[Pages S6378-S6380]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                     NOMINATION OF BRETT KAVANAUGH

  Mr. CORNYN. Mr. President, as the world knows by now, yesterday we 
had another hearing on the nomination of Judge Brett Kavanaugh to be a 
member of the U.S. Supreme Court. It was necessary to do so because an 
allegation had been made by Dr. Christine Ford to the ranking member, 
our friend Senator Feinstein from California, dated July 30, but 
because Dr. Ford requested confidentiality and she wanted to remain 
anonymous, none of this was brought to anybody's attention until some 
time after the judge's original confirmation hearing occurred. The 
judge visited with 60-plus Members of the Senate, including the ranking 
member, and it was never mentioned to him. No questions were asked 
about it.
  Contrary to her wishes, Dr. Ford was thrust into the national 
spotlight. She said she didn't agree to have her letter released to the 
press. She did not consent to having her identity revealed. She did not 
want to be part of what has turned into a three-ring circus. But, once 
there, when she asked to tell her story, we consented to doing that, 
and yesterday we heard from Dr. Ford as well as Judge Kavanaugh.
  Judge Kavanaugh asked to be heard to clear his good name and speak 
directly to the American people, and he did so forcefully yesterday.
  Now we have heard Dr. Ford's story, and we have heard Judge 
Kavanaugh's rebuttal. What we have learned is that there is no evidence 
to corroborate Dr. Ford's allegation. All of the people she said were 
there on the occasion in question said they have no memory of it or it 
didn't happen--no corroboration.
  As we all watched Judge Kavanaugh defend his personal integrity in 
front of the Nation, we saw his righteous indignation. He choked back 
his tears and aimed his fury not at Dr. Ford--none of us did that--but, 
rather, at this unfair confirmation process, which, frankly, is an 
embarrassment to me and should be an embarrassment to the U.S. Senate. 
To take somebody who has requested confidentiality and leak that 
information to the press and then to thrust her into the national 
spotlight under these circumstances, I think, is an abuse of power. But 
having made that request, once she was in the spotlight, we felt it was 
very important to treat her respectfully and to listen to her story.
  I told anybody who would listen that I wanted to treat Dr. Ford the 
same way I would expect that my mother or my sister or my daughters 
would be treated under similar circumstances. Conversely, I thought 
that we should treat Judge Kavanaugh fairly, too, just as we would our 
father, our brother, or our son. In other words, this is more than just 
about Dr. Ford; this is about Dr. Ford and Judge Kavanaugh.
  We heard the judge respond with quite a bit of righteous indignation, 
as I said, talking about his family having been exposed to the vilest 
sorts of threats, including his two young daughters. I know it was a 
hard pill for many of our Democratic colleagues to swallow to hear the 
truth of what this terrible process has resulted in, both for Judge 
Kavanaugh and Dr. Ford, but too much was on the line for Judge 
Kavanaugh to withhold his defense of his good name. After all, his 
reputation is on the line, his family is on the line, and his family, 
including his wife and his two daughters, are all caught up in what 
must be a miserable experience.
  Still, I am glad we held the hearing, and I am grateful to Rachel 
Mitchell for participating and asking her probing questions.
  Some have questioned: Why would a Senator yield to a professional in 
the sexual abuse field to ask questions of Dr. Ford? Well, it was 
simply because we wanted to depoliticize that process and to treat Dr. 
