Lindsey Graham quits; GOP establishment wonders who's next

Lindsey Graham would work with Hillary Clinton on a range of issues if she became president in exchange for concessions on fighting the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria. The South Carolina Senator, who is trailing in polls of the Republican presidential

Cheryl K. Chumley is a staff writer for WND and author of "Police State USA: How Orwell's Nightmare is Becoming our Reality." Formerly with the Washington Times, she is a journalism fellow with The Phillips Foundation in Washington, D.C., where she

Steve Harvey's epic mistake. We can't even imagine what it must be like to be Steve Harvey today. Or last night, moments after he realized he had announced the wrong winner of the Miss Universe contest on live TV. If you've somehow managed to not see

Conservative Washington Post blogger Jennifer Rubin put it bluntly in a column: "Lindsey Graham is out, others should follow." Graham is the fourth candidate to drop out so far, but that hasn't yet dented the strong numbers of the anti-establishment

Graham, 60, plunged into the contest in June on a platform of hawkish foreign policy and a declaration that newcomers need not apply for a job that offers no chance for "on-the-job training." At the time, anything was possible because none in the mob