā100 percentā certain it was him.
Kavanaugh told lawmakers he is āinnocent of this charge.ā
3:25 p.m.
Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh is giving a defiant opening statement at the Senate Judiciary Committee to clear his name of allegations of sexual assault.
Kavanaugh told senators on Thursday the allegations have left his family and his name ātotally and permanently destroyed.ā
The appellate court judge sounded angry, his voice rising. He says, āThis confirmation process has become a national disgrace.ā
He lashed out at the committee over the time it has taken to convene the hearing after Christine Blasey (BLAHā-zee) Fordās allegation first emerged. He says, āThis is a circus.ā
He urged senators to listen to the people who know him and not those making grotesque allegations against him.
3:15 p.m.
Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh has told a Senate panel that his family and his name āhave been totally and permanently destroyed.ā
Kavanaugh spoke at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on Thursday after Christine Blasey Ford testified that Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her when both were in high school. She said she was terrified to come forward but did so because she felt it was her civic duty.
He says his confirmation process has become āa national disgraceā and a ācharacter assassination.ā
Ford says the attack is seared in her memory and she is ā100 percentā certain that it was Kavanaugh who attacked her.
For more coverage of Brett Kavanaughās Supreme Court nomination, visit https://apnews.com/tag/Kavanaughnomination
Comments