Alaskans set stakes for Murkowski on Supreme Court nominee Kavanaugh

U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, talks with Alaska Capitol reporters during a press availability following her annual address to the Alaska Legislature on Feb. 22, 2018. (Photo by Skip Gray/360 North)
U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, talks with Alaska Capitol reporters during a press availability following her annual address to the Alaska Legislature on Feb. 22, 2018. (Photo by Skip Gray/360 North)

Lisa Murkowski isn’t ready to say yet how she’ll vote on Brett Kavanaugh, President Donald Trump’s latest Supreme Court nominee.

The senator who could cast the decisive vote on the lifetime appointment says she’s reading Kavanaugh’s decisions and wants to hear from her constituents.

On Monday night, only one side weighed in.

The Senate schedule will keep Murkowski in D.C. most of August, so she experimented with a new way to reach her constituents: an online and telephonic town hall.

Hundreds of people took part. A dozen got to ask questions.

A funny thing happened: Alaska may be a red state, but not one person asked her to vote for Kavanaugh.

Murkowski told them she heard their concerns.

“I, too, do not want to turn back the clock when it comes to women’s reproductive rights,” Murkowski said. “I do not want to see Roe v. Wade overturned.”

The pool was a self-selected group that chose to spend an hour on the line with their U.S. senator and not a likely representative sample of Alaskans.

But the Alaskans who got to ask questions were chosen more or less randomly from that pool. They were not screened by subject matter.

Murkowski said Tuesday at the Capitol on that the listeners probably held a range of views, but it was puzzling to her that most – if not all – of the dozen who asked questions were opposed to the president’s agenda.

Listeners spoke about tariffs, the separation of families at the border, election security, abortion rights and climate change.

The callers expressed concerns about Kavanaugh’s position on voting rights, executive power and, of course, Roe v. Wade, the landmark abortion case.

“I don’t know why” no one asked pro-Trump questions, Murkowski said. “Perhaps if you are worried or concerned about something you are more apt to weigh in publicly.”

What Murkowski thinks of Kavanaugh matters.

She’s one of the few moderate Republicans who sometimes bucks her party.

It would sink the nomination if she and all the Democrats vote no. So the stakes are high.

Still, Alaska conservatives aren’t too worried, said conservative talk-show host Dave Stieren, whose show is on KFQD.

Stieren said most of his conservative callers voted for Trump because of his potential Supreme Court picks, but Murkowski’s lack of an announced position isn’t ruffling their feathers.

“I have not gotten 20 callers in row, saying ‘Lisa Murkowski better vote for Kavanaugh,” Stieren said. “I don’t think they have the sense that she’s terribly opposed to him.”

As Stieren sees it, Murkowski supports the causes of her Democratic constituents so often, she could easily vote to confirm Cavanaugh without paying any political price for it.

“They need her more than she needs them. ‘So you’re angry at me. Boo-hoo. If I wanted to run and win again, I would run and win again. Where are you going to go?’” Stieren said, channeling an imaginary Murkowski reaction.

Alaska Republican Party Chairman Tuckerman Babcock said he’s not hearing a ton of concern about Murkowski’s vote on Kavanaugh either.

He believes Alaska Republicans think she’ll come around to confirm the nominee, even if it takes a while.

“This is very much how she conducts herself. Not a surprise,” Babcock said. “She’s very deliberative about these nominations, and she’s being very deliberative about this one.”

Babcock said if Murkowski votes against Kavanaugh on philosophical grounds — to try to preserve Roe v. Wade — the political cost to her would be dramatic.

Murkowski has been clear that she supports Roe, he said, and Alaska Republicans know that and have re-elected her anyway.

“But if she turns down a nominee solely because of one political issue, I think that would be very difficult for most Republicans to accept,” Babcock said.

Alaska Democratic Party Chair Casey Steinau said Alaska women who support reproductive rights will hold Murkowski to account if she doesn’t reject the nominee.

“If she goes ahead and supports Kavanaugh … I think she’s just throwing the support of women – Democrats, Republicans and independents, all across the board – just throwing their support in the garbage and saying ‘I don’t care what you think anymore and I’ve changed my mind,’” Steinau said. “I think it’s a very strong signal.”

Murkowski said she’s reading up on Brett Kavanaugh to prepare for her meeting with him, so she can form her own opinion.

Alaska Public Media

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