Talk:Sinn Bodhi and Lindsey Graham: Difference between pages

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{{Future election candidate|article|Graham, Lindsey}}
{{WPBiography|living=yes|class= Start|auto=yes|importance=}}
{{Infobox Senator | name=Lindsey Graham
{{pro-wrestling|class=Start|importance=Low}}
| image name=Lindsey Graham, official Senate photo portrait, 2006.jpg
{{Comicsproj|class=Start|importance=Bottom}}
| jr/sr=Senior Senator
| state=[[South Carolina]]
| party=[[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]
| term_start=[[January 7]], [[2003]]
| alongside=[[Jim DeMint]]
| preceded=[[J. Strom Thurmond]]
| succeeded=Incumbent
| state2=[[South Carolina]]
| district2=[[South Carolina's 3rd congressional district|3rd]]
| term_start2=[[January 4]], [[1995]]
| term_end2=[[January 3]], [[2003]]
| preceded2=[[Butler Derrick]]
| succeeded2=[[J. Gresham Barrett]]
| date of birth={{birth date and age|1955|07|9}}
| place of birth=[[Central, South Carolina]]
| dead=alive
| occupation=attorney
| residence=[[Seneca, South Carolina]]
| spouse=none
| alma_mater=[[University of South Carolina]]
| religion=[[Southern Baptist]]
|branch=[[United States Air Force]]
|serviceyears=1982 – 1988 (active)<br/>1988 – present ([[Air Force Reserve Command|reserve]])
|rank=[[Colonel (United States)|Colonel]]
|unit=[[Judge Advocate General's Corps, U.S. Air Force|Judge Advocate General's Corps]]
|battles=[[Gulf War]]<br/>[[Iraq War]]
|awards=
}}
'''Lindsey Olin Graham''' (born [[July 9]], [[1955]]) is an [[United States|American]] [[politician]] from [[South Carolina]]. A member of the [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican Party]], he is currently the senior [[United States Senate|United States Senator]] from that state. He serves on the [[U.S. Senate Committee on Armed Services|Armed Services]] and [[U.S. Senate Committee on the Judiciary|Judiciary Committees]].


== Edge ==
==Early life and education==
Graham was born in [[Central, South Carolina]], where his father, Florence James Graham, owned a liquor store. After graduating from high school, Graham became the first member of his family to attend college and joined the [[Reserve Officer Training Corps]]. When he was 21 his mother died, and his father died 15 months later. Because he and his sister were now left orphaned, the service allowed Graham to attend [[University of South Carolina Columbia]] so he could be near home and care for his sister, whom he adopted. At the University he became a member of the [[Fraternities and sororities|fraternity]] [[Pi Kappa Phi]].
I heard Sinn Bowdee's childhood friends with Edge, any confirmation about this? <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/124.106.193.250|124.106.193.250]] ([[User talk:124.106.193.250|talk]]) 05:10, 11 October 2008 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
:Yea, Edge's autobiography "Adam Copeland on Edge". ♥[[User:NiciVampireHeart|<font color="black">'''Nici'''</font>]]♥[[User_talk:NiciVampireHeart|<font color="purple">'''Vampire'''</font>]]♥[[Special:Contributions/NiciVampireHeart|<font color="red">'''Heart'''</font>]]♥ 17:58, 11 October 2008 (UTC)


Graham graduated from the University of South Carolina Columbia with a [[Bachelor of Arts|B.A.]] in Psychology in 1977 and from its school of law with a [[Juris Doctor|J.D.]] in 1981. Upon graduating Graham was sent to Europe as a military prosecutor, and eventually entered private practice as a lawyer.
== WikiProject class rating==
This article was automatically assessed because at least one article was rated and this bot brought all the other ratings up to at least that level. [[User:BetacommandBot|BetacommandBot]] 00:13, 28 August 2007 (UTC)


