George Will Eviscerates Lindsey Graham Entirely Without Even Hinting He's a Cowardly Closet Case
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Yesterday, the Washington Post ran a column by George Will, Why do people such as Lindsey Graham come to Congress?, which uses Graham as the exemplar of the disintegration of the Republican Party and why it needs to be put out of its misery. "Back in the day," he wrote, "small rural airports had textile windsocks, simple and empty things that indicated which way the wind was blowing. The ubiquitous Sen. Lindsey O. Graham has become a political windsock, and as such, he-- more than the sturdy, substantial elephant-- is emblematic of his party today.
When in 1994, Graham, a South Carolina Republican, first ran for Congress, he promised to be “one less vote for an agenda that makes you want to throw up.” A quarter-century later, Graham himself is a gastrointestinal challenge. In the past three years, he had a road-to-Damascus conversion.
In 2015, he said Donald Trump was a “jackass.” In February 2016, he said: “I’m not going to try to get into the mind of Donald Trump, because I don’t think there’s a whole lot of space there. I think he’s a kook, I think he’s crazy, I think he’s unfit for office.” And: “I’m a Republican and he’s not. He’s not a conservative Republican. He’s an opportunist.” Today, Graham, paladin of conservatism and scourge of opportunism, says building the border wall is an existential matter for the GOP: “If we undercut the president, that’s the end of his presidency and the end of our party.” Well.
Six years after its founding, the Republican Party produced the president who saved the nation. The party presided over the flow of population west of the Mississippi, into space hitherto designated on maps as the Great American Desert. (The Homestead Act of 1862 was enacted by a Republican-controlled Congress.) The Morrill Act of 1862 (Vermont Rep. Justin Morrill was a Republican) launched the land-grant college system that began the democratization of higher education and advanced the science-intensive agriculture that facilitated the urbanization that accelerated the nation’s rise to global preeminence. The party abetted and channeled the animal spirits that developed the industrial sinews with which 20th-century America defeated fascism and then communism. Now, however, Graham, whose mind might not have a whole lot of space for pertinent history, thinks this party’s identity and survival depend on servile obedience to this president’s myopia.
During the government shutdown, Graham’s tergiversations-- sorry, this is the precise word-- have amazed. On a recent day, in 90 minutes he went from “I don’t know” whether the president has the power to declare an emergency and divert into wall-building funds appropriated by Congress for other purposes, to “Time for President . . . to use emergency powers to build Wall.” The next day, he scrambled up the escalation ladder by using capitalization: “Declare a national emergency NOW. Build a wall NOW.” Two days later, he scampered down a few rungs, calling for his hero to accept a short-term funding measure to open the government while wall negotiations continue. Stay tuned for more acrobatics.
But stay focused on this: Anyone-- in Graham-speak, ANYONE-- who at any time favors declaring an emergency, or who does not denounce the mere suggestion thereof, thereby abandons constitutional government. Yes, such a declaration would be technically legal. Congress has put on every president’s desk this (to adopt Justice Robert Jackson’s language in his dissent from the Supreme Court’s 1944 Korematsu decision affirming the constitutionality of interning of U.S. citizens and noncitizens of Japanese descent) “loaded weapon, ready for the hand of any authority that can bring forward a plausible claim of an urgent need.” Or an implausible one. However, an anti-constitutional principle would be affirmed. The principle: Any president can declare an emergency and “repurpose” funds whenever any of his policy preferences that he deems unusually important are actively denied or just ignored by the legislative branch.
Why do they come to Congress, these people such as Graham? These people who, affirmatively or by their complicity of silence, trifle with our constitutional architecture, and exhort the president to eclipse the legislative branch, to which they have no loyalty comparable to their party allegiance?
Seven times, Graham has taken the oath of congressional office, “solemnly” swearing to “support and defend the Constitution” and to “bear true faith and allegiance” to it, “without any mental reservation.” Graham, who is just 1 percent of one-half of one of the three branches of one of the nation’s many governments, is, however, significant as a symptom. When the Trump presidency is just a fragrant memory, the political landscape will still be cluttered with some of this president’s simple and empty epigones, the make-believe legislators who did not loudly and articulately recoil from the mere suggestion of using a declared emergency to set aside the separation of powers.
Labels: George Will, Lindsey Graham, Republican brand
8 Comments:
Now that's different. Another gay bashing here on DWT. For such a "progressive" site, you sure like to spend a lot of time talking about who is sleeping with whom.
And, per Anon, the header of this post is irrelevant to what Will said.
Now, is Graham perhaps a closeted gay? OK. Fine. Find some recent anti-gay votes of his and write about that, then.
+1 Gadfly.
REALLY tired of these/this/THAT Anon/Anonymous whatever.
"Why do they come to Congress, these people such as Graham?"
easy. he got millions from rich assholes in exchange for a promise to repay in kind times a thousand... and voters in his state are too fucking stupid to fail to elect a person such as he.
The name Graham here is superfluous. You could insert scummer of any of the others and it's still the same answer.
also, your early republican party worship is myopic. after Lincoln was killed, reconstruction became a profiteer's free-for-all, which kept the former slaves in veritable chains for the next century. And the land-grant thing was also a method of displacing (and ultimately killing) most of the people who had been there for 12,000 years. I guess they didn't count in your narrative.
George Will has yet to atone for a great many sins committed against the American people. I see no reason to lionize the old bastard just because he speaks truth about Miss Lindsey.
George Will is more correct than any of us. His vocabulary may be above us (me, anyway), but his defining Lindsay Graham is spot on. Surprisingly, we all left out the most important fact. "Trump is a sanctimonious idiot whose ego, if not his stupidity, should be his downfall." There George, I said it...and I meant it. Shame on us for electing him. I put the blame on Hillary. How could she lose to such a fool? Look in the mirror, fellow Americans. We need to find a leader before we fall down.
12:02 you have observed the typical mantra of the left: the enemy of my enemy is my friend.
not true, of course... but the left still believes.
There are many Lindsay grahams. one minute he's correctly trashing trump or republican evil or treason or whatever. the next minute he's got his tongue up trump's anus and is acting as his apologist. His BFF, McCain, was that way too.
one MIGHT just conclude that Lindsay graham is schizophrenic... or possesses several personalities in that tiny pinhead of his. Occam's razor, and all that?
George will, himself, is not without profound myopia and other flaws, not the least of which is a level of hubris equal to trump's. He's correct this time about ONE OF the Lindsay grahams, but that does not correct his myopia or other flaws. he just got lucky this once.
But DWT is always sleuthing out more 'the enemy of my enemy is my friend' instances to impress you dear readers.
cluster fuck of a shithole swirling the bowl is still accurate.
Follow your own advice, 6:12. You hold no command here.
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