Posted on 02/01/2015 5:52:38 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
Potential presidential contender Lindsey Graham thinks he can appeal to typically right-skewed Republican presidential primary voters, despite non-conservative views on immigration, climate change and federal spending.
Graham, a Republican senator representing South Carolina, is serious about his recently declared interest in entering the already packed 2016 GOP field, even while the move has left the political punditry puzzled.
On Thursday, Graham announced the launch of a formal exploratory committee, Security through Strength, to determine, he said, if he can enter the race with a viable campaign.
Graham last week began selling his candidacy on Capitol Hill, telling reporters if he enters the race, hell conduct a center-right campaign that will not shy away from the idea of working with Democrats to solve the nations problems.
A center right candidacy can prevail in America, Graham said to a gaggle of reporters in a Senate hallway last week.
A center right candidacy can prevail in America, Graham said to a gaggle of reporters in a Senate hallway last week.
For instance, Graham said, You can be pro-life, you just have to be articulate and not scary about it.
Graham likened his candidacy to driving a car down the middle of a road.
Barack Obama ran as a centrist but hes been in the left ditch, Graham said. To get American out of the left ditch, you dont want to go into the right ditch.
But if anyone wants to question Grahams conservative bona fides, he said they need only look to the June 2014 GOP primary, when he handily defeated six Republican challengers.
You cant get more conservative than South Carolina, Wesley Donehue, a political consultant based in Columbia, S.C., told the Washington Examiner. Every election cycle someone comes along and says they are going to challenge Lindsey Graham, and he whips them every time.
But a Graham presidential bid would be tough for conservatives to embrace, in part because of the primary role working with Democrats to draft and pass the 2013 Senate comprehensive immigration reform bill.
The bill would expand visas and work permits, enlarge a program for immigrant agricultural workers and provide a pathway to citizenship for the 11 million people living here illegally.
Graham has also estranged himself from conservatives by embracing the idea that climate change is man-made and must be controlled by reducing carbon emissions. He once co-authored legislation with Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., that would have capped carbon emissions with a goal of an 83 percent reduction by 2050.
Graham has since revised his views on climate change, citing new, conflicting scientific evidence. But he still adheres to the notion that climate change is caused at least partly by humans and the nation should go to a lower carbon economy. Democrats, Graham said, are overselling the threat, of climate change and have proposed legislation he considers draconian.
But he defended his efforts to co-sponsor legislation with Democrats as he did with both the climate bill and immigration reform measure.
Working with the other side when it makes sense is not inconsistent with being conservative, Graham said.
Graham would also work with Democrats to restore significant federal budget cuts made to both defense and domestic spending, he said, adding that he supports both tax increases and entitlement reform to fill the budget gaps.
The solution has to be bipartisan, Graham said.
Grahams expertise in foreign policy may become his biggest appeal to voters if he jumps into the race, his longtime political advisor Richard Quinn said. Graham served nearly three decades in the Air Force and retired recently with the rank of colonel. Among his Senate colleagues, he is among the most respected lawmakers on issues related to national security and foreign policy.
I dont think there is anyone else considering a presidential candidacy who can match the depth of Lindseys experience and expertise on national security and national defense, Quinn told the Examiner. I believe national security is going to be a key issue, if not the key issue, of the 2016 cycle.
But a Graham candidacy may have a hard time finding a base of supporters, said pollster Ron Faucheux, President of Clarus Research Group.
There are already several potential candidates from the South, Faucheux said, including former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, who would pick up the support of mainstream Republicans, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, who would garner Tea Party support, and former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, who will scoop up Christian conservative voters.
He doesnt have an ideological base, which is the downside of being and independent, straight-shooter, Faucheux told the Examiner.
LOL “center right”. Especially when the “center” is far more left than even a decade ago.
Dole, McCain and Romney all won big, huh?
no
Lindsey could not be any part of a center-right team.
.
AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH
Oh God, please stop
Yer killin me...
aside from the 1,000 big reasons to ignore lindsey, he doesn’t even bring a state with him. SC is going to vote for the republican no matter what.
but if walker could flip WI, that would be huge.
I would vote for lindsay lohan before lindsey graham.
Erm... Non conservative views on immigration and spending? That’s all? Oh yea sign me up for that. /sarc
“Center-right” is Republican establishment hack talk which, translated, means “worthless as teats on a boar hog.”
Get lost, Lindsey.
It’s hard to decide who I hate more, McQueeg or Linda.
Well that leaves RINO Grahamnesty out of it. :-)
If this clown actually prevailed in the nomination struggle, he would make Goldwater or Mondale utterly popular by comparison.
Who cares when the gay boy says?
Much delusion this one has.
Lindsey Graham is a feckless, duplicitous, treacherous, double dealing backstabbing cork sucker. Go ahead Lindsey you just go ahead and run and then maybe you will see where the rest of us think of you.
do not think it will be easy for Walker to carry Wisconsin. Blue state governors normally do not carry their state in the Prez election.....think Mitt and Mass in 2012, and think about Christie’s exit poll reality check on his last election. He won the gov race by 21 points but would have lost to Hillary badly that very same night.
fools gold.....
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