Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Friday, April 26, 2019

Deal reached for Northern Ireland power-sharing talks

Theresa May and Leo Varadkar announce plan for negotiations involving all major NI parties
Northern Ireland has not had a functioning government at Stormont, Belfast, for more than 800 days. Photograph: Niall Carson/PA

 and 
The British and Irish governments have reached an agreement to establish a new round of talks involving all the main political parties in Northern Ireland, starting on 7 May.

Theresa May and the taoiseach, Leo Varadkar, credited the public response to the killing of Lyra McKee with the announcement on Friday of a fresh attempt to restore power sharing in Northern Ireland.

The two leaders said in a joint statement that the journalist’s funeral in Belfast on Wednesday, which gathered all mainstream party leaders under the roof of St Anne’s Cathedral, encouraged them to try to break a two-year political deadlock.

“We … heard the unmistakable message to all political leaders that people across Northern Ireland want to see a new momentum for political progress. We agree that what is now needed is actions and not just words from all of us who are in positions of leadership.”

The new process would involve all the main political parties in Northern Ireland, together with the UK and Irish governments, the statement said.

“The aim of these talks is quickly to re-establish to full operation the democratic institutions of the Belfast/Good Friday agreement – the NI executive, assembly and north-south ministerial council – so that they can effectively serve all of the people for the future.”

The Northern Ireland secretary, Karen Bradley, and the Irish foreign minister, Simon Coveney, told a joint press conference in Stormont, the site of the mothballed assembly outside Belfast, that the talks would begin five days after the 2 May local elections.

“We have a narrow window in which genuine progress can be made and we must act now,” said Bradley. “This isn’t going to be easy.”

Coveney hailed McKee, saying her death should not be in vain and that party leaders had a responsibility to fix Northern Ireland’s “broken” politics.

The New IRA shot McKee while she observed rioting in Derry last week. The dissident republican group apologised and said its gunman was aiming at police. The killing provoked a backlash against the group and widespread calls for politicians to resolve an impasse that has left Northern Ireland without a functioning government for more than 800 days.

Mourners at her funeral gave a standing ovation when Fr Martin Magill urged political leaders to end the stalemate – a rebuke that went viral.

Power sharing between Sinn Féin and the Democratic Unionist party (DUP) collapsed in January 2017 amid disputes over the Irish language and a renewable heating scheme that reflected deep mistrust and acrimony.

Brexit-fuelled uncertainty over Northern Ireland’s border with the Republic of Ireland and its future within the UK have hampered efforts to restore devolved government, leaving civil servants to run what some have called a “zombified” administration.


 Lyra McKee: priest receives standing ovation after calling out politicians – video

There is scepticism that unionist and nationalist leaders can overcome their differences in the short term. Mutual mistrust is deep and there is little confidence in Bradley’s ability or neutrality to shepherd the process when Downing Street relies on DUP votes at Westminster.

Arlene Foster, the DUP leader, and Mary Lou McDonald, the Sinn Féin leader, spent much of Thursday trading barbs and reiterating entrenched positions.

Foster repeated her offer of a twin-track approach that would restore devolution to deal with urgent problems in the health service, education and other sectors, and deal separately with politically problematic issues such as same-sex marriage and the Irish language.

She said the DUP could not accede to all Sinn Féin demands, describing such a scenario as a “5-0 victory”.

McDonald welcomed the announcement of new talks but did not hint at any concessions. “These talks will be a test of whether the British government and the DUP are finally willing to resolve the issues of equality, rights and integrity in government which caused the collapse of the power-sharing institutions two years ago.”

One Irish government source said neither party was in the mood to make concessions but each wanted to avoid blame for continued stalemate.

Smaller parties are keen to return to Stormont but hope rules will be changed to break the Sinn Féin-DUP duopoly.

The Social Democratic and Labour party leader, Colum Eastwood, welcomed Friday’s announcement but expressed concern at the lack of a fixed deadline. “We have already seen the DUP and Sinn Féin slip back into comfortable red lines that look great on placards but deliver nothing for people desperately in need,” he said.

