As Senate Republicans scramble and rush to a vote, Murray says: “SLOW DOWN”
Murray: “I watched Dr. Ford with tears in my eyes. She was so brave. So compelling. So real. The memories she recounted—the memories she will never forget—were heartbreaking.
“…the most striking thing to me was this… Judge Kavanaugh so clearly does not want an investigation.”
“Yesterday’s hearing doesn’t have to be the final word… We have an opportunity to take a breath, slow down, and let this process work the way it is supposed to.”
“I’m not giving up. I’m not giving up this fight to make sure women who bravely come forward are not ignored, swept under the rug, or silenced by powerful men.”
**WATCH Senator Murray’s Speech HERE***
(Washington, D.C.) – Today, as the Senate Judiciary Committee moved forward with the nomination of Judge Kavanaugh and the full Senate appears to be headed to a vote in the coming days, U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA), spoke on the Senate floor to react to the hearing yesterday and echo calls for her Senate Republican colleagues to slow down the confirmation process in order to thoroughly investigate allegations against him by Dr. Ford and others, hold additional hearings, and hear from all relevant witnesses.
In her remarks, Senator Murray once again made clear she believes Dr. Ford and was deeply moved by her testimony yesterday. She also raised concerns with Judge Kavanaugh’s testimony, including inaccuracies in his statements along with his temperament before the committee yesterday.
Key Excerpts:
“I watched Dr. Ford with tears in my eyes. She was so brave. So compelling. So real. The memories she recounted—the memories she will never forget—were heartbreaking. The living room. The stairs. The bedroom. The music turned up loud. The bed. Brett Kavanaugh—drunk and on top of her. The feeling she had when he covered her mouth to stop her from screaming. The raucous laughter between Brett Kavanaugh and Mark Judge… It was gutting.”
“…the most striking thing to me was… Judge Kavanaugh so clearly does not want an investigation. He doesn’t want the facts to come out. He doesn’t want other witnesses to be brought in who, if he is telling the truth, could corroborate his story and help clear his name. He certainly doesn’t want anyone to hear from the other two women who have come forward with their experiences regarding him and sexual assault—and who are willing to come testify under oath. He wants to rush through this as quickly as he can, with as little information as possible coming out.”
“… we simply cannot allow a Supreme Court Justice to be jammed through like this, right now. It would be a disgrace. It would damage the integrity of the Supreme Court. And it would shred whatever integrity we have left here in the United States Senate.”
“I want to say one more thing to women and survivors right now who are angry, who are dispirited, who have reached out to me and told me they are shocked, crying, and in disbelief. To them I say: We all have the right to these tears, but we all have a duty to not give up. I’m not giving up. I’m not giving up this fight to make sure women who bravely come forward are not ignored, swept under the rug, or silenced by powerful men.”
Watch Senator Murray’s speech HERE.
Senator Murray’s full remarks below:
“M. President, like millions of people across the country, I watched the hearing yesterday with a mix of so many strong emotions.
“First, I watched Dr. Ford with tears in my eyes. She was so brave. So compelling. So real. The memories she recounted—the memories she will never forget—were heartbreaking. The living room. The stairs. The bedroom. The music turned up loud. The bed. Brett Kavanaugh—drunk and on top of her. The feeling she had when he covered her mouth to stop her from screaming. The raucous laughter between Brett Kavanaugh and Mark Judge.
“The way she felt it then and told it now—two boys laughing and having a good time while a scared 15 year old girl lay pinned down on a bed worried that she may die. The bathroom, listening for Brett and Mark to leave, hearing them bounce off the walls as they went back down the stairs. Leaving the house. The sense of relief that she escaped. And something anyone who has been a 15 year old girl can understand—not wanting to tell her parents she’d been at a house with no adults, older boys, and beer.
“It was gutting.
“Dr. Ford spoke for herself—but she was channeling the voices of millions of women and survivors across the country who are too often ignored, interrupted, bullied, or swept aside. She was an inspiration—and I hope every one of my colleagues watched her speak and answer questions. She made it clear that she was there not because she wanted to be—but because she felt she had to be. She shared her story not because she wanted to create a spectacle or embarrass anyone—but because she felt it was her civic duty to share what she knew about Judge Kavanaugh to the people making the decision about whether or not he should be on our nation’s highest court.
“The Republicans on that Committee were too afraid to ask her anything themselves, but she did an amazing job keeping her composure under cross-examination by the prosecutor that Republicans hired to question Dr. Ford on their behalf.
“And Dr. Ford made it clear, over and over, politely but firmly—she welcomed an investigation. She opened herself up to questions and scrutiny. She took a polygraph. She remembered some details that further investigation could help expand on—like seeing Mark Judge at the supermarket a few weeks later. And she seemed to not be able to understand why nobody was digging into these details that could help uncover even more.
