Potential Republican 2016 presidential candidate U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham reacts after leaving the "CBS This Morning" studios in Manhattan, New York

Here’s Lindsey.

Via The Virginia Gazette

Sen. Lindsey Graham, the South Carolina defense hawk, plans to enter the crowded Republican presidential primary field Monday with a campaign that probably won’t deliver him to the White House, but will highlight the party’s divide over national security.

Graham lacks the big-money backing and name recognition that’s likely to be needed to pull away from the party’s increasingly unwieldy field.

But for him, that may not matter.

For the last several years, Graham, a former Air Force colonel and legal officer, has played a central role in a sometimes-bitter battle between the GOP’s traditional defense advocates and newly emergent isolationist-leaning libertarians led by Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, who is also seeking the party’s presidential nomination.

Graham enters the race at a time when Americans, particularly Republicans, are paying closer attention to national security concerns. As they do, Republicans are finding peril on the issue, one which they have dominated for most of the last half-century.

Jeb Bush, the former Florida governor, repeatedly stumbled last month over his thoughts on the war in Iraq that his brother, President George W. Bush, ordered. Other Republican hopefuls have given uneven responses about how they would manage the campaign against Islamic State militants who have seized control over large parts of Syria and Iraq.

Graham will almost certainly be a constant counterpoint to Paul, who advocates a less interventionist foreign policy.

The South Carolina senator did not originate the “wacko birds” label for Paul and his allies — that was coined by Graham’s best friend in Congress, Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) — but he might as well have.[…]

Graham, 59, was born in Seneca, S.C., and lived with his family behind their liquor store, restaurant and pool hall on Main Street in Central, S.C., where he plans to announce his campaign.

His personal story has helped shape his policymaking. After his parents’ death, he helped raise his younger sister and has championed the Social Security survivors’ benefits they relied upon as young people.

But it is his military service and alliance with McCain that have come to define much of Graham’s work in Washington as the two tried to defend hawkish foreign and defense policies against attack from some in the party’s new generation. Now, he’ll try to bolster those policies on the presidential campaign trail.

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