For Republican leaders, lobbying Sen. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.) to support Brett Kavanaugh’s Supreme Court nomination posed a difficult challenge: they had very little to offer the retiring senator.
The Arizonan’s congressional career is nearly over, so GOP leaders couldn’t bribe him with committee spots or campaign commitments, and since he doesn’t want or need anything from him, Republicans weren’t in a position to threaten them, either.
Evidently, it didn’t matter.
Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., who had forced a one-week delay and a new FBI background check investigation into sexual misconduct allegations involving Kavanaugh, told reporters after the cloture vote Friday that he plans to vote to confirm the nominee Saturday barring some major unforeseen development.
Asked if he thinks Kavanaugh will be confirmed, Flake said, “I think so.”
As we discussed last week, after Flake announced he’d support Kavanaugh in committee, the Arizona Republican periodically delivers eloquent speeches, criticizing his party’s president whom he does not respect, and expressing seemingly sincere questions about the direction of the GOP.
But once again, after the speeches end, and it’s time to cast meaningful votes, Flake’s pattern of sticking with his partisan brethren is what matters. I don’t doubt he’ll furrow his brow when voting to put Kavanaugh on the nation’s highest court, just as I know his apparent anguish won’t matter.
At an event this week, Flake expressed concern about Kavanaugh’s partisanship, saying, “We can’t have that on the Court.”
Three days later, it appears the Arizona Republican concluded we can have it after all.