“She said she came to be helpful. She wants to be more helpful. She did her job as a United State citizen, and she was simply asking for Senators to do theirs.
“M. President, then I watched Judge Kavanaugh, and I was appalled and dismayed. The rage on his face. The sense of entitlement he displayed. Refusing to answer questions—sneering at Senators while he demanded that they answer his questions.
“The outrage that he was even being questioned about an issue like this after all he’s done for this country. Not an ounce of contrition. Not a modicum of shame.
“The attempts—over and over—to turn this away from the substance, the allegations from women against him and the facts that could shine light on them and toward attacks on the process and a political party. The continued falsehoods and evasions—things he said that just aren’t credible.
“From his claims that he never—never—got blackout drunk or had memory lapses during a night of drinking—despite everything we’ve heard from the people who know him, and everything we have heard from him in the past about his younger days. To his claim that he and Dr. Ford didn’t ‘travel in the same social circles’—when we know that’s just not true!
“He has said before that he was friends with Holton Arms girls, and we know Dr. Ford dated a good friend of Judge Kavanaugh, who introduced the two of them. To his absolutely false claims that the Committee has already received all the evidence it needs—which, as a judge, he knows is simply not the case. And on and on.
“But M. President—the most striking thing to me was this, and this is something I hope every Senator pays very close attention to, because I know it’s what people across the country saw vividly and repeatedly. And that is the fact that Judge Kavanaugh so clearly does not want an investigation.
“He doesn’t want the facts to come out. He doesn’t want other witnesses to be brought in who, if he is telling the truth, could corroborate his story and help clear his name. He certainly doesn’t want anyone to hear from the other two women who have come forward with their experiences regarding him and sexual assault—and who are willing to come testify under oath. He wants to rush through this as quickly as he can, with as little information as possible coming out.
“M. President—is this how someone acts if they truly have nothing to hide? Is this how someone behaves if they truly want to clear their good name? Is this what someone innocent—truly innocent—of everything he is being accused of would do?
“M. President—I don’t think so. And I don’t think the people watching yesterday thought so either. But M. President, I want to close by setting aside what I thought of the hearing yesterday for just one moment.
“I believed Dr. Ford—I thought she was telling the truth. But I want to set that aside to make one more point. Because maybe some of my colleagues watched that hearing yesterday and didn’t see it the same way I did. Maybe they saw that hearing and they thought Dr. Ford was credible, and they also thought Judge Kavanaugh was credible. Maybe they thought ‘this is a he-said-she-said, I just don’t know who or what to believe.’
“M. President—here is my message to those colleagues of mine: yesterday’s hearing doesn’t have to be the final word. There is absolutely no rush. None. Zero. We have an opportunity to take a breath, slow down, and let this process work the way it is supposed to. The 11 Republicans on the Judiciary Committee may have scrambled to rush this through their phase—but we don’t have to follow suit in the full Senate.
“We can have the FBI investigate. We can continue our own investigations. We can bring in additional relevant witnesses in the most appropriate ways. We can hold additional hearings. I know we all want this to be over—trust me, I wish we didn’t have to go through this.
“But we simply cannot allow a Supreme Court Justice to be jammed through like this, right now. It would be a disgrace. It would damage the integrity of the Supreme Court. And it would shred whatever integrity we have left here in the United States Senate.
“So I say to those colleagues: Even if you hate how this process has gone so far. Even if you wish this had been done differently—that the information had come out about these allegations sooner. Even if you think this was bungled completely—and you know, even if you want to point fingers and blame Democrats for that. Fine.
“But we are here right here, right now. And we are facing one of our most important jobs as United States Senators, laid out in Article II, Section 2 of our Constitution—to provide advice and consent on Supreme Court nominations.
“M. President—we can litigate how this went later. I am sure there are ways it could have gone better. We can figure that out—we should do that so we can do better next time. But we should not—we cannot—let anger and pique over process and politics cloud what is clearly the right thing to do here.
“I hear there are conversations going on in the Judiciary Committee right now about slowing down and starting investigations, and I am hopeful these end up leading to us being able to do our jobs.”
“Because, no one— no one— should want these allegations hanging out there—or should want the investigations to happen and information to come out while he is on the Court.
“Let’s slow down. Let’s learn more. Let’s not put a man on the Supreme Court with these allegations swirling around him and while we still have the opportunity to clear this up and get this right.
“And finally, M. President, I want to say one more thing to women and survivors right now who are angry, who are dispirited, who have reached out to me and told me they are shocked, crying, and in disbelief. To them I say: We all have the right to these tears, but we all have a duty to not give up.
“I’m not giving up. I’m not giving up this fight to make sure women who bravely come forward are not ignored, swept under the rug, or silenced by powerful men.
“And I know I stand with millions and millions of women and men across the country who are watching the United States Senate very closely right now—and who aren’t going to give up either.
“Thank you M. President, I yield the floor.”