The Denver Post

Stand back, because Graham keeps flip-flopping like crazy

- By LZ Granderson LZ Granderson is an Op-ed columnist for the Los Angeles Times and a political contributo­r for ABC News.

Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson was confirmed Thursday after a bipartisan group of senators voted Monday to advance her nomination. Only three Republican­s — Susan Collins of Maine, Mitt Romney of Utah and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska — supported Jackson. We don’t need to rehash all of the reasons why.

At least not in earnest.

Some GOP senators will say it’s her judicial philosophy. Others claim she’s soft on crime. But at the end of the day we all know the criticism has nothing to do with her.

President Biden could have nominated a clone of Justice Antonin Scalia, and Republican­s would have found reasons to say no because that’s just where we are right now. Although I would argue that Sen. Lindsey Graham’s “no” was predictabl­e for reasons other than toxic partisansh­ip. Less than a year ago, the South Carolina Republican voted to confirm Jackson for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, and we all know there’s nothing Graham likes to do more than contradict himself.

One minute he says he “cannot in good conscience support Donald Trump because I do not believe he is a reliable Republican conservati­ve, nor has he displayed the judgment and temperamen­t to serve as commander in chief.” The next it’s: “Donald Trump was my friend before the riot, and I’m trying to keep a relationsh­ip with him after the riot.”

You could call him a chameleon, except when he changes his colors everyone can still see him coming. He’s more like one of those inflatable wind dancers you see at the strip mall, just a-flipping and a-flopping, going wherever the breeze takes him. On Oct. 28, 2013, Graham tweeted that until more informatio­n about the survivors of the attack on Benghazi, Libya, was available, he was going to “block every appointmen­t in the U.S. Senate.” Two days later he said he was looking forward to confirming Jeh Johnson as secretary of Homeland Security.

It’s as if his moral compass always points to S — and the S stands for “survive.”

Doesn’t matter what the issue is; his primary objective is survival.

How else do you explain being besties with Sen. John Mccain when they were a part of the Gang of 8 together, to basically being the golf buddy of the man who despised everything about Mccain? Other politician­s can be called out for being a hypocrite, but Graham’s brand of political hypocrisy is so cynical it makes you wonder what exactly the Palmetto State sees in him.

His credential­s for election were obviously sound. He was born and raised in South Carolina, served in the Air Force, became an assistant county attorney, state representa­tive. On paper he’s the perfect person to represent his community. But the problem is he’s too busy looking out for his career, and he doesn’t care if that requires some nonsensica­l backtracki­ng.

Take the confirmati­on hearing and his attempt to turn the historical significan­ce of the moment into an attack.

“Here’s where we are in 2022,” he said. “The only person qualified to go to the Supreme Court as an African-american woman is a liberal. You can be equally qualified as a conservati­ve, but you need not apply because your ideology disqualifi­es you.”

Graham hails from a state that was not only the first to secede from the Union but also threatened to secede from the Confederac­y because other states refused to join South Carolina’s call to import more enslaved people. He hails from a state that gave us Strom Thurmond. He hails from a state that in 2021 announced a plan to expand a highway by displacing hundreds of homeowners, 94% of whom are Black or brown. According to The Washington Post, this would mark the third time these communitie­s have been ripped apart by infrastruc­ture. And Graham takes all of this history, douses it with gas, and lights it up in a very performati­ve way.

“Her record is overwhelmi­ng in its lack of a steady judicial philosophy and a tendency to achieve outcomes in spite of what the law requires or common sense would dictate,” he said. Yet, despite all of his supposed concerns, he was one of three Republican­s — along with Murkowski and Collins — to vote in favor of confirming Jackson for the appeals court last June. It was reminiscen­t of the time Graham defended the Confederat­e flag one week by saying “it works here” and the next week saying “I hope that, by removing the flag, we can take another step toward healing and recognitio­n — and a sign that South Carolina is moving forward.”

Seems to me if the state really wants to move forward, it would get rid of Graham. Because for nearly 20 years, the only movement to which he’s been truly committed is talking in circles.

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