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Lindsey Graham On Tea Party: 'Just Unsustainable,' No 'Coherent Vision,' Will 'Die Out'

First Posted: 07/01/10 02:18 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 05:55 PM ET

Graham

Under the Obama administration, Senator Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) has spent much of his time playing the role of the go-to yet mercurial Republican negotiator. It's a function previously carried out by his mentor, Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), and one that can exact a taxing political cost (see McCain's inability to rally conservatives in 2008 and his subsequent trek rightward during his own reelection campaign).

In a just-published New York Times magazine profile, Graham seems to revel in the part. The senator, who has been censured by conservatives in his home state, fully cops to enjoying the political spotlight on testy legislative matters, whether detention policy, immigration reform, or climate change legislation. He also mocks his Tea Party detractors as having no long-term vision or prospects for political viability. He openly touts the closeness of his relationship to White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel, and even acknowledges the cynicism of McCain's new, non-maverick label.

Penned by Robert Draper -- who wrote some of the more entertaining narratives from the 2008 campaign trail -- the whole piece is worth a read (Draper even broaches the gay rumors that have followed Graham for years). But here are some of the relevant parts.

ON THE TEA PARTY'S CRITICISM OF GRAHAM:

In years past, Graham's deal-making forays typically featured his close friend, Senator John McCain of Arizona, as the frontman. Nowadays McCain has shucked his maverick ways in order to court his state's G.O.P. primary voters, while Graham's reflexive displays of bipartisanship have made him something of a scourge among South Carolina Tea Partiers. Harry Kibler fingered Graham as major prey in Kibler's "RINO hunt" (Republicans in Name Only). The South Carolina chapter of Resist.net warns constituents that Graham "is up to his old reach-across-the-aisle tricks again!" Among the conservative activists who have called for censuring Graham as a quisling of the right is the state's G.O.P. gubernatorial nominee and Tea Party favorite, Nikki Haley.


"Everything I'm doing now in terms of talking about climate, talking about immigration, talking about Gitmo is completely opposite of where the Tea Party movement's at," Graham said as Cato drove him to the city of Greenwood, where he was to give a commencement address at Lander University later that morning. On four occasions, Graham met with Tea Party groups. The first, in his Senate office, was "very, very contentious," he recalled. During a later meeting, in Charleston, Graham said he challenged them: " 'What do you want to do? You take back your country -- and do what with it?' . . . Everybody went from being kind of hostile to just dead silent."

In a previous conversation, Graham told me: "The problem with the Tea Party, I think it's just unsustainable because they can never come up with a coherent vision for governing the country. It will die out." Now he said, in a tone of casual lament: "We don't have a lot of Reagan-type leaders in our party. Remember Ronald Reagan Democrats? I want a Republican that can attract Democrats." Chortling, he added, "Ronald Reagan would have a hard time getting elected as a Republican today."

ON GRAHAM'S RELATIONSHIP TO WITH THE WHITE HOUSE:

The White House logs do not record visits paid by U.S. senators. According to his office's records, however, Lindsey Graham has been to the West Wing 19 times since Barack Obama became president. When I asked the White House chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, if any other Republican senator was so frequent a guest, he thought for a moment before responding, rather doubtfully, "Maybe Susan Collins."


Emanuel went on to say: "He's willing to work on more things than the others. Lindsey, to his credit, has a small-government vision that's out of fashion with his party, which stands for no government. . . . He's one of the last big voices to give that vision intellectual energy."

ON HIS LOVE FOR BEING THE KEY NEGOTIATOR :

"My God, look what I'm involved in!" he said. "By default, if for no other reason. How do you close Gitmo without working with me now? How do you do immigration?" He added: "What if I walked away from climate change tomorrow? . . . You know, all politicians like to be thought of in their own mind as somebody special. I'm past that now. I'm a little worried. This is not healthy for the country. It's really not."

ON MCCAIN NO LONGER BEING A MAVERICK:

I observed that if this conversation about how to resolve tough issues were taking place in 2006, I would likely be having it not with Graham but with his friend and legislative mentor, John McCain. "Totally agree," he responded. "I mean, I was the wingman, O.K.?" But, he acknowledged, things are different now: "John's got a primary. He's got to focus on getting re-elected. I don't want my friend to get beat."

ON THE GAY RUMORS:

During a South Carolina Tea Party rally this spring, one speaker created an uproar by postulating that Graham supported a guest-worker program out of fear that the Democrats might otherwise expose his homosexuality. (Graham smirked when I brought this up. "Like maybe I'm having a clandestine affair with Ricky Martin," he said. "I know it's really gonna upset a lot of gay men -- I'm sure hundreds of 'em are gonna be jumping off the Golden Gate Bridge -- but I ain't available. I ain't gay. Sorry."


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Under the Obama administration, Senator Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) has spent much of his time playing the role of the go-to yet mercurial Republican negotiator. It's a function previously carried out by ...
Under the Obama administration, Senator Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) has spent much of his time playing the role of the go-to yet mercurial Republican negotiator. It's a function previously carried out by ...
 
