President Donald Trump endorsed Sen. Darline Graham, R-S.C., in the special election to fill her late brother’s Senate seat for a full term.
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“I asked Darline, for the Good of our Nation, to run for the U.S. Senate in the Special Republican Primary on Tuesday, August 11, 2026,” Trump wrote in a Friday post on Truth Social. “I hope Darline does this, in that there would be nobody better to honor the legacy of her beloved brother, Lindsey.”
The president added later in his post that she has his “complete and total endorsement.”

She was appointed earlier this week by South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster, a Republican, to serve out the rest of Sen. Lindsey Graham’s term in the Senate, through early January.
Darline Graham is South Carolina’s first female senator. She and her late brother often spoke about their close relationship, which included Lindsey Graham’s adopting his younger sister when she was 13, shortly after both of their parents died.
“I don’t know what I would have done without him,” she told Fox News in a joint interview in 2015.
Lindsey Graham died suddenly Saturday night, triggering a Senate vacancy and a special election. He had been in the midst of a re-election campaign and selected by GOP voters in his state as the Republican nominee for Senate in June, setting him up for a general election to a potential fifth term in November.
Per South Carolina law, GOP candidates wishing to run in Lindsey Graham’s place can begin to file their intention to do so on July 21, and the special primary election will be held Aug. 11. His sudden death set up a scramble last weekend among Republicans in the state as they searched for a potential candidate.
On Wednesday, Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., said the newly sworn-in Darline Graham was “off to a remarkable start” in the Senate and said, “Why not her?” when asked whether she’d consider running for a full term.
Several other South Carolina GOP political figures who had been floated as potential candidates in the race to replace Lindsey Graham were Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette and Rep. Nancy Mace.
Businessman Mark Lynch, who lost to Lindsey Graham in the June primary, said Monday that he planned to revive his Senate campaign in the wake of the senator’s death.