Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) last week helped organize a curious political stunt. The Utah Republican wrote a joint letter with Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee to the panel’s Democratic members, explaining how impressed they are with the committee’s Republican chairman, Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), and the work he’s done ahead of Judge Brett Kavanaugh’s Supreme Court confirmations hearings.
The point of the partisan endeavor was apparently to tell Dems, in writing, how impressed Republicans are with themselves. Indeed, among other things, Hatch’s letter commended Grassley for conducting “the most thorough and transparent vetting possible.”
I especially enjoyed the use of the word “possible” — as in, there’s simply no way anyone, at any time, could’ve done a more thorough and transparent job in reviewing a high court nominee’s professional background. It’s not even possible.
Meanwhile, in reality, there’s a nearly three-year period from Kavanaugh’s tenure in the Bush/Cheney White House that senators were supposed to be able to review as part of the vetting process, but which Senate Republicans have declared off limits for reasons they haven’t fully explained.
Late last week, “the most thorough and transparent vetting possible” became even less thorough and far less transparent.
The Trump administration is withholding more than 100,000 pages of Brett Kavanaugh’s records from the Bush White House on the basis of presidential privilege ahead of the Supreme Court nominee’s confirmation hearing.
The Senate Judiciary Committee was notified of the action Friday. George W. Bush’s attorney Bill Burck told the panel it had essentially completed its work compiling documents, according to a letter obtained by The Associated Press. Bush directed them to err “on the side of transparency and disclosure, and we believe we have done so.”
But the current administration is also able to review the records, and the Trump White House “has directed that we not provide these documents,” the letter says.
If there’s a sensible defense for this, it’s hiding well.
The context, of course, deserves special attention: Team Trump waited until late on a Friday, ahead of a holiday weekend, to announce that it’s decided to hide more than 100,000 pages from Kavanaugh’s records.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said in a statement, “We’re witnessing a Friday night document massacre. President Trump’s decision to step in at the last moment and hide 100,000 pages of Judge Kavanaugh’s records from the American public is not only unprecedented in the history of Supreme Court nominations, it has all the makings of a cover-up…. What are they trying so desperately to hide?”