==TV.com Listing==
==Military service==
Graham decided to join the [[United States Air Force]] in 1982, and served on active duty until 1988. Following his departure he stayed in the military,joining the South Carolina [[Air National Guard]]<ref>[http://lgraham.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=AboutSenatorGraham.Biography United States Senator Lindsey Graham, South Carolina : About Senator Graham<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> and the [[Air Force Reserve Command|U.S. Air Force Reserves]]. During the [[Gulf War]], he was recalled to active duty, serving as a [[Judge Advocate General's Corps|Judge Advocate]] at McEntire Air National Guard Station in [[Eastover, South Carolina]], where he helped brief departing pilots on the [[laws of war]].
If anyone wants to his this as a reference for him, I leave it here. [http://www.tv.com/sunday-night-heat/november-28-2004---randy-orton-vs-tyson-tomko/episode/381788/summary.html] [[User:Govvy|Govvy]] ([[User talk:Govvy|talk]]) 15:12, 20 April 2008 (UTC)


In 2004, Graham received a promotion to [[Colonel (United States)|Colonel]] in the U.S. Air Force Reserves at a [[White House]] ceremony officiated by President [[George W. Bush]].
==TNA==
shouldn't his time in the New Church in TNA with Slash and James Mitchell be mentioned <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/66.192.59.4|66.192.59.4]] ([[User talk:66.192.59.4|talk]]) 12:18, 23 September 2008 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->


Graham served in [[Iraq]] as a reservist on active duty for short periods during April and two weeks in August 2007, where he worked on detainee and rule-of-law issues.<ref>[http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/27/AR2007082701919.html After Tour of Duty in Iraq, Graham Backs 'Surge' - washingtonpost.com<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> That makes him the only [[Iraq war]] [[veteran]] serving in the [[United States Senate]].
== Kizarny ==


==Political career in the House of Representatives and the Senate==
Nick Cvjetkovich
In 1992, Graham was elected to the [[South Carolina House of Representatives]] from a district in [[Oconee County]]. After only one term, he was elected to the [[United States House of Representatives]] from [[South Carolina's 3rd congressional district]] in the northwestern part of the state after 20-year incumbent [[Butler Derrick]] retired. He won by a surprisingly large margin; the 3rd had never elected a Republican before. In his first reelection bid, in 1996, Debbie Dorn, daughter of longtime 3rd District congressman [[W.J. Bryan Dorn]] and Derrick's niece, challenged Graham. However, Graham turned back this challenge fairly easily, and was reelected in 1998 and 2000 with no substantive opposition.
Statistics
Ring name(s) SiNN[1]
H.N. Hardcastle
Lucifer Love
Kizarny
Nicholas Sinn[1]
Nick Sinn
The Original Sinn[1]
Sinn Bowdee[1]
Billed height 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)[1]
Billed weight 234 lb (106 kg)[1]
Born August 29, 1973 (1973-08-29) (age 35)[1]
Toronto, Ontario[1]
Resides Orangeville, Ontario
Billed from Toronto, Ontario
Trained by Ron Hutchinson[1]
Rob Fuego
Alex Atkinson
Debut 2000[1]
Nick Cvjetkovich[1] (born August 29, 1973)[1] is a Canadian professional wrestler of British and Serb descent, better known as The Original Sinn, or simply Sinn (also spelt as SiNN). He is currently under contract to World Wrestling Entertainment, currently assigned to Florida Championship Wrestling where he wrestles under the name Sinn Bowdee.[1] According to vignettes, he is to debut on their Smackdown brand under the ring name, Kizarny.


In Congress, Graham quickly became powerful as a member of the [[U.S. House Committee on the Judiciary|Judiciary Committee]] during the [[Lewinsky scandal#Impeachment|impeachment]] of President [[Bill Clinton]] in 1998. Graham opposed some articles, but vigorously supported others. In January and February of 1999, after two impeachment articles had been passed by the full House, he was one of the managers who brought the House's case to Clinton's trial in the Senate. Though the Senate did not convict Clinton, Graham became nationally known.
Contents [hide]
1 Career
1.1 Training and beginnings
1.2 Canadian indepedent circuit
1.3 World Wrestling Entertainment
1.3.1 SmackDown!
2 In wrestling
3 Championships and accomplishments
3.1 Karate
3.2 Professional wrestling
4 Personal life
5 Author
6 Filmography
7 References
8 External links


He was reelected to the House in 1996, 1998 and 2000. In 2002, upon the retirement of the long-serving Senator [[Strom Thurmond]], the much younger Graham defeated his Democratic opponent, [[Alex Sanders (politician)|Alex Sanders]]. He became South Carolina's first new Senator since 1965, and the state's first freshman Republican Senator since the dark days of [[Reconstruction era of the United States|Reconstruction]] when
harsh sanctions were imposed on South Carolina by [[Radical Republican (USA)|Radical Republicans]]. He is not expected to face substantive Democratic opposition for a second term.