'We failed many times': How Sudan's protest leaders seized their moment

The Sudanese Professionals Association has emerged to head the revolution. Can the group convince the military to relinquish power?
Sudanese protesters open their smartphones lights as they gather for a "million-strong" march outside the army headquarters in Khartoum on April 25 (Ozan Kose / AFP)

By Mohammed Amin- 26 April 2019
From his time-aged and threadbare office in Khartoum, anthropology professor Mohammed Youssef al-Mustafa has been working since 2010 on rebuilding an independent trade union movement in Sudan.
In that office, he gathered the vestiges of the country’s independent labour leaders, who met with the hope of restoring the movement’s former glories but were always doubtful of their chances for success in a country where Omar al-Bashir’s ruling class had dominated the unions and crushed the creation of any parallel organisations.
But when Bashir was ousted from the presidency on 11 April, after 30 years in power, it was exactly that type of independent trade union, the Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA), which Mustafa is chairman of, that had played the role of rallying the population against the president.
Formed in August, the SPA came to the fore a few months later, when protests started in December. Now it is tasked with negotiating a handover of power from the military council that replaced Bashir to a civilian leadership.

Security tracking

Mustafa had been a member of the rebel Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM), a group that fought Bashir's government and helped birth South Sudan in 2011. He became a minister in 2005, when the SPLM signed a ceasefire agreement and took on positions in the Sudanese government.
But as it became increasingly obvious to him that the secession of South Sudan, where the group was strongest, was an inevitability, he started to turn his thoughts to what could be done for what remained of Sudan.
“I started to think about how to create an umbrella to salvage the remaining northern part of the country. The idea of creating a coalition of trade unions was brought up by many trade unionists,” Mustafa, a professor at the University of Khartoum, told Middle East Eye.
Mohamed Youssef Ahmed al-Mustafa leader of the Sudanese Professionals Association speaks during a press conference in the capital Khartoum (AFP)
Mohammed Youssef al-Mustafa speaking during a press conference in Khartoum (AFP)
Forging that coalition was difficult. Sudan’s security agencies tracked their initial attempts, forcing them to freeze their operations. They tried again in 2012 but could not manage to bring together the various leaders. Their next attempt came in 2013, when austerity measures sparked anti-government protests and a crackdown that killed up to 200.
“We failed many times, but we were insisting on achieving our goal, so we tried again in 2013 but we also failed,” he said.

Long struggle

The SPA began to really take shape in August 2018, as a large and well-organised structure with sub-committees formed of the many professions that had joined the coalition - doctors, teachers, journalists and lawyers among them.
They were acting in response to increasing hardship caused by the country's economic difficulties and associated austerity measures, including the ending of subsidies on fuel, bread, electricity and other essential commodities.
Those same concerns fuelled the anger that on 19 December led to protesters in the northern city of Atbara torching the ruling party headquarters and setting off a chain of daily protests against Bashir’s rule.
The SPA soon started organising regular marches on the presidential palace, where they wanted to hand over a petition demanding Bashir's resignation but were consistently met with force, often lethal, by the security forces. By January, they were developing a daily programme of protest activities.
Sudan’s city of iron and fire comes to the capital on a train
Read More »

