First Read is a morning briefing from Meet the Press and the NBC Political Unit on the day’s most important political stories and why they matter.
Today’s an important deadline for Lindsey Graham (and the rest of the GOP field)
Finally, today is a deadline for the GOP field — and especially Lindsey Graham. As NBC’s Kasie Hunt reported earlier this month, “South Carolina’s State Election Commission has warned the state’s Republican Party: If a candidate wants to stay off the ballot for the Feb. 20 presidential primary, they have until Dec. 21 to get out of the race,” NBC’s Kasie Hunt wrote earlier this month. “It’s set a potentially critical deadline for South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, who will have to weigh whether it’s worth continuing his long shot presidential bid in the face of a potentially embarrassing showing in his home state.”
Status quo heading into the holidays
After two debates in the past week, several new controversies, and even a new“Saturday Night Live” episode lampooning it all, both the Republican and Democratic presidential races are unchanged heading into the holiday doldrums. On the Republican side, Donald Trump remains the overall frontrunner; Ted Cruz has a clear path to victory in Iowa; and Marco Rubio is still trying to break through in an early state. On the Democratic side, Hillary Clinton is in firm control; Bernie Sanders, though, is still making it very interesting in both Iowa and (especially) New Hampshire; and Martin O’Malley has still been unable to break through. So it’s the status quo heading into the Christmas and New Year’s holidays — and before the four-week sprint into the Iowa caucuses that will begin on Jan.3.
Hillary vs. Trump: Has Trump has been a recruitment tool for ISIS?
A fight between the Democratic frontrunner (Clinton) and Republican frontrunner (Trump) has been the driving political story over the last 24 hours. It all started when Hillary Clinton said this of Trump at the Democratic debate on Saturday night: “He is becoming ISIS’ best recruiter. They are going to people, showing videos of Donald Trump insulting Islam and Muslims in order to recruit more radical jihadists.” On NBC’s “Meet the Press” the next morning (as well as on “Today” this morning), Trump fired back. “[N]obody has been able to back that up. It’s nonsense. It’s just another Hillary lie. She lies like crazy about everything, whether it’s trips where she was being gunned down in a helicopter or an airplane, she’s a liar and everybody knows that. But she just made this up in thin air,” he said on “Meet” yesterday. While the Clinton campaign backs up her claim with articles like this one — “Donald Trump’s Muslim Bashing Aids Cause of Terror Networks, Say Experts” — we’ve found no proof of ISIS using Trump its videos. Yet here’s the kicker to this entire controversy: Trump said on “Meet” that he wouldn’t change his rhetoric, even if ISIS uses it in the future. “No, because I think that my words represent toughness and strength. Hillary’s not strong, Hillary’s weak, frankly.”
Let us praise strong men
Speaking of strength, Trump continued to praise Vladimir Putin when one of us asked him about it on “Meet” yesterday.
TODD: Why are you so comfortable praising Vladimir Putin?
TRUMP: I’m not, I didn’t praise him, he praised me. He called me brilliant. He said very nice things about me. I mean, I accept it–
TODD: Well you’ve called him a strong leader–
TRUMP: He is a strong leader. What am I gonna say, he’s a weak leader? He’s making mincemeat out of our President. He is a strong leader. I mean, you would like me to call him a weak leader, he’s a strong leader. And I’m not going to be politically correct. He’s got an 80% of approval rating done by pollsters from, I understand, this country, okay? So it’s not even done by his pollsters. He’s very popular within Russia. Now that may change, but I didn’t say anything one way or the other. He came out with a very nice statement about me and I said, “That’s very nice, I’m honored by it.”
Also on ABC, Trump said that there was no proof Putin has killed journalists in Russia. “But, in all fairness to Putin, you’re saying he killed people. I haven’t’ seen that. I don’t know that he has. Have you been able to prove that? Do you know the names of the reporters that he’s killed?”