===Legislative and Congressional committees on which Graham has served===
[edit] Career
SC House of Representatives: Judiciary Committee


====U.S. House of Representatives====
[edit] Training and beginnings
*[[United States House Committee on Education and the Workforce|Committee on Education and the Workforce]], 1995–2002
Cvjetkovich was trained as a wrestler by Rob Fuego and Ron Hutchison in Orangeville, Ontario and also trained for (and later earned) his Black belt at Alex Atkinson's Black Belt Institute. His debut match was in 2000 against El Fuego during the Apocalypse Wrestling Federation's Iron Man Tournament at the Canadian National Exhibition. He remained with the AWF until February 2001. He also worked several dates for Scott D'Amore's Border City Wrestling promotion in Windsor, Ontario, using the name Lucifer Love (as AWF employees were not allowed to work for regional competitors, Cvjetkovich used a different ring name and gimmick so he would not be found out).
*[[United States House Committee on International Relations|Committee on International Relations]], 1995–1998[[United States House Committee on Homeland Security|Committee on Homeland Security]], 1995–1997
*[[United States House Committee on the Judiciary|Committee on the Judiciary]], 1997–2002
*[[United States House Committee on Armed Services|Committee on Armed Services]], 1999–2002


====U.S. Senate====
*[[United States Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions|Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions]], 2002–2004
*'''[[United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary|Committee on the Judiciary]]''', 2002–present
**[[United States Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Administrative Oversight and the Courts|Subcommittee on Administrative Oversight and the Courts]]
**[[United States Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime and Drugs|Subcommittee on Crime and Drugs]] (Ranking Member)
**[[United States Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Human Rights and the Law|Subcommittee on Human Rights and the Law]]
**[[United States Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights and Property Rights|Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights and Property Rights]]
*'''[[United States Senate Committee on Armed Services|Committee on Armed Services]]''', 2002–present
**[[United States Senate Armed Services Subcommittee on Personnel|Subcommittee on Personnel]] (Ranking Member)
**[[United States Senate Armed Services Subcommittee on Airland|Subcommittee on Airland]]
**[[United States Senate Armed Services Subcommittee on Emerging Threats and Capabilities|Subcommittee on Emerging Threats and Capabilities]]
**[[United States Senate Armed Services Subcommittee on Strategic Forces|Subcommittee on Strategic Forces]]
*'''[[United States Senate Committee on the Budget|Committee on the Budget]]''', 2004–present
*'''[[United States Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs|Committee on Veterans' Affairs]]''', 2007-Present
*'''[[United States Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry|Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry]]''', 2007-Present
**[[United States Senate Agriculture Subcommittee on Domestic and Foreign Marketing, Inspection, and Plant and Animal Health|Subcommittee on Domestic and Foreign Marketing, Inspection, and Plant and Animal Health]] (Ranking Member)
**[[United States Senate Agriculture Subcommittee on Energy, Science and Technology|Subcommittee on Energy, Science and Technology]]
**[[United States Senate Agriculture Subcommittee on Rural Revitalization, Conservation, Forestry and Credit|Subcommittee on Rural Revitalization, Conservation, Forestry and Credit]]
*'''[[United States Senate Special Committee on Aging|Special Committee on Aging]]''', 2007–present
*'''[[United States Senate Select Committee on Intelligence|Select Committee on Intelligence]]''', 2007–present


