Posted on 07/12/2018 1:38:56 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
Or did someone throw the Washington Post a curveball? The White House released Brett Kavanaugh’s financial records yesterday as part of their disclosures for his eventual confirmation hearing, and the Post may have thought they’d found a diamond in the rough. Kavanaugh ran up some substantial credit-card debt, a potential hanging slider over the partisan plate. That is, until they found out what the charges were.
Can we call this a swing and a miss?
Supreme Court nominee Brett M. Kavanaugh incurred tens of thousands of dollars of credit card debt buying baseball tickets over the past decade and at times reported liabilities that could have exceeded the value of his cash accounts and investment assets, according to a review of Kavanaughs financial disclosures and information provided by the White House.
White House spokesman Raj Shah told The Washington Post that Kavanaugh built up the debt by buying Washington Nationals season tickets and tickets for playoff games for himself and a handful of friends. Shah said some of the debts were also for home improvements.
In 2016, Kavanaugh reported having between $60,000 and $200,000 in debt accrued over three credit cards and a loan. Each credit card held between $15,000 and $50,000 in debt, and a Thrift Savings Plan loan was between $15,000 and $50,000.
The credit card debts and loan were either paid off or fell below the reporting requirements in 2017, according to the filings, which do not require details on the nature or source of such payments. Shah told The Post that Kavanaughs friends reimbursed him for their share of the baseball tickets and that the judge has since stopped purchasing the season tickets.
In other words, Judge Kavanaugh fronted the cost of season tickets for his friends by putting them on his charge cards, and paid it off after his pals kicked in their share. This foul pop-up led to much mirth and merriment on Twitter when the story first appeared, with some questioning whether any Nats fan could be said to have the requisite judgment necessary for a seat on the Supreme Court. The general consensus was that pointing out that Kavanaugh loves baseball, has the trust of his friends, and pays off his debts was not likely to be much of a political liability in a Senate Judiciary Committee meeting.
In fact, as CBS News notes in reviewing the same records, the real story is that Kavanaugh remains a man of relatively modest means — perhaps the most modest on the court he’s joining:
The vetting of Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh is just beginning, but his public financial disclosures make one thing clear: He’s not as wealthy as many already on the high court. Public disclosure forms for 2017 show that the federal judge would come to the nation’s highest court with only two investments, including a bank account, together worth a maximum of $65,000, along with the balance on a loan of $15,000 or less.
Separate from the disclosure forms, the White House said that between Kavanaugh’s retirement account balance of $400,000 to $500,000, and the equity in his home in Chevy Chase, Maryland, he has about an additional million dollars in wealth. …
A 2017 report from the Center for Public Integrity said that at least six of the nine justices were millionaires, with Justice Stephen Breyer reporting a minimum net worth of $6.15 million in 2016 and Chief Justice John Roberts a minimum reportable net worth of more than $5 million. The report stressed that the disclosures are made in broad ranges, making it hard to know exact figures.
Regarding Kavanaugh being poorer than the others, many of whom had considerable earnings during years of non-government legal work, Shah said, “He’s devoted his life to public service.”
At the very least, it’s clear that Kavanaugh hasn’t cashed in on public service in the manner seen by some in Congress and other parts of the federal government. For a man who has spent his whole life in and around the Beltway, that’s pretty remarkable. And while it won’t get Kavanaugh an intentional walk from Senate Democrats, they might want to consider how Kavanaugh compares to their own records before putting a few pitches under his chin.
“”Fact” and “CBS News” do not belong in the same sentence ... “
You misspelled the name! It’s “SeeBS!”
Just shows how small, petty, and grasping the MSM is. They have their agenda and it isnt about the objective sharing of important news.
All that technology and power and the best they can do is go over a mans credit card purchase. Sad.
What kind of person in public life puts charges on a credit card when there are cattle futures to be purchased?
The Lame Stream Media is about to release a BOMBSHELL!!!!
Through their intensive, exhaustive investigations, they have uncovered that Kavanaugh, at age 7, lied to his parents one day and said he was sick so he could skip school....
That does it...Kavanaugh is history....
Lol! These huge debts were the cumulative results of 10 years. He put home repairs and even remodeling and all sorts of expenses on
the cards (for the rewards and miles) and then paid it off. Many people do that habitually because you can get substantial rewards from your cards.
Didnt President Truman say that to get rich in public service, you had to be a crook? Guess The new judge designate doesnt fit this model.
Rosenstein has the US attorneys in the Dept. of Justice pawing through Judge Kavanaugh’s personal history and judicial rulings to find dirt. Why has the President not fired him?
Shhheeeessshhh I know young college graduates with more debt than that!
and they expect other people to pay it....
I don’t know.
That is a high level of credit card debt. Maybe it implies he makes bad life choices! (do I need a sarcasm tag)
One Fox talking head (Jonah Goldberg, I think) said this was standard operating procedure for potential Supreme Court judges.
It wouldn’t be a scandal if the Nats were playing better.
>>”Fact” and “CBS News” do not belong in the same sentence ... <<
And yet there it happened for the second time in your post.
Laughable.
So he bought things on credit cards and then paid the charges. There is no allegation of non-payment or bad debts. This is less than nothing. What am I missing? Do the Rat drones actually just swallow this and demonstrate some more? (Yes, I know.)
And how much is our own govt. in debt?
$20,000,000,000,000?
Yes ... the horrible lying leftists at SeeBS (check spelling there, Vette) “News” force me to do things which should not be done.
MORE FAKE NEWS. You have to parse the BS, but they said Kavanaugh also had a net worth of about $1 million
they said in 2016, Kavanagh had “ $60,000 and $200,000 in debt accrued over three credit cards and a loan”
Was the loan possible a mortgage - like nearly all other Americans?
That also gives Kavanaugh a debt-service ratio of min. 5 and Maximum 16. That’s not a debtor or someone on the verge of bankruptcy.
A guy who pays his debts will definitely not fit in with the usual DC crowd.
Kavanaugh seems real. I am liking him.
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