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This Article is From Sep 25, 2018

Kavanaugh Tells Fox He's ‘Not Going Anywhere’ as Fight Heats Up

(Bloomberg) -- A defiant and sometimes emotional Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh said Monday he "never sexually assaulted anyone," defending himself in a televised interview against allegations that threaten to unravel his confirmation.

Republicans are scrambling to save Kavanaugh's nomination as Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell promised he will get a floor vote soon. Kavanaugh, interviewed with his wife on Fox News, said President Donald Trump called him Monday afternoon "and he said he's standing by me." Kavanaugh said he's not withdrawing his nomination and that "I want a fair process where I can defend my integrity."

The interview gave Kavanaugh a chance to make his case in advance of Thursday's Senate Judiciary Committee hearing that will listen to testimony from him and his principal accuser, Christine Blasey Ford. She says he sexually assaulted her during a Maryland house party when they were in high school.

"I was never at any such party," he said on Fox News. He said he may have met Ford, who went to a different school, but he added, "We did not travel in the same social circle. She was not a friend, not someone I knew."

A second woman, Deborah Ramirez, was quoted by the New Yorker magazine as saying that Kavanaugh exposed himself to her at a drunken party at Yale University when they were students. Bipartisan Judiciary Committee staff will seek to interview Ramirez privately about her allegation, said Senator John Cornyn of Texas, the second-ranking Republican.

Vote This Week?

GOP Senator Orrin Hatch of Utah, a strong Kavanaugh backer, told reporters he expects the committee to vote on confirmation by the end of the week. It's not clear how soon a vote by the full Senate would follow. The Supreme Court begins its new term on Oct. 1.

Separately, Michael Bromwich, a lawyer for Ford, wrote to Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley Monday to object to the committee's plan to hire an "experienced sex crimes prosecutor" to question Ford for the GOP members at Thursday's hearing. Ford wants senators to conduct the questioning.

The plan is "inconsistent with your stated wish to avoid a ‘circus,'" Bromwich wrote. "There is no precedent for this committee to bring in outside counsel for the sole purpose of shielding the members of the committee from performing their responsibility to question witnesses." He asked for the prosecutor's identity and requested a meeting with the prosecutor on Tuesday.

Democratic Senator Chris Coons of Delaware said he believed Ford as well as Ramirez. He said Kavanaugh should submit to a lie-detector test, as Ford says she has done.

"If Judge Kavanaugh wants to set this record straight, there are easy ways for him to come forward," Coons said on CNN. "An interview on Fox News doesn't quite rise to that standard."

The Fox News interview with Kavanaugh and his wife, Ashley, while his nomination is pending is without parallel, as every Supreme Court nominee in recent memory has avoided media interviews during the Senate confirmation process. Fox News is Trump's favorite network, and he often critiques his aides when they appear there.

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