“We kept monitoring the situation closely since the revolution began on 19 December in Atbara and we [eventually] saw that the anger of our people has defeated the massive force of the ruling party and the inner circles of the old regime,” said Mustafa.
He said the SPA is now working on studies about wages for the different professions and on economic inequality in the country, showing how what started as a set of demands on a petition has become something far more substantive.
“The uprising has rapidly expanded in all directions. That was a real moment of change for our movement, from a movement demanding change to one raising more radical political demands,” said Mustafa.
Until they were subjugated by Bashir’s ruling machinery, Sudanese unions had a strong role in organising against the country's previous autocratic rulers. Atbara, the town where the current protests started, was key to that resistance because it was the heart of the country’s railway network, where workers actively organised.
In that same spirit, a train packed with protesters travelled from Atbara to Khartoum on Tuesday, arriving to a welcoming committee of thousands lining the tracks in the capital.
'The SPA deeply understands the needs of the youth, their hopes and the right language for reaching them'
- Haitham Mustafa, former footballer
Mohamed Ali Khogali, a Sudanese expert on social and economic rights, said the SPA now fits into that history of Sudanese trade unions fighting for civilian rights and rule, similar to the coalitions that ended the military rules of Ibrahim Abboud in 1984 and Gaafar Nimeiry in 1985.
“The trade unions garner more popularity and trust during uprisings in Sudan because they don’t have any [political] affiliation, other the demands of the people,” he said. “The economic and social demands they raise always brings them close to ordinary citizens.”
He said the SPA has also achieved a rare feat in managing to unify protests and create a political alternative to the government without actually being able to address them in person, circumventing the security threat from the regime. Though a few spokespeople like Mustafa are known, many of the other leaders have stayed in the background.
“The hunted SPA leaders have managed to operate underground to protect it from the security forces by using social media to call on people around the entire country to mobilise for protests,” said Khogali.
A Sudanese protester makes a victory sign outside the defence ministry compound in Khartoum (Reuters)
A Sudanese protester makes a victory sign outside the defence ministry compound in Khartoum (Reuters)
SPA spokesman Mohamed al-Amin Abdul Aziz told MEE that because of the threat of arrest, the leaders had developed a “flexible formula” to react dynamically to the changes in the country.
Social media allowed them to reach the Sudanese people while hiding from the security forces, he explained.
“The entire coalition is working towards the same goals that we agreed on from the beginning, this is why we don’t need to meet a lot, so we have evaded the security forces,” he said.

A changing role

The SPA’s role has changed since Bashir’s removal, forcing it to become a more public organisation as it and other groups try to present a civilian alternative to military rule.
This new phase of the protest movement has raised questions about whether the activists who forced Bashir’s ousting can capitalise on the moment and prevent the ruling military council’s “transitional” government becoming permanent.
The general mood among protesters seems to be one of trust in the group after the successes of its organising, which not only included regular marches but also a programme of entertainment and education at the site of a sit-in outside the military headquarters, which has lasted more than two weeks.
Haitham Mustafa, a former captain of Sudan’s national football team, used social media to call for protests against Bashir. He said the group has succeeded by connecting with the country’s youth.
At Sudan's sit-in the revolution continues and art flourishes
Read More »

“The SPA deeply understands the needs of the youth, their hopes and the right language for reaching them,” he told Middle East Eye. 
Aisha Ali Abdul Rahim, a 30-year-old employee in a private company, said the group’s approach had connected with her.
“We trust the SPA because they present a different discourse that understands our problems more than the political parties,” she said.
Whether that appeal can extend beyond the professional class who make up most of the organisation’s membership is crucial to whether its success can continue, according to Magdi el-Gizouli, an academic at the Rift Valley Institute. 
“Unless the SPA expands to engage and include other bases, including labourers, farmers, pastoralists and others in the countryside and conflict areas of Sudan, it would never be able to realise the deep and radical demands of the revolution,” he said.
“Radical and popular layers [of society] need to be unified to fight against the deep state.”

Getting ready for take-off: Electric aircraft


 
MOVE aside electric cars, another disruption set to occur in the next decade is being ignored in current Australian transport infrastructure debates: electric aviation.
Electric aircraft technology is rapidly developing locally and overseas, with the aim of potentially reducing emissions and operating costs by over 75 percent. Other countries are already planning for 100% electric short-haul plane fleetswithin a couple of decades.
Australia relies heavily on air transport. The country has the most domestic airline seats per person in the world. We have also witnessed flight passenger numbers double over the past 20 years.
Infrastructure projects are typically planned 20 or more years ahead. This makes it more important than ever that we start to adopt a disruptive lens in planning. It’s time to start accounting for electric aviation if we are to capitalise on its potential economic and environmental benefits.

What can these aircraft do?