==Political views==
[edit] Canadian indepedent circuit
In May and June, Cvjetkovich toured England with Brian Dixon's All Star Wrestling promotion, where he teamed with fellow Canadian Joe E. Legend defeating top stars Tatonka, Joe Gomez and Jake Roberts. Shortly after returning from England, Cvjetkovich began working for Northern Championship Wrestling in Montreal. He returned to the AWF in late 2001 and once again participated in the Iron Man Tournament, before forming a tag team with Fabian Stokes known as High Maintenance. Cvjetkovich wrestled in several Twin Wrestling Entertainment (TWE) main events across Ontario, facing legends such as King Kong Bundy and "Hacksaw" Jim Duggan. In the summers of 2002 and 2003, Cvjetkovich wrestled across the Maritimes (Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island) for All Canadian Wrestling run by Bobby Bass and Buddy Lane with competing with fellow wrestlers Peter Kingman, Kowboy Hughes, Jason Bates, Bobby Roode and Jim Niedhart. Cvjetkovich winning the ACW Heavyweight Championship in August 2003.


<!-- Unsourced image removed: [[Image:GRAHAM SENATORS.jpg|thumb|300px|left|Sen. Graham makes comments at a press conference regarding the [[nuclear option]] and the right to [[filibuster]] alongside Sen. [[John Warner]] (R-VA), on his left, as Sen. [[Ben Nelson]] (D-NE) and Sen. [[Mark Pryor]] (D-AR) listen on. Graham, alongside Warner, Nelson, Pryor and others was part of the [[Gang of 14]], which defended the right of [[filibuster]] against the will of [[Senate Majority Leader]] Sen. [[Bill Frist]] (R-TN).]] -->
In late 2003, Cvjetkovich appeared with "Dark Omen" Elvis Elliot at Fallout 2003 in Ontario on September 27 he and his partner won Tag Team Championships in a three-way tag team match. Cvjetkovich and Elliot were stripped of the titles within a month. Cvjetkovich performing with Sideshow Carnival Diablo throughout Ontario, Manitoba and Quebec, featured as strong man. Performing bizarre feats such as bending iron bars in his teeth, Human Dartboard and the Electric Chair. He then returned in March 2004 to participate in tag team tournaments across Canada with partner Elvis Elliot, winning various local titles.


Though Graham's stances are often conservative, he has gained a reputation for sometimes speaking out against or criticizing the party line, as well as being open to making compromises. Graham votes as a conservative roughly 90 percent of the time, roughly the same as Thurmond's record, but is considered to be more independent-minded than his Senate colleague, [[Jim DeMint]].
In late 2004, Cvjetkovich wrestled a number of dark matches across Canada for World Wrestling Entertainment. In 2005, he began promoting, staging an event called Warrior 1 Pro Wrestling LIVE! on June 26 at the Oshawa, Ontario civic centre. In the main event, Cvjetkovich and his partner Elvis Ozbourne / Elliot were defeated by Team Canada (Petey Williams and Bobby Roode). In November 2005, Sinn returned to Carnival Diablo, as well as partnering with Helvis / Elliot) as The Beasts of Burden. Returning to TWE (Ontario), competing in against WWE superstar Al Snow. Cvjetkovich has defended and UWA Ottawa heavyweight title against TNA Star Robert Roode and WWE legends Jake "The Snake" Roberts and Pat Tanaka.


Graham notably supported [[John McCain]]'s presidential bid in 2000, and is currently national co-chairman of McCain's 2008 presidential bid.


===Gang of 14===
[edit] World Wrestling Entertainment
On [[May 23]] [[2005]], Graham was one of the [[Gang of 14]] senators to forge a compromise that brought a halt to the continued blockage of an up or down vote on judicial nominees. This compromise negated both the Democrats' threatened use of a [[filibuster]] and the so-called Republican "[[nuclear option]]" as described in the media. Under the agreement, the Democrats would retain the power to filibuster a Bush judicial nominee only in an "extraordinary circumstance", and three conservative Bush [[appellate court]] nominees ([[Janice Rogers Brown]], [[Priscilla Owen]] and [[William H. Pryor, Jr.|William Pryor]]) would receive a vote by the full Senate.
Cvjetkovich was signed to a WWE Developmental contract on July 12, 2007. On October 13, 2007, Nick Cvjetkovich made his Florida Championship Wrestling debut under the name Sinn Bowdee.[2]


However, during the confirmations of [[John Roberts]] and [[Samuel Alito]] to the [[Supreme Court of the United States|Supreme Court]], Graham let it be known that he did not consider Supreme Court nominations to be "extraordinary circumstances." If the Democrats had filibustered these nominations, Graham would have voted to implement the "nuclear option."


