Closing summary
We’re going to close down this live blog now. Here’s a summary of the day’s events:
- The Senate will ask the White House to order the FBI to carry out a week-long background check on Brett Kavanaugh, before voting on whether or not to confirm him.
- Two Republican senators, including Jeff Flake, have said such a move is a condition of their agreeing to vote for him, forcing the hand of the majority leadership.
- Mark Judge, who refused to testify to the Senate committee, says he will cooperate with the investigation.
- Earlier, that committee voted 11 to 10 to advance the nomination after Flake, a Republican, asked for the FBI investigation.
- Flake’s proposal was informal because the judiciary committee doesn’t set the vote, senate majority leader Mitch McConnell is responsible for that.
- Donald Trump had been meeting with the president of Chile during the committee meeting but said shortly after the vote: “I just want it to work out well for the country.”
- The day started with a morning vote on whether to vote to advance the nomination in the afternoon. Nearly all the Democratic senators walked out in protest of that vote, but ultimately participated in the afternoon vote.
You can read the full report here:
Updated
The Senate judiciary committee says the FBI’s supplemental background check would be limited to “current credible allegations” against Kavanaugh – and that it must be completed within one week.
It will ask the Trump administration to order the checks be carried out before a confirmation vote.
The second most-powerful Republican in the US Senate, John Cornyn, says the chamber will meet on Saturday to vote on a procedural motion on Kavanaugh’s nomination.
The Senate will vote on a motion to proceed, one of the steps leading to a full chamber vote on the nomination itself, Reuters reported.
A lawyer for Mark Judge, a schoolfriend of Kavanaugh who Ford testified was in the room when she was assaulted, says he would answer any and all questions put to him by investigators, according to Reuters.
Updated
According to the Associated Press, the Democratic senator, Joe Manchin, often viewed as a possible swing vote, says he supports Flake’s call to delay voting so the FBI can conduct a background investigation.
I applaud Senator Jeff Flake’s decision to rise above the partisan circus on display during this entire process. It took courage to take a stand and call for a one-week FBI investigation to get to the bottom of the allegations against Judge Kavanaugh. This has been a partisan and divisive process.
Here’s a clip of Jeff Flake’s dramatic intervention before the committee vote:
Updated
The Republican senator, Lisa Murkowski, says she supports the proposed one-week delay to the US Senate’s Kavanaugh vote.
The committee cannot force such a delay but Republicans hoping to push through the nomination in a full Senate vote will need all the support they can get, meaning it would be difficult for them to steamroller wavering the likes of Murkowski and Flake and win.
Summary
The senate judiciary committee has finally voted on whether Brett Kavanaugh’s nomination to the supreme court should be advanced to the full Senate after a chaotic morning.
- The committee voted 11 to 10 to advance the nomination after senator Jeff Flake, a Republican, asked for the vote to be delayed one week so the FBI could investigate the accusations made against Kavanaugh.
- Flake’s proposal was informal because the judiciary committee doesn’t set the vote, senate majority leader Mitch McConnell is responsible for that. The implication is that Flake will vote no if the investigation doesn’t happen and the vote advances early next week as was initially planned.
- Donald Trump had been meeting with the president of Chile during the committee meeting but said shortly after the vote: “I just want it to work out well for the country.”
- The day started with a morning vote on whether to vote to advance the nomination in the afternoon. Nearly all the Democratic senators walked out in protest of that vote, but ultimately participated in the afternoon vote.
Trump has also just commented on Christine Blasey Ford’s testimony.
“I thought her testimony was very compelling, and she looks like a very fine woman to me,” Trump told reporters.
“Brett’s testimony was, likewise, really something that I hadn’t seen before.”
Trump: 'I'm going to let the Senate handle that'
And now, Donald Trump: “I’m going to let the Senate handle that.”
He says he has only heard a little bit about the meeting because he is meeting with the president of Chile.
“I just want it to work out well for the country,” Trump says.
Updated
Amid a nice bout of chaos, Politico’s chief political correspondent appears to have much more confidence than US senators.
The meeting’s final moments:
Graham: 'Somebody has got to explain this to Trump'
And now, South Carolina Republican, Lindsey Graham: “Somebody has got to explain this to Trump, so I guess that’ll be my job.”
Updated
Amy Klobuchar, Minnesota Democrat, tells reporters: “we are in a better place than we were at 8am this morning.”
Like many women, I know Christine Blasey Ford's story all too well