Friday round-up

For Fox News, Samuel Chamberlain reports that “[t]he National Archives said Thursday that it will not be able to completely review more than 900,000 pages of documents related to Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh’s time in the George W. Bush White House until the end of October.” At Politico, Elana Schor and Burgess Everett report that Senate Republicans are nonetheless “pressing ahead on confirming … Kavanaugh before the midterm elections,” and that “the George W. Bush Presidential Library is lending its resources to processing Kavanaugh records in a bid to help expedite the release of the records Grassley and his fellow Republicans have requested.” Additional coverage comes from Igor Bobic at Huffpost and from Li Zhou at Vox, who reports that “Grassley’s recent request centered predominantly on Kavanaugh’s time as counsel during the Bush White House and did not even include the trove of documents Democrats have been pressing for from his time as staff secretary.” For The Washington Post, Robert O’Harrow and Michael Kranish look into Kavanaugh’s role in independent counsel Kenneth Starr’s investigation of the death of Clinton aide Vince Foster in 1993, reporting that “a memo offering legal justification for the probe” “sheds light on how Kavanaugh’s thinking evolved on the legal rights of sitting presidents.”

At Politico Magazine, “liberal Democrat and feminist” Supreme Court practitioner Lisa Blatt calls Kavanaugh “the most qualified conservative for the job” and urges Democrats to “quit attacking Kavanaugh—full stop.” In an op-ed for the Los Angeles Times, David Singh Grewal and others maintain that “[t]here is no liberal case for Kavanaugh,” arguing that “the debate over [his] confirmation [should] focus on the issues, not on the pedigree or manners of a judge who, as a justice, will almost surely work to undermine decades of settled judicial precedent in a way no liberal should be willing to condone.”

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