Sadly, the week-long pause in Brett Kavanaugh's confirmation process is likely to give him the seat on the Supreme Court that he clearly does not deserve.
Sadly, the week-long pause in Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmation process is likely to give him the seat on the Supreme Court that he clearly does not deserve.

Kavanaugh and beyond

By Peter Funt

Sadly, the week-long pause in Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmation process is likely to give him the seat on the Supreme Court that he clearly does not deserve.

Only discovery of a true smoking gun — definitive evidence that Kavanaugh sexually abused a young teen while in high school — will dash his hopes. Given the brevity of the new FBI investigation, that is not likely.

What investigators will probably uncover this week is confirmation that Kavanaugh was a party-going teen who caroused with friends and disrespected young women and then decades later tried to fudge facts under oath before the Senate Judiciary Committee. That alone should be disqualifying.

Instead, it is likely to give dissident Republicans, led by Arizona Sen. Jeff Flake, the cover needed to reluctantly vote in Kavanaugh’s favor. “The FBI was unable to corroborate the accusations made by Christine Blasey Ford,” they could say. “Under the circumstances we cannot deny Judge Kavanaugh his place on the Court.”

With that, everything turns upside down. Ford’s heroic testimony becomes an afterthought, because it wasn’t “proved.” The women who bravely confronted Flake in a Senate office building elevator — along with thousands of others who protested on Friday — discover that the system worked against them.

And the Trump Administration succeeds in placing another conservative, one with tainted character no less, on the Court — affecting our lives and laws for decades to come.

Is there anything positive in this ugly turn of events? Yes.

Jeff Flake, who is retiring from the Senate, could emerge as a Republican challenger to Donald Trump in 2020. During the one-week FBI “pause,” Flake will be in New Hampshire — a long way from his home in Arizona, and a place that presidential aspirants like to visit early and often.

Amy Klobuchar, the articulate Senator from Minnesota who helped force the FBI investigation and who bore the worst of Kavanaugh’s crude and combative testimony — so much so that he apologized to her during the hearing — looks increasingly like a viable Democratic candidate for president.

The midterm elections, now just a few weeks away, could swing even more heavily in Democrats’ favor following an unsavory confirmation of Judge Kavanaugh.

And the sweeping movement to expose past abuses against women and reshape our cultural norms going forward could, after the Kavanaugh setback, gain even more momentum.

So while the system seems broken, the pendulum is not.

The nation will pay a steep price with the likes of Brett Kavanaugh on its highest court. But his confirmation, if it happens, might actually be a marker for the point in time when things finally began to swing the other way.

The viewpoints expressed above are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of The Independent.

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Peter Funt
In print and on television, Peter Funt continues the Funt Family tradition of making people smile – while examining the human condition. After 15 years hosting the landmark TV series “Candid Camera,” Peter writes frequent op-eds for The Boston Globe and The Wall Street Journal as well as his weekly column distributed by the Cagle Cartoon Syndicate. His writing contains the same pointed social observations that have made “Candid Camera” so popular since its invention by Peter’s dad, Allen, back in 1947. His new book, "Cautiously Optimistic," takes America's temperature in six-dozen essays, guaranteed to make readers think and smile. It's available at Amazon.com and through CandidCamera.com. Peter is a frequent speaker before business groups and on college campuses, using the vast “Candid Camera” library to bring his points to life. His newest presentation for corporate audiences, “The Candid You,” draws upon decades of people-watching to identify factors that promote better communication and productivity. Details about Peter Funt’s speaking engagements are available at: www.CandidCamera.com. See http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=naYXOGIktsw for video. Peter hosted the newest versions of “Candid Camera” in recent years with Suzanne Somers and Dina Eastwood, with complete collections now available on DVD. Peter Funt actually made his first appearance on “Candid Camera” when he and the legendary series were each just three years old. Peter posed as a shoeshine boy who charged $10 per shoe! Since that time he has appeared in hundreds of “Candid Camera” sequences, hosted over 200 network episodes. In addition to his hidden-camera work, Peter Funt has produced and hosted TV specials on the Arts & Entertainment and Lifetime cable networks. He also spent five years as an editor and reporter with ABC News in New York. Earlier in his career, Peter wrote dozens of articles for The New York Times and TV Guide about television and film. He was editor and publisher of the television magazine On Cable. And he authored the book "Gotcha!" for Grosset & Dunlap on the lost art of practical joking. Peter’s essay on the evolution of television is included in “The Story of American Business,” published in 2009 by Harvard Business Press. Peter also follows in his father's footsteps as President of Laughter Therapy Foundation, a non-profit organization started by Allen Funt in 1982. Drawing from the Candid Camera library, Laughter Therapy sends special videos, at no charge, to critically ill people throughout the U.S. When Peter took over as host of the CBS specials, "Variety" wrote: "The latest new 'Candid Camera' specials seem to be getting funnier. Peter Funt is as personable as his dad..." Following Candid Camera's Battle of the Sexes special, "The Hollywood Reporter" observed: "This show is great fun. Peter Funt has a remarkably effective presence." Peter Funt received his degree in journalism from the University of Denver. In 2010 he returned to the Denver campus to be honored as a Master Scholar in Arts and Humanities. He is a past winner of the annual Silurian's Award for radio news reporting, for his ABC News coverage of racial disturbances in Asbury Park, NJ. Peter is founder of the Monterey County Young Journalists program in California, which provides hands-on training for high school students pursuing careers in news. He also inaugurated the Courtroom Journalism competition in Monterey County in conjunction with the Lyceum Organization, and conducts a similar statewide event for the Constitutional Rights Foundation in Los Angeles, as part of its Mock Trial program. Peter resides in Central California with his wife, Amy, and two children, Stephanie and Danny. His favorite pastimes are golf, baseball, tennis and people-watching.

1 COMMENT

  1. Peter Funt, judge and jury. Same as every other journalist / commentor, regardless of political leaning. On that note, I only want to contend one thing. Sen Jeff Flake has a snowflakes’s chance in hell to be a contender in the Republican Primaries. That is soooooooo ridiculous it is almost funny. Honestly. Are you related to Allen Funt? Am I on candid camera? Lol

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