Did You See This? Some Laid Off State Department Staffer Left This Note....
Now They Care? Democrats Suddenly Get Loud About Epstein Files After Four Years...
DOJ Drops Bombshell Report on Federal Prisons—The Details Are Quite Disturbing
The Media Recalibrates Gavin Newsom's Pot Farm/Child Care Program, and Global Warming Gets...
Total Authorization
Trump Breaks Silence on Alleged Bondi–Bongino Clash
Trump Unleashes 30 Percent Tariffs on Mexico, EU: Hits Back at Cartels, Trade...
DHS Shreds NYT’s False Claims Regarding Texas Floods
Bernie Sanders Finally Gets Some Commonsense
Newsom Claims He's 'Not Anti-Gun,' but His Record Tells a Different Story
Political Analyst Warns NYC: Socialist Zohran Mamdani Poised to Win
One Final Push Could End the Mullahs Regime in Iran
UPDATE: Kash Patel Says He’s Not Going Anywhere
LA Offers Free Cash to Illegal Aliens Afraid to Leave Their Homes Amid...
Put on Notice: Trump Authorizes ICE, Border Patrol to Arrest 'Slimeballs' Attacking Office...
Tipsheet

'Afraid for Our Country': Graham Responds to News a Grand Jury Wanted to Indict Him

Greg Nash/Pool via AP

Senate Judiciary Committee Ranking Member and Republican Senator Lindsey Graham is responding to news Friday that a grand jury in Fulton County, Georgia wanted to indict him for asking questions about the 2020 presidential election. 

Advertisement

“I’m very worried about the country right now. I was the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee [in 2020]. This election was contested in courts in multiple states. I had to explain to the people of South Carolina my vote. I had to decide whether or not to have a hearing about the allegations in Georgia and other places. I called around different places, including Georgia, as a sitting United States Senator from the Judiciary Committee. I eventually certified the election in all states including Georgia. I didn’t find any evidence of mass voter but I did have concerns about the mail in ballot systems in Georgia and other places,” Graham said in response to the news, noting Fulton County is one of the most liberal jurisdictions in the country. “This is troubling for the country. We can’t criminalize Senators doing their job when they have a constitutional requirement to fulfill. It would have been irresponsible in my opinion as chairman of the Committee not to find out what happened.”

Advertisement

“We’re opening up pandora’s box here,” he continued. “We have to be careful not to use the legal system as a political tool.” 

Meanwhile President Donald Trump and 18 of his associates, including his attorneys, are expected to stand trial in October. 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement