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Three senators will likely decide whether Brett Kavanaugh becomes a Supreme Court justice in a matter of hours: Jeff Flake (R-AZ), Susan Collins (R-ME), and Joe Manchin (D-WV).
All three voted to advance Kavanaugh’s nomination in Friday’s key procedural vote. But they have yet to announce their position on the final vote, to confirm Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court for life.
There were other swing votes: Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) and Heidi Heitkamp (D-ND), most notably. But they are now officially opposing Kavanaugh. The votes of Republicans Collins and Flake, as well as Manchin, the most closely watched Democrat, will be decisive.
Because the trifecta has been working together over the last few days, there is a belief that they will end up voting the same way. That isn’t a guarantee, of course, but the three senators could function as a voting bloc, dictating the fate of Kavanaugh’s confirmation.
They each had their own journey to the middle of the most contentious Supreme Court fight in 30 years. Flake is the retiring Never Trump Republican, torn between his crusade for civility and decency and his allegiance to the GOP. Collins is the moderate Mainer who already defied her party on Obamacare repeal and who has a strong record of supporting women’s rights. Manchin is up for reelection in the country’s most pro-Trump state, and though he looks unexpectedly strong in his campaign, that could change in an instant if Manchin takes an unpopular vote to block Trump’s handpicked Supreme Court nominee.
They’ve been seen huddling together, charting out a path forward. Collins and Manchin supported Flake’s demand that the FBI investigate the sexual assault allegations against Brett Kavanaugh, as did Murkowski, and Collins met with Flake the night before he took his dramatic game-changing stand.
But mere hours from a final vote, nobody is sure what these three will do. Collins is scheduled to announce her position at a 3 pm floor speech Friday. They hold Kavanaugh’s nomination, and the future of the nation’s high court, in their hands.
Lawmakers need to find cover with difficult votes
Of any Republican, Murkowski always seemed the closest to a sure “no” vote. She has publicly stated that the question before the Senate is whether or not a woman who has been sexually assaulted is to be believed. She also revealed amid the heat of the Kavanaugh debate that she has had her own #MeToo moment in the past.
“We are now in a place where it’s not about whether or not Judge Kavanaugh is qualified,” Murkowski told the New York Times. “It is about whether or not a woman who has been a victim at some point in her life is to be believed.”
The Alaska senator has earned her reputation with her inscrutable nature, especially when the pressure is highest. But on Friday, she put her cards on the table and voted against advancing Kavanaugh’s nomination any further — making her all but certain to oppose his confirmation in the final tally on Saturday.
But even with Murkowski voting “no,” Kavanaugh could still be confirmed. At least one more Republican senator — Collins or Flake being the likeliest candidates — would need to join her. None of the Democrats — Manchin, most importantly — would be able to cross the aisle and vote for him either. The 51-49 Senate split leaves little room for error for either party.
We’ve seen the same dynamic with tough votes on Obamacare repeal and tax reform. It takes a group to tank something — and one person to save it. Nobody wants to be the 51st vote in any direction.
That’s why Flake, Collins, and Manchin could work as a unit. Voting as a bloc gives each of them cover for what will be a difficult vote no matter where they come down.
A centrist coalition on Kavanaugh’s nomination started to come together the day of the riveting Senate hearing with Christine Blasey Ford and Kavanaugh. (Ford and two other women have accused Kavanaugh of sexual misconduct or assault, allegations he has denied.) CNN reported that Flake met with Collins, Manchin, and Murkowski that day. Prominent Senate reporters, such as Politico’s Burgess Everett, have said that a group of centrist Democrats and moderate Senate Republicans would vote together.
Donnelly, Manchin, Murkowski and Collins are all expected to vote the same way, per senators and aides
— Burgess Everett (@burgessev) September 28, 2018
Since those reports started to come out, Donnelly has announced he would oppose Kavanaugh, and Murkowski has appeared to drift away from Republican leaders. But the other three have remained firmly, almost comically undecided. And all eyes have turned to Flake, who engineered the one-week delay on the Kavanaugh vote so the FBI could perform its investigation into the sexual assault allegations against the judge.
Flake has been leaving a lot of room for himself to vote for Kavanaugh
Because Collins and Manchin have largely stayed silent on how they’ll vote, Flake has attracted all of the attention as he has spoken publicly and repeatedly about Kavanaugh in the last few days.
While Flake has been litigating his confused feelings publicly, the others in the group have been quieter. Collins chided the president’s comments about Ford but she has stayed evasive on her intentions for Kavanaugh’s confirmation. Manchin has also tried to keep his powder dry for the past two weeks.
NEWS: Manchin has gone from undecided on Kavanaugh to "totally undecided"
— Burgess Everett (@burgessev) October 3, 2018
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Before calling for reopening the FBI background check, Flake had said he would vote in favor of Kavanaugh’s nomination Friday morning. His rationale: “What I do know is that our system of justice affords a presumption of innocence to the accused, absent corroborating evidence,” Flake said in a statement.
If not for the allegations of sexual misconduct, Flake would have been an easy vote for Kavanaugh. He said as much last Friday after pushing for the FBI’s investigation: “I’m a conservative. I would love to see Judge Kavanaugh be confirmed, and I hope to be able to do that. But I want a better process,” Flake told reporters at the Capitol.
Since then, Flake has positioned himself on every side of the debate around Kavanaugh — always leaving himself room to vote in favor of the judge, but never quite committing either.
- Flake has condemned Kavanaugh’s “sharp and partisan” tone during his Senate testimony, saying “we can’t have that on the Court.” But he later clarified that it wasn’t disqualifying.
- He compared the possibility that Kavanaugh lied about his drinking in high school under oath to how he himself would probably exaggerate how many yards he gained in high school football. But then he said if “somebody lies under oath, that’s not something we can deal with.”
- He called Trump’s mockery of Ford “kind of appalling,” but hasn’t said definitively that he believes her story either.
For those who have followed Flake closely in the Senate, he’s known for this kind of mercurial behavior — and he usually ends up siding with his own party. But this week, even Flake said he sometimes feels “like a man temporarily without a party.”
The wild card has been the FBI report that Flake forced Republican leaders to allow. All three senators they were waiting to see the results before they make a final decision. After seeing the report, Flake and Collins seemed satisfied with the scope of the investigation. But they still haven’t announced their final decision.
Flake, the retiring Never Trump Republican preoccupied with civility and decency, has a decision to make: Is the greater risk denying an innocent man his seat on the Supreme Court — or letting a man accused of sexual assault on to the nation’s highest court for life?
But the Arizona senator isn’t alone as he agonizes over the vote. At least two of his peers, caught in the political storm of the century, will have to make up their minds too.