There are two main types of electric aircraft: short-haul planes and vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) vehicles, including drones.
The key issue affecting the uptake of electric aircraft is the need to ensure enough battery energy density to support commercial flights. While some major impediments are still to be overcome, we are likely to see short-haul electric flights locally before 2030. Small, two-to-four-seat, electric planes are already flying in Australia today.
A scan of global electric aircraft development suggests rapid advancements are likely over the coming decade.
By 2022, nine-seat planes could be doing short-haul (500-1,000km) flights. Before 2030, small-to-medium 150-seat planes could be flying up to 500 kilometres. Short-range (100250 km) VTOL aircraft could also become viable in the 2020s.
If these breakthroughs occur, we could see small, commercial, electric aircraft operating on some of Australia’s busiest air routes, including Sydney-Melbourne or Brisbane, as well as opening up new, cost-effective travel routes to and from regional Australia.
fly
Possible short-haul electric aircraft ranges of 500km and 1,000km around Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane. Source: Author provided

Why go electric?

In addition to new export opportunities, as shown by MagniX, electric aviation could greatly reduce the financial and environmental costs of air transport in Australia.
Two major components of current airline costs
are fuel (27 percent) and maintenance (11 percent). Electric aircraft could deliver significant price reductions through reduced energy and maintenance costs.
Short-haul electric aircraft are particularly compelling given the inherent energy efficiency, simplicity and longevity of the battery-powered motor and drivetrain. No alternative fuel sources can deliver the same level of savings.
With conventional planes, a high-passenger, high-frequency model comes with a limiting environmental cost of burning fuel. Smaller electric aircraft can avoid the fuel costs and emissions resulting from high-frequency service models. This can lead to increased competition between airlines and between airports, further lowering costs.

What are the implications of this disruption?

Air transport is generally organised in combinations of hub-and-spoke or point-to-point models. Smaller, more energy-efficient planes encourage point-to-point flights, which can also be the spokes on long-haul hub models.
This means electric aircraft could lead to higher-frequency services, enabling more competitive point-to-point flights, and increase the dispersion of air services to smaller airports.
While benefiting smaller airports, electric aircraft could also improve the efficiency of some larger constrained airports.
For example, Australia’s largest airport, Sydney Airport, is efficient in both operations and costs. However, due to noise and pollution, physical and regulatory constraints – mainly aircraft movement caps and a curfew – can lead to congestion. With a significant number of sub-1,000km flights originating from Sydney, low-noise, zero-emission, electric aircraft could overcome some of these constraints, increasing airport efficiency and lowering costs.
The increased availability of short-haul, affordable air travel could actively compete with other transport services, including high-speed rail (HSR). Alternatively, if the planning of HSR projects takes account of electric aviation, these services could improve connectivity at regional rail hubs. This could strengthen the business cases for HSR projects by reducing the number of stops and travel times, and increasing overall network coverage.

What about air freight?

Electric aircraft could also help air freight. International air freight volumes have increased by 80% in the last 20 years. Electric aircraft provide an opportunity to efficiently transport high-value products to key regional transport hubs, as well as directly to consumers via VTOL vehicles or drones.
If properly planned, electric aviation could complement existing freight services, including roadsea and air services. This would reduce the overall cost of transporting high-value goods.
fly-2
Synchronised air and rail services could improve connections for travellers. Source: Chuyuss/Shutterstock

Plan now for the coming disruption

Electric aircraft could significantly disrupt short-haul air transport within the next decade. How quickly will this technology affect conventional infrastructure? It is difficult to say given the many unknown factors. The uncertainties include step-change technologies, such as solid-state batteries, that could radically
accelerate the uptake and capabilities of electric aircraft.
What we do know today is that Australia is already struggling with disruptive technological changes in energy, telecommunications and even other transport segments. These challenges highlight the need to start taking account of disruptive technology when planning infrastructure. Where we see billions of dollars being invested in technological transformation, we need to assume disruption is coming.
With electric aircraft we have some time to prepare, so let’s not fall behind the eight ball again – as has happened with electric cars – and start to plan ahead.
By Jake Whitehead, Research Fellow, The University of Queensland and Michael Kane, Research Associate, Curtin University Sustainability Policy Institute,, Curtin University. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Joe Biden was in charge of the Anita Hill hearing. Even he says it wasn’t fair.

