Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell gave away very little about his feelings while he spoke to reporters. He was joined by Republican members of the Senate Judiciary Committee (left to right): Sens. Thom Tillis, Chuck Grassley, John Cornyn, Orrin Hatch and Mike Lee. | Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images Kavanaugh Confirmation GOP leaders all but guarantee Kavanaugh confirmation But the three key undecided Republicans still haven't committed their votes.

Republican leaders insist they don’t speak for the three GOP holdouts, but they sure talk like they’ve already won the battle for Brett Kavanaugh's confirmation.

The confidence was on open display as the party's chief vote counter, speaking at a news conference Thursday, all but guaranteed that Kavanaugh will clear a procedural hurdle on Friday and be confirmed a day later. He and other top Republicans had reason to cheer, after Sens. Jeff Flake of Arizona and Susan Collins of Maine gave encouraging early remarks about the FBI’s much-anticipated Kavanaugh report, enough to seal the confirmation if their statements translate into votes.


Most Republicans view that FBI inquiry as essentially exonerating Kavanaugh of two women’s allegations of sexual misconduct. They don’t want to get out ahead of Collins, Flake and Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), but believe the trio’s main concerns about the nominee have now been addressed.

Standing alongside fellow Judiciary Committee members, Senate Majority Whip John Cornyn (R-Texas) referred to the judge’s confirmation as a foregone conclusion. He told reporters the Senate would put an end to “this circus-like atmosphere” this weekend when it votes “to finally confirm this good man to this important position.”

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Asked in a later interview whether he has the votes, Cornyn said only: “I’m optimistic. I’m going to let senators make their own announcements, but I’m optimistic we’ll get there.”

“There were two stipulations by some of our members. One was they wanted to hear from Dr. Ford. And secondly, they wanted to do this supplemental background investigation. We did that. It turned up no new information,” Cornyn added, describing himself as “very pleased” with the reaction on Thursday.

“The three that matter? Well, I’m sensing we’re in a good place. This supplemental investigation checked all the boxes and satisfied the concerns they had about talking to more people,” said Sen. John Thune of South Dakota, Cornyn’s presumptive successor as party whip. “I feel pretty good about where we are.” And asked how he was feeling, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) gave nothing away: "OK," he said as he strode away from the news conference.

The vote could even drag into Sunday if Republican leaders need Sen. Steve Daines (R-Mont.). He will attend his daughter‘s wedding in Montana on Saturday, according to his spokeswoman Katie Schoettler. Daines supports Kavanaugh but is intent on walking his daughter down the aisle.

But that will matter only if Friday‘s procedural vote is tied; otherwise, GOP leaders won't need him if Kavanaugh gets 51 votes or more. And even if the party needs Daines, McConnell could hold the vote open for hours for him to get back and confirm the judge.

But Republicans still might be getting a tad ahead of themselves, given the independent streaks that the undecided Republicans have flashed in the past.

Flake is a frequent critic of President Donald Trump and seems to be thinking increasingly about his legacy as he enters retirement. Collins and Murkowski are the last true GOP moderates in the caucus, supportive of abortion rights and opposed to repealing Obamacare.

But GOP senators said that the handful of remaining undecided senators are concerned with the misconduct allegations against Kavanaugh — not where he stands on presidential power or Roe v. Wade.

“I generally feel that it’s painting a pretty positive picture, that these are unsubstantiated allegations,” said Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.), who spent three hours going over the FBI’s Kavanaugh report in a special room in the Senate basement set aside for viewing classified material. “There’s certainly no concerns with his judicial philosophy. There’s no concerns about any of the opinions he’s written. And now it’s just a sober review of the facts.”

On Thursday evening, Kavanaugh made a direct appeal for confirmation in a Wall Street Journal op-ed.

“I was very emotional last Thursday, more so than I have ever been,” Kavanaugh said of his hearing on a sexual assault allegation. “I might have been too emotional at times. I know that my tone was sharp, and I said a few things I should not have said.”

