Here Who Is Likely To Replace Lindsey Graham – For Now

There is something quietly fitting about this. The man who adopted his teenage sister after both their parents died within a short time of each other — who raised her as his own family when she had nowhere else to turn — may now be succeeded in the United States Senate by that same sister.

President Trump posted to Truth Social Monday morning recommending that Governor Henry McMaster appoint Darline Graham Nordone as South Carolina’s interim senator. “This would be a fabulous tribute to Lindsey, who loved her dearly,” Trump wrote. McMaster’s office announced he would make the formal appointment announcement Monday at 4 p.m.

The backstory behind this recommendation matters and deserves to be told plainly. Lindsey Graham was a young man when he lost both parents in rapid succession. Rather than let his teenage sister navigate that loss alone, he stepped up — legally adopting her and raising her himself. It was a defining act of personal character from someone who would go on to spend thirty years in the United States Senate. The bond between them was real, documented, and by every account deeply important to both of them.

Appointing Darline Graham Nordone as his interim successor is not a gimmick or a political maneuver. It is a recognition of that bond and a graceful way to honor a senator whose family story is inseparable from the man he became.

The practical political picture is straightforward. The interim appointment lasts only until the term ends in January — unless Nordone chose to run for a full term, which nothing in current reporting suggests she intends to do. The more consequential question is who wins the Republican special primary next month to become the party’s nominee for the general election against Democrat Annie Andrews in November.

That race remains rated solidly Republican by the Cook Political Report — as it was when Graham was alive — and nothing about his passing changes South Carolina’s fundamental political landscape. The seat should stay Republican. The primary process to select his replacement begins almost immediately, with candidate filing opening July 28th.

The immediate concern, separate from the Senate race itself, is the committee vacuum Graham’s death creates. He chaired the Senate Budget Committee — a critical role at a moment when the reconciliation process is still grinding forward — and was one of Washington’s most influential voices on foreign policy at a moment when the Middle East situation demands exactly that kind of experienced, credible engagement. Those gaps don’t fill themselves, and Republican leadership needs to move quickly on both fronts.

But for today, the focus is on Darline Graham Nordone — a woman who knows better than anyone what her brother gave to this country, because she saw firsthand what kind of man he was long before Washington did.

It’s a fitting tribute. McMaster should make it official.

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