Sen. Lindsey Graham, the oldest and most experienced candidate at the ‘kid’s table,’ dominated the GOP presidential debate on Wednesday — and at times even seemed to be moderating it himself in a surprisingly assured performance.
But thanks to “outsider” appeal that has resonated with voters far more than decades of public service the four candidates relegated to the early debates by low polling numbers and Donald Trump’s resilience in the GOP contest so far, Graham’s improved debate performance is unlikely to do anything for his struggling campaign.
Graham, whose performance in the Fox undercard debate in August was roundly panned, performed with greater confidence and offered up a few laugh lines, like that legal immigration was necessary to preserve social security, otherwise people would need to “have four kids after age 67” like the late former segregationist Sen. Strom Thurmond.
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Graham seized particularly forcefully on military strategy and immigration, Trump’s signature issue. It’s the same issue one that’s helped put Graham out in the cold with his own party because of his work to collaborate with Democrats on comprehensive reform. He sparred tersely former Sen. Rick Santorum, arguing for a more moderate view that would help expand the party.
“I’ll win fighting for Americans,” Santorum insisted.
“In my world, Hispanics are Americans,” Graham fired back.
Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, the son of Indian immigrants, struggled to defend his support for a pathway to citizenship as part of his immigration reform plans from Santorum, who dismissed it as amnesty as he sought to try and tap into the momentum Trump has seen with harsh views on immigration.