===Detainee interrogations===
[edit] SmackDown!
In July 2005, Graham secured the declassification and release of memorandums outlining concerns made by senior military lawyers as early as 2003 about the legality of the interrogations of prisoners held at [[Guantánamo Bay, Cuba|Guantanamo Bay]].<ref>[http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0728-03.htm Military's Opposition to Harsh Interrogation Is Outlined], New York Times</ref>
On the October 10, 2008 edition of SmackDown, vignettes promoting the debut of Cvjetkovich, now under the ring name Kizarny, began to air. His gimmick relates to carnivals.


In response to this and a June 2004 U.S. Supreme Court decision allowing detainees to file [[habeas corpus]] petitions to challenge their detentions, Graham authored an amendment<ref>[http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/getpage.cgi?dbname=2005_record&page=S8859&position=all S8859], The Graham Amendment</ref> to a Department of Defense Authorization Act attempting to clarify the authority of American courts which passed in November 2005 by a vote of 49-42 in the Senate despite opposition from human rights groups and legal scholars because of the lack of rights it provides detainees.<ref>[http://www.aclu.org/safefree/general/21219prs20051110.html ACLU Urges Congress to Reject Court Stripping Measure]</ref><ref>[http://www.thenation.com/doc/20051128/brecher Right To Trial Imperiled by Senate Vote] by Jeremy Brecher & Brendan Smith</ref>


The Graham amendment was itself amended by Democratic Senator [[Carl Levin]] so that it would not strip the courts of their jurisdiction in cases like ''[[Hamdan v. Rumsfeld]]'' that had already been granted cert; this compromise version passed by a vote of 84-14, though it did little to satisfy many critics of the original language. The Graham-Levin amendment, combined with Republican Senator [[John McCain]]'s amendment banning [[torture]], became known as the [[Detainee Treatment Act]] and attempted to limit interrogation techniques to those in the [[FM 34-52 Intelligence Interrogation|U.S. Army Field Manual of Interrogation]]. Verbal statements by Senators at the time of the amendment's passage indicated that Congress believed that Levin's changes would protect the courts' jurisdiction over cases like ''Hamdan'', though Levin and his cosponsor Senator Kyl placed in the [[Congressional Record]] a statement indicating that there would be no change.
[edit] In wrestling
Finishing moves
Hell–bow (Jumping pointed forearm strike to the back of a facedown opponent's head)
Hellion Hammer (Lariat)
Sinn Kick (Jumping enzuigiri)
Signature moves
Missile dropkick
Hurricanrana
Monkey flip
Bearhug
DDT, sometimes while applying a double underhook
Nicknames
The Carnival Freak
Managers
"Handsome" Johnny Bradford
Tracy Brooks
Father James Mitchell


In February 2006, Graham joined Senator [[Jon Kyl]] in filing an [[amicus brief]] in the [[Hamdan v. Rumsfeld]] case which appears to have been an attempt to mislead the [[Supreme Court of the United States|Supreme Court]] by presenting an “extensive colloquy” added to the Congressional record but not included in the Dec 21 debate as evidence that "Congress was aware" that the [[Detainee Treatment Act of 2005]] would strip the Supreme Court of jurisdiction to hear "pending cases, including this case" brought by the [[Guantanamo Bay detainment camp|Guantanamo]] detainees.<ref>[http://www.slate.com/id/2138750 Invisible Men: Did Lindsey Graham and Jon Kyl mislead the Supreme Court?], by Emily Bazelon — Slate Magazine</ref>
[edit] Championships and accomplishments


===Immigration reform===
[edit] Karate
Graham has been an adamant supporter of "comprehensive immigration reform" and of [[S. 2611]], the McCain-Kennedy Immigration Reform Bill of 2006 as well as the equally hotly debated [[S. 1348]] of 2007, the [[Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act of 2007]]. Despite Graham's support the bill failed on a key Senate vote on June 28, 2007 and is unlikely to be revived. His view and support of the bill earned him the name Lindsey Grahamnesty by the media and staunch conservatives.
Black belt


