How Senator Lindsey Graham transformed into mini-Trump

His histrionics at the Senate hearings show he’s hitched his wagon to his new best buddy

Senator Lindsey Graham  speaks to reporters after the final vote on Judge Brett Kavanaugh’s nomination to the Supreme Court on Saturday. The process brings to completion Graham’s transformation from Trump critic to Trump lackey. Photograph: Erin Schaff/New York Times
Senator Lindsey Graham speaks to reporters after the final vote on Judge Brett Kavanaugh’s nomination to the Supreme Court on Saturday. The process brings to completion Graham’s transformation from Trump critic to Trump lackey. Photograph: Erin Schaff/New York Times

The battle over Brett Kavanaugh's nomination to the Supreme Court was an especially ugly episode of a reality-show presidency that degrades almost everyone swept up in it, and many characters stagger away from it looking worse than ever. That's Senator Lindsey Graham you see at the head of the pack. That's Graham you hear talking and talking and talking some more, in committee rooms and on stages and before the television cameras that he rushes to the way a toddler chases soap bubbles. His words are whichever ones guarantee a major role and a powerful patron, which means that these days he sounds like a more articulate echo of his golfing buddy Donald Trump.

That wouldn’t, by itself, be cause to dwell on him. Washington is lousy with lackeys, and not even the maddest of kings thins their ranks. But Graham is special. He really is. I can’t think of another Republican whose journey from anti-Trump outrage to pro-Trump obsequiousness was quite so illogical or half as sad, and his conduct during the war over Kavanaugh completed it. For the president he fought overtime, he fought nasty and he fought without nuance.

In so doing, he distilled our rotten politics – its transactional nature, its tribal fury, its hysterical pitch – as neatly as anybody in the current Congress does. Has a diva at La Scala ever delivered an aria as overwrought as the one that Graham performed on the day when both Christine Blasey Ford and Brett Kavanaugh testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee? I doubt it.

"Boy, you all want power," Graham, who serves on the committee, railed at his Democratic colleagues, accusing them of ginning up accusations against Kavanaugh. "God, I hope you never get it." Because Graham and his fellow Republicans exercise it so much more responsibly? Because they're so principled themselves? I guess that's why they minimise Russian interference in our elections; indulge Trump's bromances with Vladimir Putin, Rodrigo Duterte and Kim Jong-un; and smile upon his mendacity, misogyny, racism and unchecked greed. They're modelling integrity in government.

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Less partisan

"You want this seat?" Graham said to them. "I hope you never get it." No, Senator Graham, you do more than hope. You cheat. Let me introduce you to Merrick Garland, a figure far less partisan than Kavanaugh and thus much more deserving of a seat on the highest court in the land. You and your Republican colleagues in the Senate, every bit as desirous of power as Democrats are, crushed him, and the fact that it didn't involve an attack on his reputation doesn't diminish its ruthlessness.

“This is not a job interview,” Graham told Kavanaugh, soothing him. “This is hell.” Interesting word choice. I remember when Graham used “hell” in a different context. This was back in December 2015. He was campaigning vainly for the Republican presidential nomination, saw Trump clearly and didn’t suck up to him. “You know how you make America great again?” Graham said then. “Tell Donald Trump to go to hell.”

"If we nominate Trump, we will get destroyed," he tweeted, apparently referring to the Republican Party's prospects in 2016. "And we will deserve it." He called Trump the "world's biggest jackass". He said that choosing between Trump and Senator Ted Cruz, who survived much deeper into the party's 2016 presidential primary than Graham did, was like deciding whether to be shot or poisoned. Trump returned these kindnesses by publicly divulging Graham's mobile phone number and forcing him to get a new one.

There were sound policy reasons for Graham's revulsion. At the risk of alienating some of the conservatives in South Carolina who routinely voted for him, he had pressed for sensible immigration reform, the kind that didn't involve ethnic slurs, the forced separation of children from their parents and border walls. He was one of the Senate's most ardent hawks, and Trump was dissing foreign military interventions, damning NATO, pimping for Putin and peddling isolationism.

Revulsion

There were also personal reasons for Graham’s revulsion. Graham’s closest ally and constant companion in the Senate, a man he claimed to revere beyond measure, was John McCain. And Trump, at the beginning of his campaign, bizarrely and grotesquely mocked McCain’s long, brutal years as a prisoner of the North Vietnamese. Trump’s belittling of McCain never ceased, and Graham took proper offense – for a while. Then Trump became president, started inviting Graham to play golf and Graham parted ways with his nerve and his spine. What beautiful fairways you have, Mr President. What a virile tee shot.

That’s the sad part I mentioned. And this is the absolutely pathetic twist: McCain, battling brain cancer, stopped spending much time in Washington, and, as his health deteriorated, Graham’s ardour and cheerleading for Trump intensified. McCain, you see, wasn’t just Graham’s friend. He was his road to greater relevance. And Trump presented a veritable expressway. So Graham switched vehicles and directions, and pressed the pedal to the metal.

He went from defending Jeff Sessions to pushing him toward the exit, from sounding the alarm about Russia to hyperventilating about the Justice Department and the FBI, from calling Trump a "kook" to savaging the media for portraying him as one, from wanting to put Trump on a bed of nails to fluffing his pillows and smoothing his duvet. At times he gushes so much that he makes Rudy Giuliani look withholding.

Open line

Shocker of shockers: He now has a nearly open line to the president and the president in turn calls him. White House reporters routinely mention this and him. He has all the TV time that he could ever want. On Thursday he got a prime spot at the Atlantic festival in Washington, where he was interviewed by the magazine's editor-in-chief, Jeffrey Goldberg. On Friday he got a big profile in the Style section of the Washington Post.

He claims that he's serving a higher purpose by softening Trump's stances where they sorely need softening, but that certainly hasn't happened with immigration. He notes that he does chastise Trump occasionally. But his smearing of Christine Blasey Ford and the Democrats who championed her was so vehement that he earned public raves from Giuliani, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, Eric Trump and Sean Hannity. They and the president are his constituency now, and his agenda? According to a few people who know him well, he's auditioning for attorney general. Him or Sessions? It's like deciding whether to be shot or poisoned. And, to plunder a quote from a quintessential Washington hack, God, I hope he never gets it.

– New York Times