Ford with respect and gently, recognizing that somehow, somewhere, she 
has been exposed to some terrible trauma. But it was important for Ms. 
Mitchell to ask questions and to get answers to those questions so we 
could do our job.
  I appreciate Chairman Grassley for doing his best to keep order in 
running the committee efficiently, as much as that is possible. At the 
first hearing, after Senators would speak over each other and would 
endlessly make motions that were out of order--when one Senator said, 
``I am breaking the confidentiality rules,'' I said, ``This seems like 
a hearing by mob rule,'' not with the kind of demeanor and civility 
that you would expect from the U.S. Senate. I think Chairman Grassley 
has done the best anybody could do under difficult circumstances.
  As I said, this hearing was not easy for either Dr. Ford or for Judge 
Kavanaugh. It has been painful for everybody involved.
  Thankfully, we are much closer to a resolution on this nomination. 
Today, there was a markup in the Judiciary Committee, and I am glad we 
were able to pass that nomination out of the committee to the Senate 
floor.
  Some are saying that we are moving too fast. To them, I would say 
that it is pretty clear what the objective of the opponents of the 
nomination is. Their objective is delay, delay, delay. Some have said 
that their goal is to delay this confirmation past the midterm 
election, hope that the election turns out well for them, and 
essentially defeat the nomination and keep the Supreme Court vacancy 
open until President Trump leaves office.
  First, there was the paper chase; they needed more documents or, 
perhaps, they said there were too many. But the question I always had 
is this: If you have already announced your opposition to the nominee, 
why do you need more information? Unless, of course, you are open to 
changing your mind--but it is clear that is not the game that they are 
engaging in here.
  Now there are those who demand that the background investigation be 
opened into two new allegations that appeared following Dr. Ford's. 
Today, the majority leader and some of our colleagues have announced an 
agreement to extend the background investigation for up to another week 
for these witnesses to be interviewed by the FBI. But I would note that 
the most recent allegations are so absurd, are so fantastic that not 
even the New York Times would run a story about Judge Kavanaugh's time 
in college as reported by Ms. Ramirez. They worked hard to try to 
corroborate her story by interviewing dozens of potential witnesses. 
None of them would confirm or corroborate Ms. Ramirez's story, but they 
did find, as Ms. Ramirez was talking to one of those individuals who 
was interviewed, where she admitted that she may have misidentified 
Judge Kavanaugh. In other words, she admitted that she may have the 
wrong guy--not credible, not serious, but dangerous.
  It is dangerous in the sense that some of our colleagues take the 
position that all you need to do is listen to an accusation, and that 
is enough to make up your mind. You don't need to listen to the other 
side. As Judge Kavanaugh said, in Dr. Ford's case, it didn't happen; he 
wasn't there. If you listen to just one side of the argument, I guess 
it does make making up your mind a lot easier because you don't 
actually have to think about it and you don't have to think about what 
a fair process is in order to decide whose arguments you believe or 
whether somebody has met the burden of showing evidence that their 
claim is actually true.
  This has become so ridiculous that the newest claims made by a young 
woman named Julie Swetnick, who is represented by Stormy Daniels' 
lawyer, are riddled with holes. Why would a

