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Me Thinks Senator Graham Doth Protest Too Much

Ever since 13 Senate Republicans joined Democrats in consenting to the terrible New START treaty, Sen. Lindsey Graham has been on a tirade, telling any conservative who’ll listen that “Harry Reid ate our lunch,” meaning that Democratic leadership outmaneuvered Republicans in getting the treaty and other agenda items enacted during the lame duck session. My trial lawyer antennae tell me it sounds remarkably well rehearsed for a bit of spontaneous indignation. I first heard him do the rant on Greta Van Susteren’s Fox show last night. But then this morning, Fox’s Brian Kilmeade reported that Sen. Graham had actually called into Brian’s radio show earlier yesterday, just after the START vote, in order to give the same “Harry ate our lunch” speech. Fox kept reporting about it this morning, complete with commentary from our friend Dana Perino, who sounded like she’s buying it.

I say, “Cry me a river.” Given the clout they have in the Republican caucus on national security and legal matters, Sen. Graham and his close ally, Sen. McCain, could have stopped START dead in its tracks a month ago by condemning it in the same terms Graham is now using. The treaty hasn’t changed a wit in that time. But Graham and McCain instead played a coy game of “maybe we’ll support it, maybe we won’t.” This, along with Sen. Lugar’s enthusiastic support, gave the Obama administration the space it needed to work on other Republican moderates, who were court-able precisely because McCain and Graham were indicating that the treaty was probably okay – or at least shouldn’t be dismissed out of hand. We even heard that McCain and Graham were horse-trading: signaling the administration that approval of START was an acceptable price for saying no to “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.”

If Sen. Graham is sincerely steamed, I’d wager it’s the common remorse of a gambler who knows he has overplayed his hand. There were too many cards and players beyond his control. Obama found enough court-able Republicans and got DADT anyway. By then, because Graham and McCain had let the game go on too long, there was too much momentum in START’s direction to stop it.

Then a big deal was made of the letter McCain is said to have wrested from Pres. Obama, offering collateral and totally unenforceable promises on missile defense. As had to have been known by McCain and Graham (a lawyer who obviously understands that the letter has utterly no impact on the treaty), the letter was just the fig leaf wavering moderates needed to give their consent to the pact. If McCain is truly the one who got Obama to write it, he did nothing to make the treaty better, but he did virtually ensure that it would be approved.

So if Sen. Graham feels his lunch has been eaten, he’s got himself to blame. He knows we’re now saddled with a bad pact that will be increasingly unpopular with conservatives. Having helped create the climate in which it could be ratified even though Republicans had the numbers to stop it, he’s trying to distance himself. But I’m not sure I agree with Dana’s speculation that Graham’s anger is such that his bridge with the Obama administration is now burned. The senator is not up for reelection until 2014. There’s still time for plenty of bipartisanship.

New on The Corner. . .


COMMENTS   12

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   12/23/10 17:04
   12/23/10 17:23

Contrived, maybe? Let's make a big phony fuss to reestablish my conservative cred(which is seriously lacking). The Republican Party has already blown it's "let's give them a chance to do better" election win. For the life of me, I can't understand the party. They make me ill.

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   12/23/10 17:57

"Brian Kilmeade"

ROFL.

That dude is embarrassing.

Completely off-topic, but Fox & Friends needs some serious retooling (or de-tooling, as the case may be...heh). I stopped watching regularly some time ago.

Brian Kilmeade makes me want to become a leftist just so I don't have to share any opinions with him.

Either he looks perplexed beyond all repair or he's got a smile kickin' like that of a dude who is the only person in the room who has no idea what is happening. Hard to explain, but he seems as if he'd be the easiest guy at Fox, if not on Earth, to prank.

Then he opens his mouth and you can almost feel the Daily Show staffers frantically mashing their video capture buttons. He really *would* ask something like, "Well, other than that, Mrs. Lincoln, how was the play?"

Just sayin'...

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 MTM
   12/23/10 18:55

I'm inclined to believe your read of Sen. Graham, Mr. McCarthy.

At the risk of sounding quaint, it is a pathetic situation and an indictment of the modern statesman generally when debate over treaties is reduced to games of "who's got the momentum?". If more politicians had an education in political principles and ethics, these votes wouldn't turn on "momentum." Even falling stones can gain that...

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   12/23/10 20:23

Sen Graham (R-SC): as phony as a three dollar bill.

And while F&F is entertaining commoners (like me), there's always Mia and Joe sipping their lattes with their roundtable of swells. The difference I'd say is that F&F knows how to laugh at themselves while the MSNBC crowd has *very important* ideas, you know, and leans forward.

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   12/23/10 21:31

Unfortunately, Andrew McCarthy is almost certainly correct (and welcome back Andrew, you were missed). Graham and John ("patriotism over profit") McCain betraying their country? Unsurprising. They've done it before. But for what? Perhaps we shouldn't ask as they are unlikely to tell. Yet, while republicans are notoriously inept when it come to making deals with democrats, the price of precious metals has gone up. Perhaps they made a good profit on the pieces of silver. Congratulations are in order after all.

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   12/23/10 23:21

The more apt analogy for Graham is that "the dog eat my homework." This is usually preceded by the student (or Graham in this case) not doing his homework at all.

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   12/23/10 23:21

davidinvirginia, "See also Cornyn, John"

Indeed.

denroy, "Contrived, maybe? Let's make a big phony fuss to reestablish my conservative cred(which is seriously lacking). The Republican Party has already blown it's "let's give them a chance to do better" election win. For the life of me, I can't understand the party. They make me ill."

I used to have that problem. Tell ya what I did: I didn't vote for a Senator (yes, he's named in the article); a governor, and a congressman. All were GOP.

I sleep soundly at night because I didn't partake in the GOP hypocrisy.

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   12/24/10 03:47

Y'all take this sheet way too seriously.

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   12/24/10 09:10

Graham's whole outburst could be summarized/translated thusly: "Please! Please! Please! Don't primary me from the right when I'm up for re-election! Pretty please! I'll screech and sound indignant a lot more often, I promise! Just. Please. Don't. Primary. Me!"

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   12/24/10 12:01

And so much for the "urgency" BS...

External Link 

At least some countries have deliberative, careful legislatures. Too bad the U.S. isn't one of them.

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   12/27/10 11:12

I think Mr. McCarthy is probably correct. I think we have to take everything Senator Graham says with a grain of salt, and look behind his statements for his motivations. He has forfeited the benefit of the doubt by behaving so badly over the past ten years.

He is quite fortunate that he was re-elected in 2008 and will not face his electorate again until 2014 because I think he probably could not win a GOP South Carolina primary in 2012. Similarly, I suspect Senator Hatch is about to become a stalwart Republican for the next two years until after nomination day in 2012. I understand GOP moderates who represent Massachusetts and New Hampshire; I do not understand GOP moderates who represent South Carolina, Utah, Indiana, Arizona, and Texas.

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