One of the forgotten footnotes of the Anita Hill story was the investigation into who leaked her "confidential" correspondence with the judiciary committee to the press. Like Ford, Hill was said to have lodged an allegation with a committee member, but did not want to go public. The story was that she was forced to go public when her allegation was leaked to the media AFTER the Thomas hearings had concluded. (Sound familiar?).89Hen wrote:Ibanez wrote:It doesn’t matter who they got to examine her, Democrats would have a problem the choice. Everything is so polarized these days that it’s a lose-lose situation from the start.Blumenthal just asked by a reporter about Ford's testimony and how it impacted his view of Kavanaugh and he can't help but mention Roe v Wade and other positions he's taken as a judge.
The end result was that the attorney who investigated could not identify the source of the leak. But the inference many drew from the facts outlined in the report that the leak was not so much a leak, but rather an intentional act of a strategy of delayed disclosure -- the suggestion being it was withheld to be used as a means of derailing Clarence Thomas, when it looked like all else had failed.
On July 10, shortly after Trump nominated Kavanaugh, NARAL sent a tweet saying that abortion rights were not going to be taken away by five men, including a "frat boy named Brett." I thought at the time we were going to learn about Kavanaugh's younger life as a bad "frat boy." I said to a colleague at work that NARAL/Planned Parenthood had some dirt on his college years that was going to become public.
Thereafter, the "frat boy" line of attack disappeared entirely and my friend even commented after the hearings ended that I had been wrong.
And the, just like that, it happened -- after the hearings, again.
It seems so familiar to me.