Anita Hill is sworn in Oct. 11, 1991, by Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Joe Biden to testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee on the confirmation of Clarence Thomas to be associate justice of the Supreme Court. (Arnie Sachs/DPA/AP)


About 90 minutes into Anita Hill’s testimony on Oct. 11, 1991, Joe Biden had a choice to make.
To cast doubt on her sexual harassment allegations against Clarence Thomas, Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee planned to ask her about a former acquaintance named John Doggett, who said in an affidavit that Hill was prone to romantic delusions and had “a problem being rejected by men she was attracted to.”

Doggett had not been vetted by the committee, as the rules of the hearing required, and Biden said it would be best not to air his claims until aides interviewed him. But as Republicans applied pressure, Biden was unsure what to do — changing his mind five times as colleagues, witnesses and a national television audience watched.

“We will wait,” Biden said first, only to weigh in moments later with another idea: “Whatever the witness prefers.”

Hill said to the chairman: “So you are going to make me decide, aren’t you?”

Biden’s handling of Hill’s allegations against Thomas and the hearings they incited in 1991 remains one of the most revealing and controversial episodes of his career. In an era when bipartisan support for Supreme Court nominees was more common, the senator from Delaware wanted to run a process that was seen as fair by both sides.

But for decades, Democrats have been angered by Hill’s treatment by the GOP and conflicted about Biden’s performance as chairman. The issue has even more resonance for some Democrats now in the wake of allegations of sexual assault against then-Supreme Court nominee Brett M. Kavanaugh last year, which led to a similar hearing. Both he and Thomas denied wrongdoing.
Anita Hill spoke to the Post in November 2017 to reflect on her 1991 testimony about sexual harassment, the slow pace of change and the #MeToo movement. 
Interviews with a dozen people with firsthand knowledge and a review of the written record and interviews published with participants over the past three decades reinforce that Biden failed to use the powers afforded to Senate committee chairmen to conduct a judicious and thorough inquiry into Hill’s allegations. He did not give full consideration to witnesses whose allegations seemed to corroborate her testimony or curb the attacks and innuendo leveled at her during the hearing. A former Biden lawyer told The Washington Post this month that the Democrats were outmaneuvered by Republicans, whose purpose was to damage Hill.

Biden, 76, entered the 2020 presidential race Thursday. Praised by supporters as a champion for women and survivors of sexual assault, the former vice president has faced doubts about his White House bid because of his age, past performance as a candidate and a physical style that has made some women uncomfortable. Critics also have faulted Biden for not apologizing to Hill personally for conducting a hearing they say was not fair to her.

Biden reflects on Hill’s testimony before the committee on Capitol Hill on Oct. 12, 1991. (Greg Gibson/AP)

Biden called Hill earlier this month to express regrets over her experience, but Hill was unsatisfied with the conversation and did not characterize his comments as an apology, the New York Times reported Thursday. Hill did not respond to calls and emails about their conversation, and Biden’s campaign told the Times it would have no further comment.

“I still don’t think [Biden’s response] takes ownership of his role in what happened,” Hill told The Post in a 2017 interview. She declined to be interviewed for this article.

“Women were looking to the Senate Judiciary Committee and his leadership to really open the way to have these kinds of hearings,” she said. “They should have been using best practices to show leadership on this issue on behalf of women’s equality, and they did just the opposite.”

Biden said Friday that he was sorry for the way Hill was treated but that there was little he could have done differently as chairman.

“I wish we could have figured out a better way to get this thing done,” he said during an appearance on ABC’s “The View.” “I did everything in my power to do what I thought was within the rules to be able to stop things.”

Offered several opportunities to personally apologize or take responsibility, he did not.
“If you go back and look at what I said and didn’t say, I don’t think I treated her badly. I took on her opposition,” he said.

The former Biden lawyer, Cynthia Hogan, said in an interview that he approached his role during the Thomas hearings as if he were a neutral arbiter.