[[Page S6379]]

woman continue to go to parties with high schoolers when she was in 
college, and why in the world would she go to not 1, not 2, but 10 of 
these alleged drug- and alcohol-infused parties where gang rape 
occurred? It is just outrageous--incredible.
  We have encouraged all of these individuals, no matter how incredible 
the allegation may be, to work with the Judiciary Committee and submit 
to an interview with the bipartisan representation of the Judiciary 
Committee there. This is standard operating procedure for the Judiciary 
Committee. The basic background investigation is done by the FBI. But 
they are not investigating a crime; it is a background investigation in 
which they take notes on their conversations with witnesses. They don't 
tell you which witness to believe or what conclusions to draw from 
that. They send that to the Judiciary Committee, and the Judiciary 
Committee follows up with additional questions, if necessary. Lying to 
the FBI--just like lying to the committee--is actually a crime 
punishable by a felony, so both carry serious consequences and a 
serious warning to those who might try to lie their way into a 
background check.
  What is so ridiculous about where we find ourselves is that in 
addition to Dr. Ford's confidential letter to the ranking member being 
released against her wishes and without her consent, contributing to 
this circus atmosphere as we continue to try to investigate some of 
these claims, the Democratic professional staff have been refusing to 
cooperate or participate, even as they continue to make more and more 
demands. It is clear that their appetite for delay is insatiable, and 
delay is their ultimate goal.
  For those who continue to say that they want the FBI involved, I will 
tell them that the FBI has been and is involved. It has conducted its 
background investigations just as it did on the six previous occasions 
when Judge Kavanaugh was being vetted for other positions within the 
Federal Government. You heard that right: Judge Kavanaugh has been 
through six FBI background checks, and none of these matters have come 
up previously.
  What we were doing yesterday with the hearing was part of our job, 
which is to continue the investigation. I think people have a very 
narrow idea of what an investigation entails. It is not just a 
background check by the FBI. It is the interviews by the professional 
staff on the Judiciary Committee, and those are the hearings like the 
one we had yesterday, all day, hearing from Judge Kavanaugh and Dr. 
Ford. That is our job; that is our constitutional role, to provide 
advice and consent.
  Plus, if our colleagues across the aisle were really interested in a 
background investigation of Dr. Ford's complaints in a confidential 
manner, as she requested, they could have requested that be done and 
the results reported to us in a closed setting. What happened to Dr. 
Ford is inexcusable. To have a Senator sit on this allegation and 
refuse to turn it in to the committee so it could be investigated in a 
confidential way that would have protected her anonymity and would have 
allowed the committee to question both Judge Kavanaugh and her--that 
didn't happen, by design, perhaps because the goal really wasn't about 
giving Judge Kavanaugh or Dr. Ford a fair hearing. It was about 
delaying this confirmation vote.
  When Judge Kavanaugh was interviewed about a week or so ago and again 
yesterday, he talked about a fair process--in other words, hearing from 
both sides of an argument. But under our constitutional system, if you 
are accused of a crime--and, believe me, Judge Kavanaugh has been 
accused of multiple crimes--you are entitled to the presumption of 
innocence. In other words, there is a burden to come forward with 
evidence to justify and support an accusation, and if you don't do 
that, your accusation is not enough to meet that burden.
  Usually what we have are corroborating witnesses--other people 
present at the time who can corroborate what the allegation is. But all 
of the witnesses who have been identified by Dr. Ford cannot 
corroborate or confirm her allegation. They say that they have no 
memory of that or it simply didn't happen.
  Even the Bible talks about the importance of corroborating witnesses. 
I didn't find this, but I vaguely remembered it, and someone on my 
staff pointed out Deuteronomy 19:15:

       One witness is not enough to convict anyone accused of any 
     crime or offense they may have committed. A matter must be 
     established by the testimony of two or three witnesses.

