Hypothetical confirmation process

I have a simple query for anyone who is unhappy with the Brett Kavanaugh confirmation process (meaning everyone who is paying attention to it). The catch is that the question is different depending on what you are most unhappy about.

IF you believe the process has been mostly unfair to Kavanaugh – imagine that Ford’s accusation is 100% true and that it happened exactly as she described it. What would you propose would have been the right course of action to get to the bottom of the allegation?

IF you the believe the process has been mostly unfair to Ford (and/or Ramirez and Swetnick as well) – imagine that Kavanaugh is completely innocent and none of these allegations are remotely true. What would you propose would have been the right course to handle false allegations?

I’d love to hear from my readers before I share my own response. Plus, I am still thinking about my own response! And hopefully the responses can set aside the politics of the situation. If it helps for either side, imagine that Kavanaugh’s judicial philosophy is more like that of Ruth Bader Ginsburg and see if that changes your thinking at all.

Confirmation craziness

And my blog returns after a long absence! The spirit of the blog remains as it was before – an opportunity to discuss politics from different points of view with an emphasis on respecting the people in the discussion regardless of their views. I have been playing with ideas on the direction I want to take it going forward and plan to get back to sharing regularly.

Today I jump back in with the story that has been consuming me – partially for some time, and extensively today. The post I had been hoping to write before the Kavanaugh-Ford hearing is now rendered basically irrelevant. After watching most of Ford’s testimony, parts of Kavanaugh’s, and following on Twitter and various news sites throughout the day I have much to say and it is not nearly as charitable to all parties as it would have been yesterday.

I must begin with Christine Blasey Ford. She has earned a tremendous amount of respect from me. I couldn’t help thinking as I watched this that this could be any woman I know who was going about her life and then found that a traumatic event from her past was suddenly relevant to a highly-charged national issue. She has bravely faced the issue head-on while enduring incomprehensible vitriol from those who don’t like what she is bringing up. Her story fits everything I would expect of a credible allegation and I can’t imagine anyone who could watch her testimony and see a political motivation in what she has done.

This doesn’t inherently mean the allegation is true. Indeed, after a morning where the Twitterverse indicated that Republicans were not feeling good about things, Brett Kavanaugh came out swinging. And I agree with the popular assessment from left and right that his anger at what he and his family went through is genuine. I certainly feel awful for his wife and daughters and what they have endured. And it seemed that he and the committee turned the tide for the Republican side and rallied support back in his favor.

He certainly addressed the substance of the allegations to the extent that he can. But rather than parsing which of their accounts of the details is more believable, let’s keep a few things in mind.

