How Lindsey Graham’s keen ability to read the moment propelled him to political relevance for 3 decades
Published in Political News
Since South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham’s death on June 11, 2026, much of the commentary has focused on his evolution from Donald Trump critic to Trump ally.
But focusing on that transformation misses the broader pattern that defined his political career. For more than three decades, Graham repeatedly positioned himself where Republican politics in the South were headed rather than where they had been.
As scholars of elections and Southern politics, we believe that instinct helps explain not only his embrace of Trump but also nearly every major political decision he made.
That includes everything from running as a Republican in South Carolina when Republicans were still an ascendant minority in the state to joining the “Republican Revolution,” when Republicans took control of both houses of Congress in the 1994 midterms, to adapting to the tea party era, when insurgent Republicans rode a wave to an abrupt electoral shift, and ultimately becoming one of Trump’s closest allies.
One of Graham’s early bets was that South Carolina’s political future belonged to the Republican Party. Although Republicans remained a minority in the early 1990s, demographic change, evangelical mobilization and suburban realignment were steadily improving their prospects.
In 1992, Graham challenged South Carolina Rep. Lowell Ross, a Democrat, for the 2nd District seat in the state’s legislature. Graham won 60% of the vote and became one of the first Republicans to represent upstate South Carolina since Reconstruction. Republicans gained control of the South Carolina House during the next cycle in 1994 and took control of the South Carolina Senate in 2000.
While many ambitious South Carolina politicians remained in the Democratic Party through the early 1990s, Graham understood that the state’s political future belonged to Republicans.
Just as he had anticipated the changing political landscape in South Carolina, Graham’s entry into national politics displayed a keen ability to read the political moment.
He ran for an open seat in the U.S. House of Representatives after Democrat Butler Derrick, a 20-year incumbent, announced his retirement. Graham recognized that South Carolina’s 3rd District had become part of a broader Southern realignment that was increasingly favoring Republican congressional candidates.
In addition to these trends, there was a growing backlash against healthcare reform and other policies championed by Democratic President Bill Clinton. Graham joined a group of Republican candidates who united behind the “Contract with America,” a series of promises – tax cuts, welfare reform, a balanced budget – from the Republican leadership to the American people. The resulting GOP surge concluded with a takeover in the House for the first time in 40 years.
Graham and his newly elected colleagues helped propel Newt Gingrich to the House speakership. Graham entered Congress just as the Republican Party was transforming itself from a congressional minority into a governing majority.
Graham again showed his knack for political timing when he decided to run for the open seat vacated by longtime Sen. Strom Thurmond in 2002.
Though midterm contests had historically been difficult for candidates from the president’s party, President George W. Bush was riding record approval ratings following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
Graham had amassed a political war chest during his time in Washington and did not face a primary challenger in 2002. His general election opponent was Alex Sanders, the former chief judge of the South Carolina Court of Appeals and president of the College of Charleston. Graham won handily, by a 54% to 44% margin.
Graham’s Senate career also displayed his political acumen and ability to respond to changes within the Republican electorate.
During the pre-Trump era, Graham frequently reached across the aisle, most famously as one of the “Three Amigos” – a term for the hawkish national security views of Sens. Graham, Joe Lieberman, a Democrat, and Republican John McCain that riffed off a popular movie by the same name starring Steve Martin, Martin Short and Chevy Chase.
He also worked on other high-profile bipartisan legislation, including a climate change measure in 2009 with Democratic Sens. John Kerry and Lieberman. And he supported some judicial nominees from Democratic presidents.
These bipartisan efforts reflected a Republican Party that still rewarded cross-party cooperation on national security, judicial appointments and some major policy issues. This was also an era when McCain-style conservatism – marked by a softer rhetorical style and less ideological fervor – still held considerable influence among Republicans.
Even before Trump arrived, Graham already had shown an ability to read the political moment by adapting after the tea party movement focusing on lower taxes and a smaller government reshaped Republican incentives.
During this era, Graham’s rhetoric became increasingly conservative. He emphasized immigration enforcement and became more combative with Democrats.
Graham’s role in the 2013 bipartisan “Gang of Eight” immigration reform efforts is a good example. He initially advocated a pathway to citizenship as part of comprehensive reform. But after the effort collapsed and immigration became a defining issue in Republican politics, he increasingly emphasized border security and criticized Democratic approaches to immigration.
Graham recognized that compromise had become a political liability among Republican primary voters. Political scientist Sean Theriault labeled Graham one of the “Gingrich Senators,” a group that fundamentally altered norms in the Senate, driving it toward more obstructionist and conservative policies.
Graham’s decision to ally himself with Trump, therefore, represented less of a sudden reversal than the culmination of a pattern that had defined his career. By 2016, Republican primary voters had largely embraced Trump, and Graham recognized that reality more quickly than many Republicans.
When asked about his increasing conservatism, Graham acknowledged the change in political math that had altered South Carolina politics and reordered his incentives.
“Most of us have one thing to worry about, and that’s the primary. Most of us are not in swing states,” Graham said.
Whether viewed as principled adaptation or political opportunism, Graham repeatedly aligned himself toward the direction South Carolina, Southern and Republican politics were moving. That instinct – not simply his alliance with Trump – helps explain how he remained politically relevant for more than three decades while many contemporaries faded from the scene.
As the Gingrich Senators age out of office and are replaced by newer senators who have experienced political life only in the Trump era, Graham may come to be seen as one of the last Republicans whose career spanned two distinct political worlds.
This article is republished from The Conversation, a nonprofit, independent news organization bringing you facts and trustworthy analysis to help you make sense of our complex world. It was written by: Gibbs Knotts, Coastal Carolina University and Christopher A. Cooper, Western Carolina University
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The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.























































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