 
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mcmutter
A Groover has to expect a few setbacks .....
12:52 PM on 07/15/2010
After Baggers lose races come Novenber, they're goners ....
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INDIVIDUALTERRY
no to the collective!
11:52 AM on 07/05/2010
The TEA parties long range vision is to do away with political hacks like Graham , the arrogant entitled class of politician who thinks he was hired for his genius.
With the demise of Ted,Spector and Byrd progress against the progressives is progressing!
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dems08
Above all... avoid the moor
12:49 AM on 07/04/2010
hey lindsey!!!

I understand you aren't part of the 'Party of NO!'

Tell us, please, what did you vote in favor of, anyway?
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dems08
Above all... avoid the moor
12:42 AM on 07/04/2010
"Remember Ronald Reagan Democrats? I want a Republican that can attract Democrats... "

dream on lindsey... no pub will attract dems
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Uchenna Oguekwe
06:35 PM on 07/03/2010
I think we are beginning to see a real rift in the Republican party. The tea party drive repubs are saying that they want their country back while the old school republicans are saying we want our party back. This is going to get more interesting.
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hrpmap
Retired man still active..
05:18 PM on 07/03/2010
Lindsie Grahm, the progressives favorate Republican.
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Freesia2
I'm nicer than I appear in print. :-)
12:57 PM on 07/03/2010
How many times do we have to go over this Lindsey? I'm tired of explaining this to you.

The Tea Party will not die out - because the Tea Party never was. They are, were, always will be the illiterate bigot base that the GOP has carefully nurtured for about 4 decades now. In polls their every political position (even when it doesn't make sense) is in lockstep with the GOP. That's because they ARE the Gop. The only thing that will die is the ability of Dick Armey and Beck and Palin to keep fooling them into thinking that they went to a party. They went nowhere. Except in a circle like little trained poodles. All that was missing were the hoops to jump through. (Unless I missed that.)

So don't celebrate or fret either. They are legends in their own minds. I'm using the word generously.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
dancingstu
Christian, liberal lawyer
04:07 PM on 07/03/2010
The other thing that might die is the ability of people like Palin and Beck to keep milking these people for all they're worth.

"Would you like to buy some more gold? It's at an all time high, so, now is the time to buy!"

"I have a new book coming out with my picture on the cover and some parts of it might have been written by mavericky me! You should buy a copy, or you can just donate money to my money launder...er... I mean my PAC and I'll give you a "free" copy."
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12:17 PM on 07/03/2010
Send ALL incumbents to the woodshed...VOTE them ALL OUT! Vote for the person you've never heard of and increase the chances your next elected official isn't on the take by 50 fold.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
R U Sirius
Retired educator, trainer; writer/editor
10:23 AM on 07/03/2010
...as opposed to the Greedy Old Plutocrat "vision"? And what would that be? Ask Rush.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
CarolinaYankee
09:58 AM on 07/03/2010
Let's take bets, now that Steele is probably going to go. Bet MsWasilla will shed her tea cup and come back to the GOP to take the job. Who else can raise money like her and that is what that job is.
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farmilyman
everything is illusion
09:41 AM on 07/03/2010
Unlike the "coherent vision" of the GOP. Does anyone know what it is other than to regain power at any cost?
09:15 AM on 07/03/2010
Lindsay Graham is pretty much my favorite thing about my state's politics. I disagree with him A LOT, but I at least feel that he has some principles of his own. I just hate it when he allows the pressure from the loudest angriest people in the state to push him towards being so socially conservative.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
CarolinaYankee
09:53 AM on 07/03/2010
Unfortunately, he is just filling in for the Maverick turned Gelding because John has an election to win. When he is up for election in 2014 he will probably do a 180 too. This is some kind of plan I'm afraid.
04:13 AM on 07/03/2010
While I am glad he spoke 'truth to um, trying to be power', it's really weird to hear Lindsey Graham called a MODERATE Republican. No? I mean, lets look back a few months at least!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Horatio
Wordsmith seeks others for salacious mental trysts
12:48 AM on 07/03/2010
Ut-oh. It's the dog shed for Ms. Lindsey.
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msgirlintn
Magnolia's mom!
09:35 PM on 07/02/2010
I am no Lyndsey Graham fan but this was a good article. I am proud he called out the teabaggers that want to "take my country back".

This article makes me have more respect for him. Now if he would only be a moderate enough Repub to work across party lines on the jobs bill and the extended unemployment bill.
10:19 PM on 07/02/2010
I am proud of him also.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
liberalOrgonian
12:24 AM on 07/03/2010
Hi Ms girl,
I could not have said it better.
Who knew........ Lyndsey Graham?
Maybe there is hope for the country.
faved.
How are you dear?
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msgirlintn
Magnolia's mom!
01:28 AM on 07/03/2010
Hey Lib!

I was thinking about you today and wondered where you were! How are you? How is it going? Hope Miss Kia is ok too!

I'm good. Disgusted about the Senate going on a week's vacation without passing the unemployment extension. My daughter has one week leftl TN doesn't have the 99 weeks that they keep talking about.

It's so good to see you. Have a great 4th!