San Diego Union-Tribune

SEN. GRAHAM ADMONISHED FOR FUNDRAISIN­G

Panel rebukes him for TV appearance on Capitol grounds

- BY MARIANA ALFARO Alfaro writes for The Washington Post.

A nine-minute Fox News appearance last year has earned Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., a public admonishme­nt from the Senate Ethics Committee because, during it, he solicited campaign contributi­ons for former Georgia Senate candidate Herschel Walker while standing on Capitol grounds.

In a letter to Graham, the committee’s chair, Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., and vice chair, Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., detailed that the South Carolina Republican violated Senate rules and standards of conduct by soliciting campaign contributi­ons in a federal building.

The committee issued only a public admonition but no sanction in response to Graham’s actions.

Per the committee’s investigat­ion, on Nov. 30, Graham conducted an interview with Fox News in the rotunda of the Russell Senate Office Building. The Republican senator spent four out of nine minutes in the interview talking about the 2022 Senate runoff race in Georgia between Walker and Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-Ga.

Republican­s then saw the race as an opportunit­y to pick up a Senate seat from Democrats,

and Graham was one of Walker’s most ferocious backers in the Senate. Ultimately, however, Warnock defeated Walker in the increasing­ly purple state, giving Democrats a slim majority in the chamber.

The Senate committee, upon reviewing the November interview, concluded that Graham “directly solicited campaign contributi­ons on behalf of Mr. Walker’s campaign committee, www.teamhersch­el.com, five separate times.”

In the letter, Coons and Lankford acknowledg­ed that Graham self-reported his actions to them.

“It was a mistake. I take responsibi­lity. I will try to do better in the future,” Graham said in a statement Friday.

The committee also noted that this is not the first time Graham violated

Senate rules banning fundraisin­g appeals on federal property.

According to the letter, on Oct. 14, 2020, immediatel­y after a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing, Graham participat­ed in an “unplanned media interview” in the Dirksen Senate Office Building, during which he “directly solicited campaign contributi­ons” to his re-election campaign committee in response to a reporter’s question regarding his fundraisin­g efforts.

At the time, the Judiciary Committee was in the midst of confirmati­on hearings for now-U.S. Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett. Graham, then chair of the committee, was fending off an election challenge from Democrat Jaime Harrison. Asked by a reporter if the Coney Barrett hearings would affect his standing in the Senate race, Graham responded by making a fundraisin­g appeal.

“I don’t know how much it affected fundraisin­g today, but if you want to help me close the gap — LindseyGra­ham.com — a little bit goes a long way,” he said. “I feel really good about my campaign.”

In the Thursday letter to Graham, Coons and Lankford explained that they dismissed the 2020 complaint — issuing instead a private warning to Graham — because the committee concluded that his conduct then, despite violating Senate standards, was the result of “inadverten­t, technical, or otherwise of a de minimis nature.”

The last time the committee issued a public letter of admonition was in April 2018, when it reprimande­d Sen. Robert Menendez, DN.J., after a mistrial was declared in a monthslong bribery case against him. The committee’s standards allow for it to issue private letters of admonishme­nt, which means the public is unlikely to hear about complaints resolved this way.

In the Thursday letter, Coons and Lankford noted that Graham broke the Senate’s rules on fundraisin­g in 2022 despite having been given a private warning about his October 2020 fundraisin­g wrongdoing.

 ?? MARIAM ZUHAIB AP FILE ?? The Senate Ethics Committee issued a public admonition to Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.
MARIAM ZUHAIB AP FILE The Senate Ethics Committee issued a public admonition to Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.

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