As Judge Brett Kavanaugh’s Supreme Court nomination moves closer to a vote, Dr. Christine Blasey Ford is prepared to testify tomorrow about an alleged sexual assault from the early 1980s. The California professor is not, however, the conservative jurist’s only accuser.
We learned a few days ago about another alleged incident involving Kavanaugh and Deborah Ramirez, who was a classmate of Kavanaugh’s at Yale. Ramirez, who is now a board member at a non-profit group that helps victims of domestic violence, was initially reluctant to share her story, but she’s now prepared to face FBI scrutiny and share information with senators.
If you saw Rachel’s interview last night with John Clune, Ramirez’s attorney, you know that Republicans don’t seem too eager to explore this second controversy.
The committee’s Republican majority “refused” to have a phone conversation about the possible testimony of Deborah Ramirez, and it has demanded she show all her cards before even negotiating an appearance, lawyer John Clune said Tuesday on MSNBC’s “The Rachel Maddow Show.”
“Here’s the problem, Rachel: They won’t talk to us,” Clune said. “The demand that they keep making to us is, ‘Give us every piece of information that you have now and then we can talk about scheduling a phone call.’ And that’s just not the kind of partisan game playing that our client deserves.”
And while this makes it sound as if Republicans are taking a rather passive posture toward this second accusation, the response from Donald Trump was even more striking.
In a brief Q&A with reporters, the president gave a long, meandering answer about Ramirez’s claim, dismissing her allegation as part of a Democratic “con game.”









