I Do Declare: Fani Willis Beat Lindsey Graham in Federal Court. Now He Must Testify Under Oath.

The gentleman from South Carolina has some 'splainin to do in Georgia

More popcorn, please.

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Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach
Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach

Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), who we imagine spends his free time on a wraparound porch wearing seerksucker and sipping mint juleps, will have to interrupt that routine and head south to Georgia to answer questions in front of a grand jury.

The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals yesterday gave the final smackdown to Grahamโ€™s legal effort to avoid a subpoena to answer questions before the special grand jury convened by Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis to investigate whether ex-prez Donald Trump, or anyone else, broke the law in trying to overturn Georgiaโ€™s 2020 election results. The anyone else part is important, because by definition it could include Graham himself, who was a Trump campaign supporter and made calls to Georgia officials in the wake of Trumpโ€™s loss, around the same time that Trump himself was pushing the lie that he actually won in Georgia, and nationally.

Graham will now have to answer questions under oath related to what he knew about Trumpโ€™s effort, and about his own, which means he could himself be at legal peril for perjury if he doesnโ€™t tell the truth. Of course, he could always plead the fifth, staving off answering any questions that incriminate him, and the federal courtโ€™s ruling also says he is protected from answering questions that fall under his authority to conduct legislative inquiry, potentially a major loophole.

Legally thatโ€™d be fine but itโ€™d also be the political equivalent of bulletin board material in sports, handing Democrats an argument to use against Graham in his next general election campaign or against Republicans in general, reminding voters that a sitting U.S. Senator couldnโ€™t answer questions about his behavior in the last presidential election without potentially admitting he may have committed a crime.

Of course, all of this is going down in Georgia, a state in the midst of its own heated U.S. Senate and gubernatorial races, making it be very interesting next few weeks for political junkies to focus on the peach state.

Straight From The Root

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