Ringo84
Separation of Church and State expert
- Jul 31, 2006
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It applies for civil cases as well. The order is logical. First the accuser brings the charges. Then the accused answers them. How does the accused effectively answers charges without hearing them first? Because this isn't in a courtroom, we ought to run the hearing like a Soviet tribunal, where the accused is presumed guilty by reason of his even being there, or do we conduct it with some semblance of the rules of Anglo-Saxon jurisprudence?
Petty, yet Ford's attorney is insisting on it. I don't think Ford really wants to testify. Saying so outright, however, would be tantamount to throwing in the towel and giving the confirmation process a green light, so she attaches conditions that are difficult to impossible for the Senate to meet. She acts as if by testifying she's doing the Judiciary Committee a favor...
Kavanaugh, on the other hand, is eager to testify on Monday.
Not first hand. He doesn't know what she would say in her testimony which could differ significantly what he's heard from others.
If she didn't want to testify, she wouldn't be negotiating with the Senate Committee to do so. Republicans don't want her to testify is more like what's happening.
Ringo
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