The Oklahoman

Sen. Graham's challenge: Fill a court seat and save his own

- By Meg Kinnard

COLUMBIA, S. C .— Few members of the Republican Part y have taken a political journey as long as Lindsey Graham's, from ridiculing Donald Trump as a “race- baiting, xenophobic, religious bigot” to becoming one of the president's fiercest defender sin Congress, as well as a regular golf partner.

Graham has long been known to have flexible politics, and that has served him well in South Carolina for decades. But this November maybe his toughest test yet as he seeks reelection and explains to voters how, as chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, he will push for Trump's Supreme Court nominee on the president's aggressive timetable, when the senator was so clearly — even defiantly — opposed to that approach as recently as two years ago, even demanding that he be called out for hypocrisy if he switched.

He switched.

“The rules have changed as far as I'm concerned,” Graham said Saturday.

It falls to Graham, as committee chairman, to vet Trump' s pick to replace the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and manage the spectacle of televised hearings on the nomination. It's one of the most volatile tasks in all of politics, more so now with a pandemic raging, a country on edge, and the ideologica­l tilt of the high court in the balance, perhaps for a generation.

And, Graham has Jaime Harrison to worry about.

The Democratic Senate candidate is running close to Graham, according to one recent poll, despite the conservati­ve tilt of South Carolina, and is matching the three-term incumbent in fundraisin­g that has yielded a total of more than $30 million apiece.

Harrison hopes to use the shifting Supreme Court stance against Graham, as does a proHarriso­n political action committee which, along with The Lincoln Project, is up with a $1 million ad buy aiming to use Graham's own 2018 pledge to oppose future electionye­ar confirmati­ons to the court. The Lincoln Project is a group of current and former Republican officials looking to defeat Trump.

“If an opening comes in the last year of President Trump' s term, and the primary process has started, we'll wait to the next election,” Graham said at an event hosted by The Atlantic magazine. Reminded t hat he was speaking on the record, Graham doubled down: “Yeah. Hold the tape.”

On Saturday, Harrison also posted video from a Senate Judiciary Committee meeting in 2016, where Graham declared ,“If there' s a Republican president (elected) in 2016 and a vacancy occurs in the last year of the first term, you can say Lindsey Graham said, ` Let's l et the next president, whoever it might be, make that nomination.'”

“My grand pa always said that a man is only as good as his word ,” Harrison added on Twitter .“Senator Graham, you have proven your word is worthless.”

The allegation that he's a flip-flopper isn't new for Graham.

Over the years he has take non and handi ly defeated primary challenge rs from the right who didn't see him as conservati­ve enough for South Carolina. Republican­s control both legislativ­e chambers in the state, and hold all statewide offices and most of the congressio­nal seats. Graham was too conciliato­ry, critics argued, too ready to work out deals with Democrats on issues such as immigratio­n alongside his long time ally and friend, the l ate Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.

Graham explained some of that bipartisan­ship, including his votes in favor of O ba ma-era Supreme Court picks Sonia So to mayor and Elena Kagan, by pointing to the consequenc­es of election results.

A similar framework was invoked by Trump, who on Saturday in North Carolina signaled that he' d be willing to accept waiting for a vote on his nominee until the postelecti­on congressio­nal session: “We win an election, and those are the consequenc­es.”

Part of Graham's justificat­ion for pressing ahead is Democrats' changing of the Senate rules to confirm more appeals court judges during President Barack Obama's tenure. But what looms largest is the confirmati­on battle for the last Supreme Court nominee, Brett Kavanaugh. Graham says Democrats “conspired to destroy” Kavanaugh.

Kavanaugh, who denied allegation­s of sexual assault that were raised against him, was nar - rowly confirmed in 2018 after a blistering, partisan fight. Graham played a pivotal role, delivering a fiery, confirmati­on hearing defense of Kavanaugh that went viral. “What you want to do is destroy this guy's life, hold this seat open and hope you win in 2020,” Graham said, his voice shaking.

That moment transforme­d Graham's political arc, drawing praise from Trump, pl audits from conservati­ves and scorn from liberals now donating in droves to stop his reelection bid.

“It was just a complete low point in my career in the Senate, and I spoke up,” Graham said, describing Democrats' scorn. “As I speak about it right now, the more I think about it, the more pissed I get,” he said this month during an event with Federalist Society members in South Carolina.

Trump has promised to put forward a female nominee for the Supreme Court seat this week, starting the process for Graham in the Senate. It may end up being Graham's only chance to shepherd a nominee to the high court. When he became chairman in 2019, he said he would hand the reins back to Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley in the next Congress, a deal Grassley confirmed that year.

As he seeks a fourth Senate term, it' s clear that the consequenc­es the Supreme Court battle could have on hi s own election are not far from Graham's mind. In a tweet thread announcing his support for Trump's nominating process Saturday, Graham cast Harrison, an associate Democratic National Committee chairman, as “a loyal foot soldier in the cause of the radical liberals to destroy America as we know it.”

Later, he tweeted t hat he was “dead set” on confirming Trump's pi ck. At t he end was a link to a fundraisin­g page for Graham's reelection bid.

 ?? YORK TIMES, POOL VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., listens at a hearing with the Senate Appropriat­ions Subcommitt­ee on Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies, Wednesday on Capitol Hill in Washington. [ANNA MONEYMAKER/NEW
YORK TIMES, POOL VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., listens at a hearing with the Senate Appropriat­ions Subcommitt­ee on Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies, Wednesday on Capitol Hill in Washington. [ANNA MONEYMAKER/NEW

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