Latest briefs Browse latest →
Graham Dies, Opening Seat Before Close Senate Votes
Lindsey Graham’s death opens South Carolina’s Senate seat, leaving voters awaiting a successor while a slim Republican majority faces close votes
Full visual brief
Follow the story
Sources & verification
Reporting behind this brief, checked before publication.
- BBC News · bbc.co.uk
- The Guardian · theguardian.com
- ABC News Top Stories · abcnews.com
- CBS News Latest · cbsnews.com
- NBC News · nbcnews.com
- CNBC Top News · cnbc.com
- Al Jazeera · aljazeera.com
- Deutsche Welle · dw.com
- France 24 · france24.com
- The New York Times · nytimes.com
- Associated Press · apnews.com
- South Carolina Legislature · scstatehouse.gov
Brief text
Sen. Lindsey Graham died at 71, creating a South Carolina vacancy while the Senate GOP holds a slim majority and an unfinished Russia sanctions push awaits new ownership.
- Frame 1Lindsey Graham’s death opens South Carolina’s Senate seat, leaving voters awaiting a successor while a slim Republican majority faces close votes.
- Frame 2His office announced a “brief and sudden illness” Saturday night, gave no cause, and asked for family privacy.
- Frame 3South Carolina law lets the governor appoint an interim senator through January after the next general election.
- Frame 4Graham had served since 2003 and chaired the Budget Committee, which steers major bills through reconciliation.
- Frame 5That committee helped carry last year’s tax law without a filibuster, making the vacant seat consequential for close votes.
- Frame 6Graham returned from Kyiv after advancing a Russia sanctions package; Senate leaders must now decide who carries that work.
How this was checked
- Reporting
- Cross-checked across 12 sources
- Claims
- We checked the names, dates, numbers, and core facts against the reporting linked above
- Artwork
- This is an editorial illustration based on the reporting, not source photography
- Published
- Jul 12, 4:54 AM EDT
- Our standards
- Editorial standards and corrections