His positions on immigration, and in particular collaborating with Senator Kennedy, earned Graham the ire of conservative activists.<ref>[http://www3.washingtontimes.com/national/20070608-124010-3947r.htm "Kennedy alliance costly to GOP senators" The Washington Times]</ref> Graham responded by saying, "We are going to solve this problem. We're not going to run people down. We're not going to scapegoat people. We're going to tell the bigots to shut up, and we're going to get this right."<ref>[http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,274606,00.html Newt Gingrich on Immigration Bill], Foxnews</ref> The controversy prompted conservative activists to support a primary challenge in 2008 by longtime Republican national committeeman [[Buddy Witherspoon]],<ref>[http://thehill.com/campaign-2008/grahams-approval-plunges-on-immigration-2007-06-22.html TheHill.com - Immigration stance hurts Graham at home, poll finds<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref><ref>[http://thehill.com/leading-the-news/rnc-official-inches-toward-graham-battle-2007-11-14.html TheHill.com - RNC official inches toward Graham battle<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> but Graham won the nomination by a large margin.<ref>{{cite news | title = Graham romps to easy win over challenger Witherspoon | work = [[The State (newspaper)|The State]] | date = [[June 11]], [[2008]] | url = http://www.thestate.com/local/story/430462.html}}</ref>
[edit] Professional wrestling
All Canadian Wrestling
ACW Heavyweight Championship (1 time)
Universal Wrestling Association (Ottawa)
UWA Heavyweight Championship (1 time)


==Alito confirmation hearings==
[edit] Personal life
During the Judiciary Committee confirmation hearings for Judge [[Samuel Alito]] for a seat on the United States Supreme Court, Graham was accused by Democrats of having coached Alito before the hearings. Graham did express his support for him during the hearings. One of the most controversial moments of the hearings occurred when Graham asked Alito, "Are you really a closet [[bigot]]?" Alito answered "I'm not any kind of a bigot, I'm not." and Graham continued his statement by expressing his opinion that Alito definitely was not a bigot. Alito’s wife cried and left the hearing briefly.<ref>[http://www.senate.gov/~lgraham/index.cfm?mode=presspage&id=250378 Second Round of Graham Questioning Judge Alito], www.senate.gov</ref>
Cvjetkovich was previously in a relationship with female wrestler Tracy Brooks. He is the childhood friend of two wrestlers, Edge and Christian Cage. While growing up, as stated in Edge's book, Cvjetkovich was referred to as Fatty by Edge and Christian. Cvjetkovich is the protege and close friend of Jake 'The Snake' Roberts. Sinn's real life brother Steven wrestles under the name Kobra Kai.


Rosemary Alito, the judge's sister, said that her sister-in-law took the comments as a message of support. Rosemary responded with: "Martha understood them to be kind comments." "It was that expression of warmth, the feeling of support for Sam, that triggered an emotional response." After Samuel Alito's participation in the hearings ended, Martha-Ann Alito gave Graham a quick hug and he responded that he planned to give her children a book compiling "all the documents that we have from so many different people saying nice things about her husband."<ref>{{cite web |first=Tina |last=Kelley |coauthors=Nate Schweber |title=Thrust Into Limelight and for Some a Symbol of Washington's Bite |url=http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/13/politics/politicsspecial1/13wife.html?pagewanted=2 |work=The New York Times |date=January 13, 2006}}</ref>


