COLUMBIA, S.C. — The long and occasionally quixotic relationship between Donald Trump and Lindsey Graham has again turned negative after the South Carolina senator criticized the former president for refusing to support a federal abortion ban.
Trump repeatedly disparaged Graham on his social media site and said he regretted endorsing the senator during his last reelection campaign. Graham, a staunch abortion opponent who has pushed for a national ban, did not back down from his criticism, saying Trump's view was an ''error.''
But some observers of the Trump-Graham dynamic think both Republicans benefit from their public strife.
For Trump, they say, creating public distance from anti-abortion advocates might help him blunt President Joe Biden's attacks on an issue that Democrats have long credited for electoral victories since the U.S. Supreme Court, with three justices Trump nominated, overturned Roe v. Wade. Graham, meanwhile, gets to burnish his conservative bona fides against years of home-state criticism that he is too liberal.
State Rep. John McCravy, a Republican who sponsored South Carolina's new law that bans most abortions at six weeks, said he could not see how the back-and-forth really harmed either Trump or Graham with voters.
Trump "wants to get elected, and I think that appearing to be moderate helps him to get elected,'' McCravy said. ''Regardless of what they say, I think he's taking the practical side of this. He's pointing out something that's true and using that to show that he's not an extremist.''
Spokespeople for Trump's campaign and Graham's Senate office did not immediately comment when asked Friday about the squabble.
A smashed cellphone; a vow to ‘count me out'