Sen. Lindsey Graham warned Saturday against allowing House Speaker John Boehner’s resignation to result in a “meltdown of the Republican Party” that prevents the GOP from winning the White House.
“The first thing you do in medicine and politics is do no harm, so I hope that we’ll look at winning the presidency in 2016, and realize that our actions in the House and the Senate could jeopardize that — or actually enhance our ability to win,” the South Carolina senator told reporters after his remarks at the Values Voter Summit in Washington.
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Graham, who’s had low polling numbers in the GOP presidential race, said he likes Boehner and praised him for his 25-year career in Congress, which comes to a close on Oct. 30.
But Graham said he expects more from whoever becomes the next speaker: “I hope we can have a relationship … that will allow us not to shut down the government, keep the conservative agenda alive and focus on winning in 2016.”
Graham also hinted at a standoff coming this winter over the budget, telling reporters that he won’t vote for a budget that doesn’t lift sequestration caps on defense spending. Still, he said, he expects the short-term government funding bill meant to avert a shutdown on Oct. 1 to pass when it comes up for a vote.








