KEY POINTS
  • The Supreme Court will start hearing oral arguments on Monday amid a brutal partisan battle over Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, who has wrestled with allegations of sexual assault from multiple women and whose confirmation now hangs in the balance.
  • If Kavanaugh is not on the bench to hear an oral argument, he will not vote on the case. That said, if his vote would prove decisive, it's likely that the court will simply have the case re-argued, as it has done in a number of previous vacancies. 
  • On Monday the court will hear arguments on two cases, Mount Lemmon Fire District v. Guido and Weyerhaeuser Company v. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, or the "frog case."
Demonstrators protesting against Judge Brett Kavanaugh's nomination as an Associate Justice on the Supreme Court hold a rally outside the US Supreme Court in Washington, DC, September 28, 2018. 

The Supreme Court will start hearing oral arguments on Monday amid a brutal partisan battle over nominee Brett Kavanaugh, the man whose path to the nation's highest court has been blocked by an uproar over allegations of sexual assault.

The claims, made by several women, have put Kavanaugh's confirmation in the balance. The increasingly fractious and partisan process — in which Kavanaugh this week blasted lawmakers for pursuing "a calculated and orchestrated political hit" motivated by "revenge" — has been striking, particularly for a branch of government that generally tries to hold itself above politics.