“What happened is we got really politically outplayed by the Republicans,” said Hogan, now vice president for public policy for Americas at Apple. “They came with a purpose, and that purpose was to destroy Anita Hill. Democrats did not coordinate and they did not prepare for battle. I think he would say that that’s what should be done differently.”

Keith Henderson, a friend of Hill’s who spent time with her as the hearings unfolded, wondered in an interview this month why Biden had not personally apologized to her.

“That’s where I fault him,” Henderson said in his first comments to the press about the episode. “He should just clear the air and clear his own conscience. . . . I think he’s making another mistake in the way he’s handling the whole issue.”

Allegations emerge

Biden was 48 in 1991, a fourth-term Democratic senator known for his political moderation and what some former Senate aides described as a preoccupation with being liked by members of both parties. As the author of the bill that would become the Violence Against Women Act of 1994, he prided himself on his sensitivity toward women who had been mistreated and used his chairmanship to advocate for their interests.

Clarence Thomas pauses during testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill on Oct. 11, 1991. (Greg Gibson/AP)

At the end of June, Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall announced that he would retire as the first and only black justice on the high court. President George H.W. Bush responded by nominating the 43-year-old Thomas, also African American, who had served in the Reagan administration and was a judge on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Over the summer, rumors circulated around Washington that while Hill worked for Thomas at the Department of Education and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, he had pressured her for dates and directed their work conversations toward his sexual interests. Thomas, who declined to comment for this article, has vehemently denied harassing Hill or any woman who worked for him.

Biden approached the confirmation with a focus on Thomas’s judicial philosophy and a desire to avoid questions of ethics or personal conduct. During the battle over Robert Bork’s Supreme Court nomination in 1987, polling showed public support for steering clear of personal matters, a Biden aide said a few years later. Biden still had a bitter taste from attacks on his character during the 1988 campaign cycle, when he withdrew as a presidential candidate after facing allegations that he plagiarized part of a speech from a British politician.

Hill, then a 35-year-old law professor in Oklahoma, was approached by Democratic Senate staffers and told them about her experiences with Thomas, with the understanding that she would remain anonymous. But Biden’s staff told her that they could not circulate her allegations to members of the Judiciary Committee unless they were shared with Thomas, along with her name.

Eventually, in response to Hill’s frustration, Biden’s staff suggested on Sept. 20 that she could alert committee members to her charges by submitting to an FBI investigation in which both she and Thomas would be interviewed.

The probe began three days later, after Hill faxed a four-page statement of allegations to Biden’s staff. A senior Biden aide said in 1992 that the FBI interviewed “approximately 10 people in about seven different cities in around 48 hours.” The final report did not draw conclusions.


Virginia Thomas, wife of Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas, listens as her husband testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill on Oct. 12, 1991. (John Duricka/AP)

Biden did not share Hill’s statement with Democrats on the committee until hours before the Judiciary Committee deadlocked in a 7-to-7 vote on Thomas’s nomination; most Republican members of the committee did not review the statement until days later. (Thomas was confirmed 52 to 48 in mid-October; Biden voted against him in committee and on the floor.)

The day of the committee vote, according to multiple accounts, Biden told Thomas that he would oppose him for ideological reasons but promised to send the nomination to the Senate floor, where it appeared Thomas would be confirmed. Biden said later that during the conversation, he assured Thomas that he would be treated fairly if Hill’s allegations were reported in the press.

Former senator John Danforth (R-Mo.) and Thomas’s wife later wrote that Biden promised to vouch for Thomas’s character, a characterization Biden disputed publicly.

“I think you’re a good man,” Virginia Thomas recalled Biden telling Clarence Thomas, according to an essay she wrote in People magazine in November 1991. “And if these allegations come up, I don’t think they have merit. I will be your biggest defender.’ ”

Hill revealed

Nine days later, as the Senate prepared for its final vote on Thomas’s nomination, Hill’s anonymity was broken when her allegations and identity were reported by Newsday, a Long Island-based newspaper, and on NPR.

Biden was concerned that any attention on Hill would raise concerns about how he had handled her case. From his point of view, the FBI had investigated, and he had made its final report available to members of his committee. He had followed the rules.