  • Motivation
    • If you follow the chain of events that led to Ford being in that seat, her motivations seem to pretty genuinely be about sharing information she felt needed to be shared. I can’t make any sense of her coming forward as she did for other reasons. If anyone reading this can provide an alternate interpretation consistent with her words and actions I’d be interested in hearing it.
    •  Kavanaugh on the other hand is a man close to reaching the professional pinnacle for a judge who finds himself on the defensive about an old allegation. The motivations to deny the allegation are many. Again, that doesn’t mean he is lying or that her version is accurate, but it is a factor in any assessment.
    • And being upset at your reputation being ruined doesn’t make you innocent of the allegations. Indeed, most of the men who have faced consequences for their sexual misconduct continue to express indignation at the attacks on their character even when the evidence is overwhelming. So I fail to see how his deep and genuine anger at what has happened over the past 2 weeks has any bearing on an assessment of his guilt or innocence.
  • Evidence
    • I continually am reading that there is no corroboration for her claims. Sen. Bob Corker said he is a yes vote because she didn’t present any evidence to back her statement. Let that sink in for a moment – the alleged victim of an assault is the one responsible for providing evidence to support her memories and personal experience?
    • Yes, many years have passed and that creates a lesser likelihood of verifying information. And yes, the Judiciary Committee has conducted an investigation, and this not a criminal proceeding. But if it was important for Ford and Kavanaugh to have a chance to speak directly and to be cross-examined, why aren’t the other potential witnesses as well? Why aren’t their stories being probed more deeply than by a partisan committee? And once again, I’ll ask any readers for answers if anyone can provide a justification for why Mark Judge wasn’t called. The only explanations that I can come up with are either purely political or because the committee doesn’t care to get to the truth.
  •  Timing
    • Building on the last point, I can understand a senator at this point agonizing over whether to reject Kavanaugh based on the degree of evidence received (I don’t agree, but I can at least understand the argument). I can’t understand the justification that further exploration should not be done before a vote. It seems to me that and FBI investigation is the right path, but I am certainly open to any other objective and thorough process that would attempt to probe deeper into the details with others who may have information.
    • So what is the reason for avoiding this if not purely political? The handling of the Merrick Garland nomination made it clear that the Senate does not view a Supreme Court seat remaining open for some time is a problem. Yet in this case Sen. Mitch McConnell is committed to ‘plowing right through’.
  • Smear campaign
    • This seems to be real defense – this whole thing is some plot orchestrated by the Democrats to get him. Now, setting aside for a moment the politics of the situation, what this argument really does is dismiss Ford (and Ramirez and Swetnick) as irrelevant to the question of their own traumatic experiences. How can you square this argument with what these women have claimed? If the argument is that they are flat-out lying as part of a Democratic conspiracy, an investigation needs to get to the bottom of that conspiracy. What exactly is the case being made if not that? I need help here understanding it. And Sen. Lindsay Graham is definitely not the person who is going to make that clear.
    • This is a separate question from whether the Democrats have behaved honorably throughout this confirmation process and in how Dr. Ford’s name became public. I’ll just say this – the federal judiciary has been becoming an increasingly partisan battleground over the years, likely tracing back to the Bork confirmation hearings from my read of the history. The treatment of Merrick Garland brought things to a boiling point. Both Republicans and Democrats have made clear that having the right to appoint judges is one of the ultimate acts of politics today and things are only going to get worse from both sides. This has major implications for the health of our democracy that go well beyond the scope of this post.
  • Relevance
    • Kavanaugh continually emphasized that this allegation was dropped on him, that he worked his butt off to get where he is, that people say things in a high school yearbook that don’t mean much, that previous investigations of him found nothing, that he has many positive references. Let’s be clear – those things have nothing at all to do with whether or not he did indeed assault her. Nothing.
    • The fact that he has left no wiggle room in his denial means that the question of how much to care about the behavior of a 17 year old boy in the judgment of a 53 year old man is also irrelevant. If he did indeed commit this assault, even if he does not remember it at all (my personal opinion is that this is the most likely scenario), it is absolutely disqualifying that he would so forcefully deny it.

Ultimately, what are we to make of all of this? I am still processing it all (and being very ready for sleep doesn’t help matters!) and don’t have great answers. There are definitely serious questions about the degree of escalating partisanship in this country and this event will leave deep scars on our democracy for a long time to come. And we can hardly afford a greater divide than we already have.

Brett Kavanaugh had the chance to handle this differently. His response could have been focused on Dr. Ford and acknowledging what she has gone through and being willing to provide space for the truth to come out while respecting her experience. He and others claim to value her and what she has gone through, but the escalating rhetoric treats her as a pawn in a Democratic game rather than as independent human being with agency and the ability to make her own choices and deal with her own life. He did not have to admit to doing anything that he does not remember doing to do this, but simply to acknowledge that getting to truth of what happened to her that night would have been worth the delay that a thorough investigation would have created. This could have turned this into an opportunity for healing some of our divisions.

But to me this is really about women and anyone who is marginalized in various ways in our society. The clear message being sent here by plowing through with Kavanaugh’s confirmation is that this country does not give a shit about what Dr. Ford experienced as a scared 15 year old girl and the impact on the rest of her life, and in trying to make that right. And by extension, that the experiences of any women are irrelevant in the face of forces that are deemed more important – the right to appoint a judge who believes what you believe, or the suffering a powerful man faces when his name is dragged through the mud to face consequences for his behavior, the political value in confirming a judge before the midterms and the new session, and so many more. That is nothing new in our country as know that the concerns of the powerful dwarf those of the less powerful, but it is time we acknowledge the many ways this plays out and all commit to doing something about it.