But Kavanaugh‘s tone is unlikely to determine his confirmation. Flake and Collins both expressed confidence to reporters in the breadth of the FBI’s probe, which included interviews with nine witnesses and hundreds of tips submitted to the bureau. They attended a GOP briefing on the FBI report, then came back to read it themselves.

Both also attended a party lunch on Thursday and were quiet, declining to tell their colleagues where they would come down, according to attendees who say Flake is keeping his head down as he goes through the report, trying to minimize any drama.

The Arizonan asked questions during the FBI briefing that were not much different than those posed by other senators, according to a GOP colleague who was observing him closely. Flake, that Republican senator predicted, “will be OK” with Kavanaugh in the end.

Collins has been shadowed by Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio), a fellow centrist Republican who knows Kavanaugh personally, for much of the past two days. She’s bristled at the Democratic attacks against her in recent days, leading some Republicans to believe that she’s being pushed toward Kavanaugh and not away from him.

Murkowski has been more circumspect, essentially declining to comment until she’s finished reading the FBI report. She did not attend the Republican lunch on Thursday.

Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) also remains undecided, and Republicans are hopeful he will give Kavanaugh his only Democratic vote. Manchin, Murkowski, Collins and Flake may wait until Friday morning to announce their decision, according to senators and aides.

All three have been increasingly hard to locate as the spotlight on them intensifies. Flake is exiting the Capitol on the House side sometimes, using a series of hidden passages and tunnels to escape media hordes. Murkowski and Collins are often ensconced in their Capitol offices rather than in the Senate office buildings, which are open to the public and have become ground zero for confrontations with protestors.

“I’m not going to judge how my four remaining colleagues are going to vote,” Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.) said in an interview, adding that “I think we recognize” that Collins, Flake and Murkowski are “going through a tough time” based on the heightened security surrounding them as the Kavanaugh vote nears.

Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) who has bitterly tangled with his committee’s Democrats throughout the confirmation process, said that Collins, Murkowski and Flake “ought to feel good about” the outcome of the FBI’s inquiry because they were involved in the process of shaping it.

Grassley also noted that “I haven’t heard from four Republicans” on Kavanaugh. The fourth GOP holdout appears to be Sen. Ben Sasse (R-Neb.), although spokesman James Wegmann said Thursday that the Nebraskan “has long been and remains at lean-yes.”

“He's spent well over 150 hours doing his homework, and he pledged to fully review the information in the new FBI report before announcing his vote,” Wegmann said.

Late Thursday, Grassley sent out a list of 10 people interviewed by the FBI, emphasizing that they were selected as they had "potential firsthand knowledge of the allegations."

One person on the FBI's list refused to be interviewed. Listed were: Mark Judge, PJ Smyth, Leland Keyser, Timothy Gaudette, Christopher Garrett, an attorney for one of the witnesses, Deborah Ramirez, two eyewitnesses named by Ramirez, Ramirez's close friend from college.

Publicly, Democrats raged against an FBI process that they say was unfairly restricted by a White House intent on getting Kavanaugh through. But privately, some Democrats acknowledged a creeping pessimism about a Supreme Court battle they were always waging against long odds.

Even Sen. Heidi Heitkamp’s (D-N.D.) announcement of a “no” vote, citing “young girls and women across our country” watching the outcome of Ford’s testimony, carried a ring of fatalism. Heitkamp took a stand as a recent poll showed her down by double-digits to her GOP challenger, and she claimed she would have "gone the other way" and backed Kavanaugh had she truly been motivated by politics.

Republicans said they couldn’t think of any reason why Flake, Murkowski, or Collins would vote against Kavanaugh after reading the FBI’s interviews with the individuals connected to the allegations against him.

“Each person makes up their own mind. But right now I think it would be very difficult to identify information that would suggest any corroboration to new accusations that have been made. It is not there,” said Sen. Mike Rounds (R-S.D.).

Nolan McCaskill contributed to this report.