What we know about Lindsey Graham’s final days
- The San Juan Daily Star
- 8 hours ago
- 4 min read

By OLIVIA DÍAZ
Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., likely died on Saturday from a tear in his aorta, officials said, hours after returning to the United States from Ukraine and months before he was to face reelection.
Graham’s office said Sunday that a preliminary report from Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in Washington indicated that the senator had died from an aortic dissection, though that determination was subject to additional testing.
Graham, who was chair of the Budget Committee and formerly led the Judiciary Committee, became a household name in Republican politics and was among President Donald Trump’s closest and most loyal allies in the Senate. He died two days after his 71st birthday, and as he was seeking a fifth term.
A former Air Force lawyer who had served in the Air Force Reserve, Graham also developed a reputation as a foreign policy hawk who vehemently defended Israel and Ukraine. Hours before he died, the senator had returned to Washington after a trip to Ukraine, where he said he had reached agreement with colleagues in both parties and the White House on imposing sanctions targeting buyers of Russian oil.
Here’s what to know about the end of Graham’s life:
Emergency workers were called to his home.
Graham’s office did not provide any further details about what happened in the moments leading up to his death. But the medical examiner’s preliminary finding said he suffered a tear in the main artery that carries blood from the heart, “stemming from arteriosclerotic cardiovascular disease,” or a gradual weakening and hardening of the arteries.
According to recordings of dispatcher calls obtained by The New York Times, emergency workers responded Saturday night to a call about a person experiencing chest pains at the senator’s Capitol Hill address. The recordings did not name Graham, who had returned from Ukraine hours earlier, but responders could be heard saying they were administering CPR to a person suffering from cardiac arrest.
According to the recordings, the emergency call for help came from a woman in Baltimore who was not identified. She informed responders that the house’s door was open, but emergency crews could be heard saying they needed the police to assist a forced entry.
Trump said in an interview Sunday that he had spoken with Graham not long before the episode, and gotten no inkling that there was anything amiss.
“Other than being tired, he was fine,” Trump said. He said early reports of a possible heart attack made sense. “That would just be a quick end. And maybe that’s not the worst way to go.”
The D.C. Metropolitan Police Department said in a statement Graham was declared dead at 10:23 p.m. at George Washington University Hospital.
He had just returned from Ukraine.
In his last public act, on Friday, Graham announced during a visit to Ukraine that he had reached agreement among a bipartisan group of senators and the White House on his long-stalled effort, resisted by Trump, to impose sanctions targeting buyers of Russian oil.
It was a fitting end to the senator’s career on Capitol Hill, where he had long been a proponent of U.S. military intervention against adversaries abroad, particularly Russia. Last year, he had pressed for new, harsher sanctions on countries that did business with Moscow, but he pulled back amid Trump’s opposition.
“I have never been more optimistic than I am today that we have the formula to end this war,” Graham said Friday in Kyiv, the Ukrainian capital. “Help Ukraine be more lethal. Let those supporting Russia to know there’s going to be a price to be paid if you keep doing it. And to try to find an off-ramp — not to humiliate Putin, but to end this war so that Ukraine will thrive and survive.”
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine said Friday that he was grateful to Graham, posting a photo of the two shaking hands in Ukraine.
His trip to Ukraine came just days after Graham had traveled to Ankara, Turkey, for the NATO summit.
Graham’s sister is appointed to finish his Senate term.
Gov. Henry McMaster of South Carolina said Monday that he would appoint Sen. Lindsey Graham’s sister, Darline Graham Nordone, to finish his Senate term, after Graham’s death Saturday.
Standing next to Nordone at a news conference, McMaster said it was his duty under the law to select someone “to serve in the place of this irresistible man, this irreplaceable man, this extraordinary man, for the remainder of his term.”
“Lindsey took care of his little sister in years long departed,” McMaster said at a news conference held at the Statehouse in Columbia, South Carolina. “It’s my honor to ask his little sister, Darline Graham, to finish his work for him now.”
Nordone accepted the appointment, saying it would be a “privilege to get to finish” some of her brother’s work over the next several months.
Plans are underway to honor him.
Trump announced on social media Sunday that he would order flags to be flown at half-staff until Saturday evening in honor of Graham.
Arrangements on Capitol Hill have yet to be announced, but Sen. Tim Scott, his fellow South Carolina Republican, suggested in an interview on CBS’ “Face the Nation” that GOP leaders were planning to find ways of honoring Graham in the coming week.
It was not known whether he would lie in state in the Capitol, as his close friend and former Sen. John McCain of Arizona did in 2018 after his death from a malignant brain tumor.
