Lindsey Graham sacrificed his reputation to Donald Trump. He got plenty in return.
Vox – Immigration
vox.com
Summary
His career explains why so many Republicans made peace with Trump — and what they gave up to do it. Take just one aspect of Graham’s considerable legacy: Foreign policy, where he was one of the most prominent hawks in American politics for decades. If Graham made a Faustian bargain to sacrifice his pre-Trump reputation in order to advance his pre-Trump policy goals, then the terms were often honored. He served as a lawyer in the US Air Force and quickly climbed the ladder from the state legislature to the House, where he helped lead Bill Clinton’s impeachment , before winning an open Senate seat in 2002 after Strom Thurmond died . In President Barack Obama’s first term, he entertained becoming the decisive vote on climate and immigration bills, but ultimately disappointed the president when he withdrew from talks (he seemed like a movie spy “who double-crosses everyone to save his own skin,” Obama later wrote in his memoir ). In Obama’s second term, Graham and McCain were part of the bipartisan “Gang of Eight,” a robust attempt at an immigration reform package that would have provided a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants, expanded legal immigration, and added more border security. It passed the Senate, but never came up for a vote in the House after a right-wing populist backlash. Nevertheless, Graham ran for president in the 2016 cycle, where he confronted conservative critics of his immigration plan head-on. Naturally, he was critical of Trump, who seemed to represent everything he fought against, both in domestic politics and in foreign policy. Especially in the Senate, he faced significant skepticism, including from Republicans who — like Graham — had publicly announced they would not vote for him in the 2016 election against Hillary Clinton.
From the source
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) holds up a hat that reads "Trump 2028" during an event at the Kennedy Center on August 13, 2025, in Washington, DC. | Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) died suddenly over the weekend, his office announced on Sunday, and the political world is processing his legacy earlier than it ever expected to. More than perhaps any senator — even the currently ailing Mitch McConnell — Graham embodied the transition from an older era of the Republican Party and Washington politics to the Trump era we live in now. Graham was famously a vocal critic of Donald Trump, whom he ran against in the 2016 Republican presidential primary, but rapidly became a top ally after the election, to the horror of many of his longtime friends inside and outside the GOP. But Graham’s career arc also showed why so many Republicans of so many different stripes were tempted to embrace Trump. The senator ultimately succeeded in steering an inexperienced, ideologically malleable,
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