-
Lindsey Graham Is Dead
Lindsey Graham died Saturday night. He was 71. His office called it a “brief and sudden illness.” He had just returned from Ukraine, his tenth trip there since the war began, and he was scheduled to appear on Meet the Press the next morning. He never made it.
I want to say something true and human first, because it matters: no one is a malignancy every hour of every day. Graham’s parents both died while he was still in school, and he became the one who raised his younger sister, Darline, eventually adopting her himself. According to Darline, “Lindsey assured me that he was going to take care of me, and he was going to be there for me. That’s just who he is.”
That was a real weight for a young man to carry, and he carried it. I won’t use that against him, nor speculate about anything else in his private life either. Whatever else is true about the public man, his family and his private life are not on trial here, and they never will be in this space. To Darline, and to whoever loved him as a brother and not as a senator, I am sorry for your loss. That grief is not up for debate.
But Lindsey Graham the senator is a different matter, and thirty years of public record don’t get to rest in peace just because the man attached to them did.
In 2016, Graham called Donald Trump “a xenophobic, race-baiting, religious bigot.” He warned his own party in writing: “If we nominate Trump, we will get destroyed, and we will deserve it.”
By 2019 he was one of Trump’s most loyal defenders in the Senate. By the years after, he was a regular golf partner, a frequent surrogate, a man who told Trump directly that four more years meant he could “do big stuff.” The senator who once diagnosed his party’s sickness became one of its most reliable symptoms.
This was not growth. This was proximity to power, and Graham chased it the way he chased Trump’s approval, without shame and without a stopping point.
In 2016, with a Supreme Court seat open nine months before an election, Graham said the next president should fill it. He said it on camera, and he said something else too: “You can use my words against me, and you’d be absolutely right.”
In 2020, with a seat open six weeks before an election, Graham helped ram through Amy Coney Barrett’s confirmation. His own 2016 words were played back to him constantly. He did it anyway.
Then came the Kavanaugh hearing, where Christine Blasey Ford testified under oath that she had been sexually assaulted by the nominee. Graham did not question her. He turned to his own colleagues and roared that a no vote would be “legitimizing the most despicable thing I have seen in my time in politics.” Not the assault. The accusation.
In 1998, Graham helped lead the charge to impeach Bill Clinton. The charge was not simply that Clinton had an affair. It was that he lied about it under oath, denying the nature of the relationship in sworn testimony before a federal grand jury, and that he obstructed justice in the effort to keep it hidden. Graham’s framing at the time: “Impeachment is about cleansing the office.”
In 2019, faced with a call transcript showing Trump pressuring a foreign leader to manufacture dirt on a political rival, Graham announced before the Senate trial even began that he wasn’t “trying to pretend to be a fair juror.” He waved the evidence away as “hearsay.”
Compare the standards. In 1998, sworn testimony and alleged obstruction were disqualifying enough to impeach a president. In 2019, a recorded phone call wasn’t even worth a fair hearing from the same senator. Graham never explained the difference, because there wasn’t one that didn’t depend entirely on whose president it was.
Graham pushed for the Iraq War. He spent the next two decades as one of the Senate’s loudest voices for regime change in Iran, calling for preemptive strikes as early as 2010 and comparing the Iranian government to Nazi Germany when the shooting actually started this year. He was a defender of keeping Guantanamo Bay open indefinitely, telling Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson’s confirmation hearing he wanted the prison to stay open regardless of her judicial record, because a public defender who once represented a detainee there was, in his eyes, disqualifying.
Whatever the merits of any individual conflict, Graham’s answer to nearly all of them was more bombs, more detention, more indefinitely. Ukraine was the one exception he stayed consistent on for the length of the war, and it is worth naming since consistency was rare enough in this man to be notable when it happened. It does not balance the ledger.
Graham voted against the Employment Non-Discrimination Act. He co-sponsored the Defense of Marriage Act. Decades later, he introduced a national 15-week abortion ban, after years of insisting abortion policy should be left to the states. On issue after issue affecting people who were never in the room when he made these votes, Graham chose the position that cost him nothing and protected him from his own party’s base.
Lindsey Graham spent three decades in Washington proving that conviction is negotiable if the price is right. He called Trump a bigot, then knelt for him. He set a rule for the Supreme Court, then broke it the moment it inconvenienced him. He said impeachment was about cleansing the office once, and refused to be a fair juror the next time the office needed cleansing.
He raised his sister when no one else would. That was real, and it was decent, and it belongs to him and to her alone.
The rest belongs to the record, and the record does not go to the funeral.