Scrappy RINO-ish Lindsey Graham Dead

South Carolina Republican Senator Lindsey Graham has died unexpectedly at age 71.

Senator Lindsey Graham, who was first elected to represent his home state of South Carolina in the Senate in 2002 and played an influential role in shaping the foreign policy of Republican administrations over the last two decades, has died. He was 71.

Graham died Saturday night of a “brief and sudden illness,” his office said.

“Senator Graham’s family appreciates prayers at this time and asks for privacy during this incredibly difficult period,” the statement said. Emergency medical technicians responded to a call for cardiac arrest at Graham’s home Saturday night, according to police scanner audio obtained by NBC News.

There were no indications Graham was ill and he was scheduled to appear on NBC’s Meet the Press Sunday morning.

President Trump hailed Graham as “one of the greatest people and Senators I have ever known” in a Sunday morning Truth Social post.

No, and no. For most of his career, Graham wasn’t just a RINO, he was the RINO (especially after John McCain lost to Obama), wandering off the reservation in deeply irritating ways on a variety of issues, from illegal alien amnesty (remember “Lindsey Grahamnesty”?) to pork barrel spending to bombing Syria. Powerline dubbed him “The Arlene Specter of the South,” but that wasn’t quite right. Specter was a colorless Machiavellian always looking out for his own interest above any other consideration, but Graham was anything but colorless.

He was a peculiar senator from a peculiar state whose Byzantine politics inspired House of Cards‘s Frank Underwood. Graham was simply different. In many ways, he was The Last of the Southern Dandys, with that light voice that made everyone think he was gay. He was popular in his home state, and Democrats spent over $100 million trying unsuccessfully trying to oust him in 2020.

Based solely on his positions, Graham was much more RINO-ish than, say, John Cornyn, and I have little doubt that if I lived in South Carolina rather than Texas, I’d find him much more irritating.

Yet Graham had qualities that elevated him beyond ordinary RINO-dom.

First of all, he had charm. He was a throwback that loved being an old-style glad-handing politician, no matter how out of fashion that stereotype was. Some politicians put on and take off their personas like a suit, but with Graham you suspected he was like that all the way down.

Second, he was a scrapper. No matter how much he irritated you, when he was on your side, he relished laying into the other with gusto. Graham loved the thrust and parry of political debate, and could cut-down and insult Democrats with the best of them. McCain seemed to crave good publicity from the leftwing MSM, but Graham seemed to love any publicity, good or bad, so he didn’t shy away from high-profile dustups. He was a key figure (and a key vote) in many important legislative fights. And he was a stout supporter of Ukraine’s resistance to Russia’s illegal war of territorial aggression.

Third, and perhaps most importantly, Graham really seemed to come into his own in the Trump years. Despite widely divergent personalities (though with a shared love for the limelight), President Trump and Graham forged a strong working relationship. Under Trump, he seemed to wander off the reservation less and fight more for Republican priorities. He fought hard for Trump’s judicial nominees, and his fierce defense of Brett Kavanaugh and laying into Democrats for their ginned-up, obviously bogus rape allegations, was probably his finest hour.

Love him or hate him (and whichever it was varied from issue to issue), you certainly didn’t forget him. Graham’s seat was already up for election this year, and barring a 2018-sized wave for Democrats this year, Republicans should hold the seat, and likely with someone more reliably conservative than Graham. But the senate just got considerably less colorful.

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