==Electoral history==
[edit] Author
{{seealso|United States Senate election in South Carolina, 2008}}
Cvjetkovich is the writer, artist and publisher of the Fred the Possessed Flower comic book series (1999-2000). With his brother Steven, he wrote a comedy-horror novel called Between Chapters, which was self-published in September 2000. The Cvjetkovich brothers have variously published as Happy Predator Press and Happy Predator Publications.
{| class="wikitable" style="margin:0.5em ; font-size:95%"
|+ {{ushr|South Carolina|3}}: Results 1994&ndash;2000<ref name="clerkresults">{{cite web |url=http://clerk.house.gov/member_info/electionInfo/index.html |title=Election Statistics |accessdate=2007-08-08 |publisher=Office of the Clerk of the House of Representatives}}</ref>
!|Year
!
!|Democrat
!|Votes
!|Pct
!
!|Republican
!|Votes
!|Pct
!
!|3rd Party
!|Party
!|Votes
!|Pct
!
|-
|[[U.S. House election, 1994|1994]]
|
|{{Party shading/Democratic}} |{{nowrap|[[James E. Bryan, Jr.]]}}
|{{Party shading/Democratic}} align="right" |59,932
|{{Party shading/Democratic}} |40%
|
|{{Party shading/Republican}} |{{nowrap|'''Lindsey Graham'''}}
|{{Party shading/Republican}} align="right" |90,123
|{{Party shading/Republican}} |60%
|
|
|
|
|
| |'''*'''
|-
|[[U.S. House election, 1996|1996]]
|
|{{Party shading/Democratic}} |Debbie Dorn
|{{Party shading/Democratic}} align="right" |73,417
|{{Party shading/Democratic}} |39%
|
|{{Party shading/Republican}} |'''Lindsey Graham'''
|{{Party shading/Republican}} align="right" |114,273
|{{Party shading/Republican}} |60%
|
|{{Party shading/Independent}} |Lindal Pennington
|{{Party shading/Independent}} |[[Natural Law Party (United States)|Natural Law]]
|{{Party shading/Independent}} align="right" |1,835
|{{Party shading/Independent}} align="right" |1%
|
|-
|[[U.S. House election, 1998|1998]]
|
|{{Party shading/Democratic}} |''(no candidate)''
|{{Party shading/Democratic}} align="right" |
|{{Party shading/Democratic}} |
|
|{{Party shading/Republican}} |'''Lindsey Graham'''
|{{Party shading/Republican}} align="right" |129,047
|{{Party shading/Republican}} |100%
|
|{{Party shading/Independent}} |[[Write-in candidate|Write-ins]]
|{{Party shading/Independent}} |
|{{Party shading/Independent}} align="right" |402
|{{Party shading/Independent}} align="right" |<1%
|
|-
|[[U.S. House election, 2000|2000]]
|
|{{Party shading/Democratic}} |{{nowrap|[[George Brightharp]]}}<br/>(On [[United Citizens Party|United Citizens]] line)<br/>(Total)
|{{Party shading/Democratic}} align="right" |64,917<br/>2,253<br/>67,170
|{{Party shading/Democratic}} |29%<br/> 1%<br/>30%
|
|{{Party shading/Republican}} |'''Lindsey Graham'''
|{{Party shading/Republican}} align="right" |150,180
|{{Party shading/Republican}} |68%
|
|{{Party shading/Libertarian}} |Adrian Banks
|{{Party shading/Libertarian}} |[[Libertarian Party (United States)|Libertarian]]
|{{Party shading/Libertarian}} align="right" |3,116
|{{Party shading/Libertarian}} align="right" |1%
| |'''*'''
{{end box}}
<div class="references-small"><nowiki>*</nowiki>Write-in and minor candidate notes: In 1994, write-ins received 13 votes. In 2000, [[Natural Law Party (United States)|Natural Law]] candidate LeRoy J. Klein received 1,122 votes and write-ins received 33 votes. George Brightharp ran under both the Democratic and United Citizens Parties.
</div>


{| class="wikitable" style="margin:0.5em ; font-size:95%"
|+ [[List of United States Senators from South Carolina|South Carolina Senator (Class II)]]: 2002 results<ref name="clerkresults" />
!|Year
!
!|Democrat
!|Votes
!|Pct
!
!|Republican
!|Votes
!|Pct
!
!|3rd Party
!|Party
!|Votes
!|Pct
!
!|3rd Party
!|Party
!|Votes
!|Pct
!
|-
|[[U.S. Senate election, 2002|2002]]
|
|{{Party shading/Democratic}} |{{nowrap|[[Alex Sanders (politician)|Alex Sanders]]}}
|{{Party shading/Democratic}} align="right" |487,359
|{{Party shading/Democratic}} |44%
|
|{{Party shading/Republican}} |{{nowrap|'''Lindsey Graham'''}}
|{{Party shading/Republican}} align="right" |600,010
|{{Party shading/Republican}} |54%
|
|{{Party shading/ConstitutionUSA}} |Ted Adams
|{{Party shading/ConstitutionUSA}} |[[Constitution Party (United States)|Constitution]]
|{{Party shading/ConstitutionUSA}} align="right" |8,228
|{{Party shading/ConstitutionUSA}} align="right" |1%
|
|{{Party shading/Libertarian}} |Victor Kocher
|{{Party shading/Libertarian}} |[[Libertarian Party (United States)|Libertarian]]
|{{Party shading/Libertarian}} align="right" |6,648
|{{Party shading/Libertarian}} align="right" |1%
| |'''*'''
{{end box}}
<div class="references-small"><nowiki>*</nowiki>Write-in and minor candidate notes: In 2002, write-ins received 667 votes.
</div>