  So this is a rule of ancient origin dating back to the Old Testament. 
That is what we are talking about today. When Dr. Ford comes with an 
accusation 35 or 36 years after the fact, and no one else can confirm 
her story, it is not enough to carry the day.
  The other thing we need to be wary of is false choices. This is not a 
matter of he said, she said. Someone said this is a matter of he said, 
she said, they said: Dr. Ford said one thing; Judge Kavanaugh said 
another; the so-called corroborating witnesses said another. But what 
they said did not corroborate Dr. Ford's story. Just the contrary, they 
confirmed Judge Kavanaugh's denial of any participation in anything 
remotely like that which Dr. Ford alleges.
  So after 36 years, as Ms. Mitchell was able to develop, we know, for 
perhaps obvious reasons, that Dr. Ford's account has some 
inconsistencies and some gaps regarding the timing, location, and 
details regarding these events. I think we need to listen to her. We 
need to take her story into account. As I said, I want to treat her the 
same way I would want my mother, sister, or daughters treated under 
similar circumstances. But we can't ignore the inconsistencies and the 
gap in her story and the fact that she has tried to tell it 36 years 
after the fact.
  We also can't ignore the full-throated defense and the heartfelt 
denial of Judge Kavanaugh or the testimony that none of this is in the 
character of Judge Kavanaugh. We have heard that from people dating all 
the way back to 1982. Indeed, Ms. Mitchell--a professional prosecutor, 
prosecuting sex crimes in Arizona--told us last night that with her 
more than two decades of experience and the kind of case brought 
forward by Ms. Ford, she would not file those charges against a 
defendant because there simply is not enough evidence. In fact, the 
only witnesses identified by Dr. Ford denied the event actually 
occurred. As a matter of fact, she said that she couldn't even get a 
search warrant or arrest warrant in a case like this. If you can't 
identify the time or the place, you are not even going to be able to 
get a search warrant. You certainly can't show probable cause, which is 
required by law.
  So here is where we are. If the allegations we discussed during 
yesterday's hearing remain uncorroborated and unproven, if it never 
came up in the context of six Federal background checks, if it has been 
explicitly denied by the nominee, if the three alleged eyewitnesses 
have no recollection of it or say that it didn't happen, if it 
conflicts with the account of some 65 women who knew the nominee to 
behave honorably in high school and countless more women who have known 
and interacted with Judge Kavanaugh since--the timing seems unusual, 
perhaps even politically motivated. And if our colleagues across the 
aisle chose not to act on this information once presented but rather to 
spring it on us and Judge Kavanaugh after the fact, there is no reason, 
in my mind, that we should not move forward with the nomination because 
we have seen what happens.
  This is not just about Dr. Ford; it is about the subsequent 
allegations by Ms. Ramirez and additional allegations by Ms. Swetnick, 
each more salacious, each more incredible, and each more out of 
character with what we know about Brett Kavanaugh. And it is going to 
continue. The longer this nomination is unresolved, there are going to 
be more and more people coming out of the woodwork to make accusations 
that are uncorroborated and unprovable. You can imagine what this does 
to Judge Kavanaugh and his family as he is left hanging like a pinata, 
where people just come by and take another whack at him and his family.
  We have to move forward. We can't establish a precedent by which a 
nominee can be derailed by a mere accusation that is unproven. We are 
never going to get good people to agree to serve in these important 
offices, and we can't allow the nomination process to be a drive-by 
character assassination that is unproven. The only ammunition our 
colleagues across the aisle

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need in order to shoot down any figure at any time would be innuendo--
innuendo, speculation, suspicion, unproven allegations, nothing more. 
We are not going to let that happen. We are not going to establish that 
precedent. It would be bad for the Senate. It would be bad for the 
United States of America.
  Please don't misunderstand me. I am glad Dr. Ford had a chance to 
have her say. We owed her that much. I know it took some courage, and 
it is a reminder to all Americans that victims can and should be heard. 
As I said, I myself have two daughters. We all have a mother. Some are 
fortunate to have sisters or a spouse. This can be a very personal 
matter to every one of us. Yet we all know that all of us have fathers, 
and many of us have brothers. Some have husbands and sons. In other 
words, my point is, if this kind of uncorroborated allegation would 
seem so manipulated in exploiting vulnerable people who made 
accusations like this and we tolerate that, I think it will forever 
poison the confirmation process and discourage good people from coming 
forward.
  We must always be fair to both the victims and those who stand 
accused. It has to be a two-way street. I have supported Judge 
Kavanaugh's nomination because I have known him since the year 2000. In 
my experience, he has always been an upstanding and certainly he is an 
incredibly well-qualified individual.
  We have heard everybody--from his fellow lawyers to his law clerks, 
to women he has worked with, to former Presidents of the United 
States--say that. We know he has an incredible record on the DC Circuit 
Court of Appeals, where many of his decisions have been affirmed by the 
U.S. Supreme Court. I know he will judge fairly and carefully. I 
believe he belongs on the Nation's highest bench. In a few more days, 
after a few more delays, we will finally vote to put him there and say 
enough with the games.
  I yield the floor.
  I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so 
ordered.

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