Hill testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill on Oct. 11, 1991. (AP)

The news led Senate Democrats to postpone the floor vote on Thomas’s nomination for one week to allow for new hearings. Republicans received several concessions from Biden and Democratic leaders. Hearings would begin in just three days, the Judiciary Committee would not take a second vote on Thomas, and the final floor vote would take place on schedule, no matter what came out during the hearings.

Biden and Republicans agreed that the hearings would focus on sexual harassment allegations and not delve into other matters, such as Thomas’s alleged interest in pornography. (Thomas denied Hill’s charges, including her claim that he had discussed pornographic films with her.)

The chairman also offered Thomas the choice of testifying before Hill, after Hill or both; he chose the third option.

“I think that [Biden] was in a very, very difficult position because it was such a major event and he was trying to be the referee of a proceeding where there weren’t any rules,” Danforth said in an interview.

Biden called Hill for the first time that evening to tell her about the hearings, a conversation she recalled in her 1997 book, “Speaking Truth to Power.”

“I asked how the hearing would be conducted. ‘Well, at this point the only thing we can do is to conduct an open hearing,’ he said, almost as if I were to blame. ‘I give you my word that I acted only to protect your confidentiality,’ ” she wrote.

Three days later, all of the major television networks carried the hearing as Biden gaveled it to order and gave opening remarks. He said that fairness demanded that Thomas “be given the benefit of the doubt.” He also said that as chairman, he had the power to “rule out of order questions that are not relevant to our proceedings.”

Thomas, upset with Biden for failing to vouch for his character, delivered a fiery opening statement, saying that he would not “provide the rope for my own lynching,” a comment that stunned Democrats to silence.


Sen. Orrin G. Hatch (R-Utah) questions Anita Hill during the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on Oct. 11, 1991. From left are Sens. Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa), Sen. Alan Simpson (R-Wyo.), Hatch and Strom Thurmond (R-S.C.). (John Duricka/AP)

As Biden began his questioning, Sen. Orrin G. Hatch (R-Utah) cut him off mid-sentence.
“This is the nomination of a man to become a justice of the Supreme Court of the United States,” said Hatch, appearing irate and beginning a longattack against Hill and the process.

“Would the senator yield?” Biden said after some time.

“I am not finished,” Hatch said.
“Senator, let me--.”
“Let me finish.”
“No, I will not.”
“Yes, you will. Yes, you will,” Hatch said. Biden was the chairman, but Republicans had started to take control.
Hill under fire

Hill compared the hearing to a “trial that lacked all of the protections of a trial.” She faced a committee that was all white, all male and had an average age of about 60; Hill is African American.
“Even if somebody had been sitting at the table with me, you couldn’t object, nobody could speak but me, and the chairman was not controlling what was going on, so it was worse than being put on trial because in a trial you’ve got legal protections,” she told The Post in 2017.


Members of the Senate Judiciary Committee confer before the start of hearings before the committee on the nomination of Clarence Thomas to the Supreme Court on Oct. 13, 1991. From left are Hank Brown (R-Colo.), Strom Thurmond (R-S.C.), Alan Simpson (R-Wyo.), Biden, Howell Heflin (D-Ala.) and Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.). (Shayna Brennan/AP)

In Senate offices, Republicans were seeking affidavits from Hill’s former law students alleging that she engaged in unseemly behaviors. They also sought information about psychological conditions that could lead her to fabricate claims about Thomas. In the hearing room, Republican members of the committee questioned Hill’s motives and sanity, raised the possibility that she had plagiarized one allegation from the horror novel “The Exorcist,” and suggested they were amassing a trove of ugly details about her personal life.

“I really am getting stuff over the transom about Professor Hill,” said Sen. Alan Simpson (R-Wyo.). “I have got statements from her former law professors, statements from people that know her, statements from Tulsa, Oklahoma, saying, ‘Watch out for this woman.’ ”

Simpson told WNYC in 2014 that he was “a monster” to Hill and angered “to the core” during the hearing because he thought her allegations described behavior that did not merit serious concern.
Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pa.), now deceased, asked witnesses who supported Thomas whether Hill’s allegations were made for reasons of ambition and whether she might have imagined the behavior she said Thomas engaged in. After Hill passed a lie-detector test ordered by her lawyers, Simpson read an affidavit stating that this did not mean she did not suffer from “a delusional disorder.”

