South Carolina governor names Graham's sister as temporary Senate replacement
WASHINGTON - Republican South Carolina Governor Henry McMaster on Monday appointed the sister of the late Senator Lindsey Graham to fill his vacant Senate seat until the first week of January.
Darline Graham Nordone - whom President Donald Trump named as his preferred choice for the post - is expected to be sworn in as early as this week, allowing Majority Leader John Thune to maintain Republicans' 53-47 majority in the Senate.
Senator Graham died late on Saturday. His sudden death, shortly after he returned to Washington from a trip to Ukraine, coupled with the ongoing absence of Senator Mitch McConnell, is weighing on Congress as it returns from its July 4 holiday break on Monday to grapple with key defense and national security legislation during a compressed four-week summer work period.
The Senate opened on Monday with Graham's desk draped in black with a vase holding white flowers atop it.
With McConnell out indefinitely due to illness and Graham's seat temporarily empty, the Republican caucus is down two members, effectively leaving it with a minimal 51-seat majority that could create hurdles for Thune as he seeks to pass major defense policy legislation and a new Russia sanctions bill. Also pending are a lapsed foreign surveillance program and Senate consideration of President Donald Trump's nominees, including Todd Blanche as U.S. attorney general.
McMaster announced his choice of Nordone at a press conference in Columbia, the capital of South Carolina. She will fill out her brother's term, which ends the first week of January, when a new Congress will be sworn in.
South Carolina's Republican Party will hold a special primary election on August 11 with a runoff on August 25 if no candidate wins a majority. Whoever captures the party nomination will face Democrat Annie Andrews in the November 3 general election.
It was unclear whether Nordone would attempt to join the race for a six-year term. Republican Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina had also backed Nordone for the temporary Senate assignment.
MCCONNELL STATEMENT
Graham sat on the Senate Appropriations Committee, and McConnell remains a member. Without them, the struggle already underway to reach agreement on across-the-board government funding could become even more arduous. Congress and Trump face a September 30 deadline to keep federal agencies operating for 12 more months.
Graham died from a heart ailment late on Saturday, his office said. McConnell, an 84-year-old Kentucky Republican who has spent half his life in Congress, also chairs the Senate Rules Committee and has been absent since mid-June.
Washington, D.C.'s Office of the Chief Medical Examiner is carrying out extensive testing to determine whether there were contributing factors to a preliminary finding that the senator's cause of death was a tear in his aorta.
The office normally has up to 90 days to make its determinations.
In a statement to constituents on Sunday, McConnell said he was hospitalized after a fall and later developed mild pneumonia, but has moved to a rehabilitation center and remains determined to return to the Senate.
"I'll keep working hard to get back on the Senate floor as soon as possible," McConnell said without providing a timeline for his return.
As chair of the Senate Budget Committee, Graham sought a new budget package to circumvent opposition from Democrats and pass Republican priorities such as additional defense funding, new tax cuts and some Trump-backed voter restrictions.
Graham and McConnell were also key to Republican hopes of reviving a lapsed Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act program, as lawmakers scrutinize Trump's decision to appoint Bill Pulte, an ally with no intelligence background, as acting head of national intelligence.
BLANCHE CONFIRMATION
Their ability to advance legislation renewing FISA authority will depend on Trump's DNI nominee, Jay Clayton, who is due for a confirmation hearing this week as Pulte's replacement.
The Senate Judiciary Committee's loss of Graham also could impact the confirmation of Blanche, who raised hackles among Republicans and Democrats this year as acting attorney general by promoting a now-defunct $1.8 billion "anti-weaponization" fund that critics say could have benefited Trump allies.
McConnell's absence from chairing the Rules Committee could create a partisan deadlock on the panel just days after Trump fired the last three members of the Election Assistance Commission in the run-up to the November midterm elections.
The Rules Committee would handle any new Trump nominations for the independent body that assists election administration officials nationwide. But with McConnell absent, the 17-member panel would consist of eight Republicans and eight Democrats, potentially keeping it from processing nominees.
Trump and his allies have criticized McConnell several times since the president returned to office. McConnell has opposed Trump's tariff policies and some of his cabinet picks, as well as his efforts to eliminate the Senate filibuster. As the rules panel chairman, he has also declined to advance Trump's voter ID bill, known as the SAVE America Act.
The longest-serving party leader in Senate history, McConnell has struggled publicly with health issues in recent years, including freezing up while speaking to reporters in 2023, and was hospitalized for eight days in February with flu-like symptoms.
(Reporting by David Morgan and Richard Cowan; editing by David Gaffen, Sergio Non and Deepa Babington)
Copyright Reuters or USA Today Network via Reuters Connect.