Connect with us

Politics

Liz Cheney has a striking answer to a key Lindsey Graham question

Published

on

Liz Cheney has a striking answer to a key Lindsey Graham question

Last week, former Republican Rep. Charlie Dent of Pennsylvania said he’d already cast a ballot for Vice President Kamala Harris. A few days earlier, the Democrat also picked up some endorsements from prominent Wisconsin Republicans, including former state Senate Majority Leader Dale Schultz. A few days before that, Al Cárdenas, the former chair of the Florida Republican Party, announced his support for Harris.

They have an enormous amount of company. Indeed, as the Democratic ticket focuses heavily on reaching out to independents and disaffected GOP voters, Republicans for Harris has become a surprisingly effective force, backed by former members of Congress, governors, state lawmakers, cabinet secretaries, White House staffers, and even a former Republican vice president who probably never dreamed he’d be backing a Democratic presidential candidate.

The developments have not gone unnoticed. On the contrary, Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina appeared on “Meet the Press” over the weekend and asked a rather pointed question. NBC News reported:

GOP Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina on Sunday slammed members of his own party who are supporting Vice President Kamala Harris’ presidential bid, asking them, “What the hell are you doing?”

It was probably a rhetorical question, though it’s a relatively easy one to answer.

In fact, former House Republican Conference Chair Liz Cheney has held some public events with Harris, including one in Wisconsin in which Charlie Sykes — an MSNBC Daily columnist and conservative media host who’s also broken with his party and backed Harris — reminded the former Wyoming congresswoman about Graham’s on-air comments, and asked for her reaction.

“Well, don’t listen to Lindsey Graham,” Cheney responded. “It’s good life advice, actually.”

It was a funny line, and it generated some applause from the audience, but that’s not all Cheney has had to say on the matter. In fact, at the same event, Cheney also said, “If you wouldn’t … hire somebody to babysit your kids, you shouldn’t make that guy president of the United States.” She went on to argue, “In this election, we need to elect the person who is the responsible adult.”

Hours earlier, at a separate Harris event in Pennsylvania, the former House GOP leader encouraged voters to consider the significance of electing a president who’s “totally erratic,” “completely unstable,” and who “idolizes tyrants.”

If Graham genuinely wants to know “what the hell” anti-Trump Republicans are doing, there’s no great mystery here: They’re putting patriotism above party. They’re coming to terms with the fact that their party has nominated an erratic criminal, who’s been credibly accused of mental instability, and who’s running on an authoritarian platform. They believe it’s in the nation’s interest to defeat him and instead go with a qualified, mainstream vice president.

For more along these lines, I’d also refer the South Carolinian to Cheney’s recent remarks delivered at the birthplace of the Republican Party.

Nearly three weeks later, the speech holds up quite well, whether Lindsey Graham wants to listen or not.

Steve Benen

Steve Benen is a producer for “The Rachel Maddow Show,” the editor of MaddowBlog and an BLN political contributor. He’s also the bestselling author of “Ministry of Truth: Democracy, Reality, and the Republicans’ War on the Recent Past.”

Read More

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Politics

Jack Smith plans to double down on the need for his Trump investigations

Published

on

Jack Smith plans to double down on the need for his Trump investigations

Republicans and Democrats are hoping for a blockbuster hearing from the former special counsel, who is testifying publicly for the first time about his efforts to charge the president…
Read More

Continue Reading

Politics

Former Trail Blazer Chris Dudley to run again for governor of Oregon

Published

on

Former Portland Trail Blazer center Chris Dudley has launched a second attempt to run for governor of Oregon as a Republican, a long-shot bid in a blue state even as the incumbent has struggled in polls.

Dudley, who played six seasons for the Trail Blazers and 16 for the NBA overall, said in an announcement video Monday that he would ease divisiveness and focus on public safety, affordability and education in a state where support for Democratic Gov. Tina Kotek has been low for her entire tenure.

“The empty promises, the name calling, the finger pointing and fear mongering that has solved nothing must stop,” said in his election announcement. “There are real solutions, and I have a plan.”

Dudley is one of the most successful Republicans of the last 25 years in Oregon, coming within 2 points of defeating Democratic Gov. John Kitzhaber in 2010.

“I think it’s imperative that we get somebody from outside of Salem who’s away from the partisan politics, away from the name calling, the finger pointing,” Dudley told The Oregonian. “Who has the expertise and background and the ability to bring people together to solve these issues.”

In his election announcement, Dudley spoke about his love of the state and frustration people have with the current state of politics. He mentioned education, safety and affordability as key issues he plans to address but did not give any key policy specifics.

Dudley is a Yale graduate who worked in finance after leaving the NBA. A diabetic, he also founded a foundation focused on children with Type 1 diabetes.

In the GOP primary, Dudley faces a field that includes state Sen. Christine Drazan, who lost to Kotek by nearly 4 percentage points in 2022.

Other candidates include another state lawmaker, a county commissioner and a conservative influencer who was pardoned by President Donald Trump for his involvement in the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol.

Kotek is a relatively unpopular governor. Her approval rating has consistently remained under 50 percent her entire term in office, according to polling analysis by Morning Consult. She has not announced her campaign but is expected to run for reelection.

Despite expectations that Democrats will do well in the midterms, a number of Oregon Republicans have become more involved in state politics since the last election. Phil Knight, a co-founder of Nike, donated $3 million to an Oregon Republican PAC focused on gaining seats in the state Legislature in October. It was his largest political donation to date, according to the Willamette Week.

Dudley received significant backing from Knight in his 2010 race, but it’s unclear if he will get the same level of support this time around.

Any Republican faces an uphill battle for governor in Oregon, where a GOP candidate has not won since 1982 and where Democrats have a registration edge of about 8 percentage points.

Continue Reading

Politics

Jack Smith plans to double down on the need for his Trump investigations

Published

on

Republicans and Democrats are hoping for a blockbuster hearing from the former special counsel, who is testifying publicly for the first time about his efforts to charge the president…
Read More

Continue Reading

Trending