As Republicans prepared to question Hill during the hearing, Biden said there was “no right answer” to whether they should be allowed to ask about Doggett, her former acquaintance, in violation of the rules. He placed the onus on Hill to decide, and she relented.

“I did not at any time have any fantasy about a romance with him,” she told Specter.

Biden challenged several witnesses who testified for Thomas, including Doggett, saying that Doggett’s conclusion that Hill had fantasized about him romantically was a “true leap of faith — or ego.”


Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pa.) questions witnesses appearing before the committee in defense of Hill on Oct. 13, 1991. Sen. Hank Brown (R-Colo.) listens behind. (John Duricka/AP)


Hill’s friends are sworn in before testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Oct. 13, 1991. From left are Judge Susan Hoerchner, Ellen Wells, John Carr and Joel Paul. The four testified on Hill’s behalf. (John Duricka/AP)

The hearings ran for three days. Four witnesses testified for Hill, two of whom said she had told them about Thomas’s alleged behavior in the early 1980s. Sixteen witnesses testified on behalf of Thomas, dragging the final session into the early morning of Oct. 14.

Thomas was asked questions about a woman named Angela Wright, a former EEOC employee whose claim that he had asked the size of her breasts and pressured her for dates had made its way to the committee. Wright, then an editor at the Charlotte Observer, was deposed by staffers and flew to Washington under subpoena. Biden, citing time constraints, never called her to testify.

Two other women who had worked at the EEOC were also seen as potential witnesses whose accounts would support Hill’s. Rose Jourdain could corroborate Wright’s story, and Sukari Hardnett wrote to the committee that “if you were young, black, female and reasonably attractive, you knew full well you were being inspected and auditioned as a female” by Thomas while working for him.
Wright declined to comment for this article. Jourdain died in 2010. Hardnett did not respond to a request for comment.

The final day of the hearing was allotted for panels of witnesses, and the pro-Thomas testimony went long. If Wright, Jourdain or Hardnett had been called to testify after that, it would have been late at night.

Biden speaks to members of the last panel scheduled to testify before the committee early on Oct. 14, 1991. From left are Anna Jenkins (looking down), Nancy Altman, Pamela Talkin, Patricia Johnson and Linda Jackson. (Marcy Nightswander/AP)

In the end, Biden did not summon any of the women, and little attention was paid to Wright’s deposition, which was submitted to the written record in lieu of her testimony. Biden framed this as Wright’s decision, and the two signed a letter that stated that if she wanted to testify in person, he would honor her request. Wright, under subpoena until that point, saw it as Biden’s decision whether to call her.

Hogan, the former Biden lawyer, said she recommended that Biden place Wright’s deposition in the record instead of having her testify late on the final night. She said she saw it as a “slam-dunk victory” because the interview would go unrebutted by Republicans, but now says this view was naive.

“I feel I gave Senator Biden bad advice,” Hogan told The Post. “I told him I thought it was better than having her testify live. I have felt bad about this for years.”

Republicans who worked to confirm Thomas praised Biden’s performance and said he had no reason to apologize.

“I thought under the circumstances, he did as best he could,” C. Boyden Gray, who served as Bush’s White House counsel during the confirmation battle, said in an interview. “There was a lot of obvious disappointment and maybe even anger about the way things turned out, but I think those of us who knew him knew he was trying to maintain the dignity of the committee and run a straight process.”
Gray said that he “always thought [Biden] was skeptical of the whole plot, if you will, or the whole development.”

Biden in 2017 said that he believed Hill and said he was sorry “if she felt she didn’t get a fair hearing.”

Libby Casey and Annys Shin interviewed Hill in 2017. Robert Barnes, Alice Crites, Julie Tate and Matt Viser contributed to this report.