• Lindsey Graham

    South Carolina Poll Watch: Sen. Lindsey Graham in GOP Primary Trouble With Tea Party

    grahamf Sen. Lindsey Grahamnesty Tries His Hand Again at Immigration Reform

    South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham

    Without a doubt, this RINO should be in trouble.

    Yesterday we put out a poll on Lindsey Graham’s standing with the entire South Carolina electorate. Today we narrow it down to those describing themselves as regular Republican primary voters.

    52% of them say that given the choice they’d pick a more conservative challenger in the 2014 GOP primary, compared to only 37% who say they’d support Graham under that scenario. It’s a pretty simple calculus- Graham leads 47-40 on that question with Republicans who say they don’t consider themselves to be members of the Tea Party but he trails 76-18 with folks who identify with that movement. The Tea Party faction of the Republican Party has become more and more powerful since Graham dispatched a relatively weak primary challenger in 2008 and if the fever doesn’t die down over the next three years he’s going to be in serious trouble in a primary.

    Senator Graham will face a more conservative Tea Party GOP primary challenger in 2014.

    Poll results are here (Pdf).

  • Illegal Immigration,  Lindsey Graham

    Sen. Lindsey Grahamnesty Tries His Hand Again at Immigration Reform

    South Carolina Republican Senator Lindsey Graham

    You would have thought that Senator Graham would have learned from the last time he tried for some illegal immigration amnesty.

    But, he is up to it again.

    Sens. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) have rekindled their alliance on immigration reform, taking some early steps to test the political will for addressing the contentious issue this year.

    Their call list hasn’t focused so much on House and Senate members who’ve been reliable pro-immigration votes in the past. Instead, they’re looking to a strange-bedfellows mix of conservative and liberal constituencies that can provide a “safety net” of support, as Graham put it, once the issue heats up.

    “It’s in the infant stage,” Graham told POLITICO. “I don’t know what the political appetite is to do something.”

    For all the groups getting a call from the pair, it is the presence of Graham himself who elevates the odds — however bleak — that the Senate could move on a comprehensive, bipartisan overhaul bill. Graham abruptly departed the talks last spring and took with him any hope of getting a bill in the past Congress.

    Now, conservative evangelicals, the AFL-CIO, the Service Employees International Union, business organizations and immigrant advocacy groups say they have gotten word from Schumer’s office that a renewed effort is under way. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce confirmed that it is back in the mix, after a hasty exit last year when Schumer proposed a legislative framework with a temporary worker program that favored labor unions.

    And Schumer and his staff have quietly begun reaching out to some unlikely players in the Senate, including Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, who has professed a newfound freedom since winning reelection last year without the Republican Party’s help.

    I agree with Stacy that this is probably just a shakedown for campaign cash from the open borders crowd and U.S. Chamber of Commerce. But,  like Michelle, do not trust Graham. The only saving grace is the House GOP.

    Hey! Senator Graham – how about enforcing the immigration laws and securing the borders first?

    Can someone PLEASE run against Grahamnesty in a South Carolina GOP primary.