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US President Donald Trump pats Brett Kavanaugh on the back during a ceremonial swearing-in at the White House on October 8, 2018. Photo: AFP

Donald Trump rallies to Brett Kavanaugh’s defence after new sexual misconduct allegation surfaces

  • President’s comments came after a New York Times article reported that a male former classmate at Yale had told the FBI about witnessing an alleged assault
Donald Trump

WASHINGTON – President Trump vigorously defended Brett Kavanaugh on Sunday following a new allegation of sexual misconduct during the Supreme Court justice’s college years, as some leading Democrats raised fresh suspicions that Kavanaugh was untruthful during last year’s Senate hearings leading to his confirmation to the high court.

In an early-morning tweet, Trump called on the Justice Department to “come to [Kavanaugh’s] rescue,” and accused critics of trying to deter the justice from rulings favourable to the administration. The president’s angry ripostes came a day after The New York Times reported that a male former classmate at Yale had told the FBI about witnessing an episode similar to, but separate from, an already publicised account by a female classmate, Deborah Ramirez, who said an inebriated Kavanaugh had thrust his penis in her face during a Yale party in the 1980s.

President Trump participates in the swearing-in ceremony of Brett Kavanaugh. Photo: AFP

The authors of The New York Times story said Kavanaugh did not speak to them about the newly reported allegation.

Last year’s contentious confirmation hearings were dominated by allegations that Kavanaugh, as a student at an elite prep school in the Washington suburbs, sexually assaulted Christine Blasey Ford, then a younger girl who went to school nearby.

Despite compelling testimony by Ford, who went on to become an academic in Northern California, Kavanaugh vehemently denied any wrongdoing, and with the backing of the White House and Trump allies like Senator Lindsey Graham, his nomination was approved, thus cementing a conservative majority on the Supreme Court.

Many of the Democrats who want to challenge Trump in 2020 have frequently referred to the string of sexual-misconduct allegations against the president himself, but there has been little appetite for making the Kavanaugh case a major campaign talking point, in part because the episode was so polarising. In the ensuing months, the president has often invoked the case at fiery rallies, insisting that Kavanaugh was the wronged party.

Trump apologises to Kavanaugh for his ‘incredible pain’ at ceremony

But with the campaign season now underway in earnest, the previous allegations, coupled with new information, are again becoming part of the discourse.

Democratic Senator Kamala Harris of California, a 2020 contender and former prosecutor, tweeted Sunday that “Brett Kavanaugh lied to the US Senate and most importantly to the American people.” She called for his impeachment, as did another Democratic hopeful, Julian Castro.

Sen. Amy Klobuchar, a Minnesota Democrat who, like Harris, sits on the Judiciary Committee and is seeking the Democratic nomination, repeated her deep misgivings about Kavanaugh in an interview Sunday on ABC’s This Week, citing his judicial views on the power of the presidency as well as the past and current sexual misconduct allegations.

But Klobuchar said that before impeachment proceedings could be considered, senators would need to examine documents relating to the administration’s decision-making surrounding the FBI probe called after Ford’s allegations were aired.

Backers of Trump and Kavanaugh quickly rallied to the defence of both men. Republican Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, also appearing on This Week, said the newly surfaced allegation recalls the “shameful circus” of last year’s hearings. He predicted at “the next Democratic debate, they’ll all be saying impeach Kavanaugh, impeach Trump – there’s nobody they don’t want to impeach.”

On Twitter, Trump blasted “Radical Left Democrats and their Partner, the LameStream Media” for targeting Kavanaugh and “talking loudly of their favourite word, impeachment.”

“He is an innocent man who has been treated HORRIBLY,” Trump wrote in one tweet. In another, he urged that the justice sue for “liable,” later correcting the spelling to “libel.” Trump also accused Kavanaugh critics of acting out of unhappiness over high court rulings.

“They are trying to influence his opinions,” the president tweeted.

Many commentators, however, called the situation yet another troubling instance of the president seeking to politicise the Justice Department and federal law enforcement by calling on the department to intercede on Kavanaugh’s behalf.

The New York Times article focused on Ramirez’s student days and her account of a party at which Kavanaugh, then a freshman, “pulled down his pants and thrust his penis at her, prompting her to swat it away and inadvertently touch it.” The story said the FBI had failed to interview witnesses who may have been able to provide corroborating testimony, and that the paper’s 10-month investigation suggested there was evidence to support Ramirez’s account.

The New York Times also disclosed a previously unreported allegation: “A classmate, Max Stier, saw Mr Kavanaugh with his pants down at a different drunken dormparty, where friends pushed his penis into the hand of a female student.” The article said Stier, who heads a non-profit organisation in Washington, has not come forward publicly with his account, but notified senators and the FBI at the time.

The authors of the Times story said Kavanaugh did not speak to them because they could not agree on terms for an interview, but noted that he denied Ford’s and Ramirez’s earlier allegations, and declined to answer questions about Stier’s account.

The FBI, the article said, did not investigate Stier’s claim.

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