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Graham says he won’t support McConnell for GOP leader unless he has ‘working relationship’ with Trump

cigaretteman

HR King
May 29, 2001
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Sen. Lindsey O. Graham (R-S.C.) said Wednesday that he would not support Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) for reelection as the Senate GOP leader if he did not have a “working relationship” with former president Donald Trump.

“Elections are about the future. If you want to be a Republican leader in the House or the Senate, you have to have a working relationship with President Donald Trump,” Graham told Fox News host Sean Hannity. He added that Trump was “the most consequential Republican since Ronald Reagan” and that he could handily win the GOP nomination if he wanted it and be reelected president in 2024.
“Here’s the question: Can Senator McConnell effectively work with the leader of the Republican Party, Donald Trump?” Graham said. “I’m not going to vote for anybody that can’t have a working relationship with President Trump, to be a team, to come up with an America First agenda ... because if you can’t do that, you will fail.”



While two pro-Trump Republican Senate candidates — Eric Greitens of Missouri and Kelly Tshibaka of Alaska — have publicly stated they would not support McConnell for GOP leader, so far no sitting senators other than Graham have publicly broached taking such a stand.
Trump and McConnell’s relationship soured after the Jan. 6 insurrection, when a pro-Trump mob stormed the U.S. Capitol to try to stop the certification of Joe Biden’s electoral college win. The violent siege resulted in five deaths and injured dozens of law enforcement officers.








Trump's powerful hold over the GOP








More than 10 months after leaving office, former president Donald Trump maintains a powerful hold over the Republican party. (Zach Purser Brown/The Washington Post)
After the attack, McConnell said Trump had been “practically and morally responsible” for provoking the mob, and he reportedly vowed never to speak to Trump again. The Senate minority leader’s votes and actions, however, have more often hewed closer to Trump’s interests, and McConnell has said he would vote for the GOP’s 2024 nominee, even if it is Trump again.




Trump, who has repeatedly mocked McConnell as a “Broken Old Crow” and a “loser” who is an ineffective leader for the party, intensified his attacks after McConnell joined 18 Republican senators to vote for Biden’s infrastructure bill, giving Biden a long-sought, bipartisan win.
As with many other Republicans, Graham’s stance on Trump has evolved significantly since the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection.
“Trump and I, we’ve had a hell of a journey. I hate it to end this way‚” Graham said that night when the Senate reconvened after the rioters had been cleared out. “But today ... all I can say is, count me out. Enough is enough.”
About a month later, Graham rushed back to Trump’s defense, becoming an even more vocal supporter of the former president. In February, he pronounced on “Fox News Sunday” that the Trump movement was “alive and well” and called Trump “the most potent force in the Republican Party.” Graham also slightly criticized McConnell, who he said had made himself a target for pro-Trump Republicans in 2022.



By the end of the year, Graham was openly questioning McConnell’s leadership, calling him out in televised interviews for agreeing to a deal with Democrats to raise the debt ceiling without the risk of Republican filibuster.
“We’re going into an election cycle where the wind’s to our back. We can’t do this again,” Graham said in December. “But when you look forward to this party, Donald Trump is the most consequential Republican in the entire Republican Party, maybe in the history of the party since Ronald Reagan. And if you’re going to lead this party in the House and the Senate, you have to have a working relationship with Donald Trump or it will not work.”
Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.), who heads the National Republican Senatorial Committee, has tried to walk a tightrope when it comes to placating Trump while working with the GOP establishment. But he has openly supported McConnell.



“I’ve known Mitch McConnell since the early ’90s,” Scott said in November. “I actually lived in Kentucky and supported him then. I have a good working relationship with Mitch McConnell.”

 
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Donald Trump has sought for a year to drive a wedge between Republicans and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) — with relatively little success, all told.
But Sen. Lindsey O. Graham (R-S.C.) has now given the wedge a few helpful taps.
2021 Election: Complete coverage and analysis
Appearing on Sean Hannity’s Fox News show on Wednesday night, Graham made a characteristically pragmatic (rather than moral) case for McConnell to iron things out with the former president. Graham even said he would not be able to support a leader who would be at odds with Trump — becoming the rare senator to publicly threaten not to support McConnell.
“Elections are about the future,” Graham said. “If you want to be a Republican leader in the House or the Senate, you have to have a working relationship with President Donald Trump. He’s the most consequential Republican since Ronald Reagan. It’s his nomination if he wants it, and I think he’ll get reelected in 2024.”

Graham added: “I’m not going to vote for anybody for leader of the Senate as a Republican unless they can prove to me that they can advocate an ‘American First’ agenda and have a working relationship with President Trump, because if you can’t do that, you will fail.”



Graham’s comments notwithstanding, Trump’s effort to turn GOP senators and Senate candidates against McConnell has borne relatively little fruit.

No senators have signed on to the effort, and CNN had reported earlier Wednesday that few GOP candidates had embraced opposing or even threatening to vote against McConnell as leader. It counted just two high-profile candidates who have done so: former Missouri governor Eric Greitens; and Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski’s Republican challenger, Kelly Tshibaka.
The Ohio GOP Senate primary, for example, is a sprint to the right if there ever was one. But even candidates like Josh Mandel and J.D. Vance have declined to toe Trump’s line.

Graham’s decision to enter the fray is an important one: Although Republicans might have been able to skirt the issue in an off-year, a high-profile senator is ensuring that it’s not going away. And that goes particularly as Republicans get closer to a potential takeover of the Senate. They logically will be forced to take a harder position — potentially by Trump himself if he continues the push.


McConnell signaled this week that he will seek the GOP’s No. 1 leadership role next term. And a few weeks ago, he turned more than a few heads by seeming to legitimize a Jan. 6 committee that Trump and his allies have labeled a witch hunt.
But it’s also in line with how Graham has long spoken about things, and he seems to be trying to push McConnell to give in to Trump as much as anything, before the situation gets out of hand.

As far back as February, after McConnell delivered a stemwinder against Trump’s Jan. 6 actions, Graham immediately went on Sean Hannity’s Fox News show and said he was worried that the rift between Trump and McConnell threatened the GOP’s chances to retake the Senate in 2022.
So much of Graham’s comments about the GOP’s relationship with Trump are in this vein — making a pragmatic rather than a moral or principled case for standing by the former president.


Graham has effectively conceded that his own pro-Trump conversion, which came after he vociferously opposed Trump in the 2016 presidential primaries, was born of political expediency. He has urged his party to stand by Trump because it effectively has no other choice if it wants to win. He has even said the alternative is that a vengeful Trump could destroy the party out of spite.

Graham’s comments Wednesday night should certainly be understood in the same way, but that doesn’t make them any less significant. This tension has simmered more than it has boiled — at least when it comes to how fellow Republicans have dealt with it — but it has shown no sign of evaporating. And now Graham is pushing his party — and more specifically, McConnell — to deal with it before it truly threatens what he and McConnell hold so dear: their power.

 
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Lindsay Graham has flip-flopp#d on Trump as
a U.S. S#nator. His history shows him both
for and against Trump. Graham is a bad politician
who looks for which way th# wind is blowing.
 
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Someone hand Lindsey a napkin. He's got a little something around the corners of his mouth.
 
Lindsay Graham has flip-flopp#d on Trump as
a U.S. S#nator. His history shows him both
for and against Trump. Graham is a bad politician
who looks for which way th# wind is blowing.
Lute - what happened to your "E" key on your keyboard?
 
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