During the 2016 presidential campaign, after his own candidacy failed, Sen. Lindsey Graham’s (R-S.C.) principal focus was on stopping Donald Trump from becoming his party’s nominee. Two years ago at this time, the Republican senator described Trump as a “race-baiting, xenophobic, religious bigot” who should be told to “go to hell.”
After Trump became president anyway, Graham appeared well positioned to be an intra-party thorn in the White House’s side, mocking Trump’s dismissal of Russia’s attack on the American elections, for example. For his part, the president was publicly admonishing Graham as recently as August.
The two have evidently put their differences behind them. The South Carolinian, who now complains about pundits criticizing the president in the same ways he used to, has become one of Trump’s high-profile cheerleaders.
Indeed, Graham’s Twitter feed took a turn toward the bizarre in recent days, promoting conspiracy theories and anti-Clinton nonsense. TPM’s Josh Marshall explained yesterday:
Note here the things that Graham is including in his call. They range from things that are fairly unreasonable or without significant merit to things that are totally crazy. He is asking for a Special Counsel to reinvestigate Clinton’s private server, the Uranium One story, which is completely ludicrous, and anti-GOP bias at the FBI, which is not only factually nonsensical but seems intended to lay the groundwork for ideological purges of the primary national law enforcement agency which already has a very Republican-leaning political culture.
One might expect some of Graham’s over-the-top rhetoric from a conservative pundit or a House Freedom Caucus member, but the senator is supposed to be above such things.
Except he’s not.









