Rep. Ralph Norman to run for Senate in South Carolina following Lindsey Graham's death

Rep. Ralph Norman, R-S.C., attends a House Rules Committee meeting after the Senate passed President Donald Trump’s sweeping spending and tax bill, on Capitol Hill in Washington, July 1, 2025. Norman announced his run for U.S. Senate on Saturday.

Rep. Ralph Norman, R-S.C., attends a House Rules Committee meeting after the Senate passed President Donald Trump’s sweeping spending and tax bill, on Capitol Hill in Washington, July 1, 2025. Norman announced his run for U.S. Senate on Saturday. (Elizabeth Frantz, Reuters)


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WASHINGTON — Rep. Ralph Norman, a South Carolina Republican, plans ​to run for the Senate in the state following the death of longtime Sen. Lindsey Graham, Norman said ‌on Fox News on Saturday.

"I will be laser-focused on passing President Trump's America First (agenda)," ⁠Norman told Fox host Kayleigh ​McEnany.

Norman added in a note on ⁠his campaign website that "our country is at a crossroads" and ‌that "President Trump needs ‌proven conservative fighters standing with him, not politicians who fold ⁠when the pressure comes."

Norman's announcement comes ⁠after President Donald Trump said on Friday he had asked Darline Graham to run for the position in a special Republican primary on Aug. 11.

"I hope Darline does this, in that there would be nobody better to honor the legacy of ‌her beloved brother, Lindsey," Trump said in ​a Truth Social post, adding she would have Trump's endorsement.

Graham was sworn in on Tuesday to fill the Senate seat on an interim basis.

Candidates can formally file to run next week. Others who have announced their intention to seek the Senate seat are Republicans Duke Buckner and Mark Lynch.

Norman, 73, ran ​unsuccessfully this year for governor of South Carolina.

He is a lifelong resident ‌of Rock Hill, ‌with ⁠a career outside of politics in commercial real estate development. Norman was elected to represent South Carolina's 5th Congressional District in 2017. He previously spent 11 years in the South Carolina House of ‌Representatives.

Norman has "consistently voted in ​favor of limited government, individual liberties, ‌and sound financial policies," according ⁠to his House biography.

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