It gets better. The GOP Judiciary Twitter account sent a message saying they got their nomination confirmed, followed by Happy Birthday Hillary.
https://twitter.com/JudiciaryGOP/status/1320878683423428609And earlier, the Supreme Court ruled that Absentee ballots in Wisconsin need to be received by the close of polls on Election Day, as opposed to just postmarked by Election Day. To be clear, that isn't a Federal requirement, since some other states allow ballots to still count as long as they are postmarked prior to Election Day and received within a certain amount of time after (Alaska, for example, counts ballots received up to 10 days after Election Day, Illinois allows up to 2 weeks, there are several more). In other words, it's very much a "States' Rights" kind of issue. But that's not the important thing.
Kavanaugh thinks the Supreme Court didn't go far enough and that Federal courts should be able to weigh in on how all states run their elections (something Justice Rehnquist proposed back in the Bush/Gore election that 2 other conservative justices thought was going too far). That way, "suspicious impropriety" doesn't arise as votes are counted after the big night. Votes that were made legitimately, by Americans who have the right to cast that vote and make their voice heard.
This is a pretty bad look.
Edit for clarity: In this particular ruling, the court actually went along with the Wisconsin Supreme Court's decision, the alarming thing is Kavanaugh's adoption of the Rehnquist concurrence from 2000 about how the Federal courts should have more say in how states conduct their elections.