==Notes==
[edit] Filmography
{{reflist}}
Enter... Zombie King (2002) as The Zombie King


==External links==
[edit] References
{{commons}}
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Original Sinn Profile". Online World Of Wrestling. Retrieved on 2008-04-26.
{{wikiquote}}
^ http://www.fcwwrestling.com/talent.html
*[http://lgraham.senate.gov/ United States Senator Lindsey Graham], U.S. Senate site
{{CongLinks | congbio = g000359 | fec = S0SC00149 | opensecrets = N00009975 | votesmart = CNIP7869 | ontheissuespath = Senate/Lindsey_Graham.htm}}
*[http://www.lindseygraham.com Lindsey Graham - U.S. Senate], Campaign site
*[http://src.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Senators.Home&Issue_id=0&Senator_id=55&State_id=0&CFID=19394202&CFTOKEN=52631625 Profile] from the ''Senate Republican Caucus''
*[http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/g/lindsey_graham/index.html Collected news and commentary] at ''[[The New York Times]]''
*[http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Lindsey_Graham Profile] at [[SourceWatch]] [[Congresspedia]]
*[http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/features/2005/0504.earle.html "Swing Conservative: The perilous bipartisanship of Lindsey Graham."] ''Washington Monthly'', April 2005
*[http://www.consortiumnews.com/2007/032607b.html "The American Ghosts of Abu Ghraib"] by Sam Provance
*{{dmoz|Regional/North_America/United_States/Government/Legislative_Branch/Senate/Members/Graham,_Lindsey_%5bR-SC%5d/}}


{{s-start}}
[edit] External links
{{s-par|us-hs}}
Professional wrestling
{{USRepSuccessionBox
portal
| before= [[Butler Derrick]]
Myspace
| state=South Carolina
The official website of The Original Sinn
| district=3
[1]
| years=1995 – 2003
The official website of The Original Sinn (original)
| after= [[J. Gresham Barrett]]}}
Between Chapters (ISBN 0-9685626-1-2)
{{s-par|us-sen}}
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nick_Cvjetkovich"
{{U.S. Senator box
Categories: 1973 births | Serbian Canadians | Canadian comics artists | Canadian comics writers | Canadian horror writers | Canadian karateka | Canadian professional wrestlers | Canadian television actors | Canadians of British descent | Canadians of Serbian descent | Living people | Ontario sportspeople | People from Toronto
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Hidden category: Articles needing additional references from December 2007 <small><span class="autosigned">—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[User:Evanisher|Evanisher]] ([[User talk:Evanisher|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/Evanisher|contribs]]) 23:19, 11 October 2008 (UTC)</span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
| after=
| state=South Carolina
| class=2
| years=2003-
| alongside=[[Ernest Hollings]], [[Jim DeMint]]}}
{{s-prec|usa}}
{{s-bef|before=[[Saxby Chambliss]]<br><small>R-[[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]]}}
{{s-ttl|title=''[[List of current United States Senators by seniority|United States Senators by seniority]]''|years=72nd}}
{{s-aft|after=[[John E. Sununu]]<br><small>R-[[New Hampshire]]</small>}}
{{end box}}
{{end}}


{{SC-FedRep}}
==Did kizarny debut==
{{USSenSC}}
when did he pop up because i dont remember seeing him at all last night on smckdown and when i re watch the shows on youtube i still dont see him debuting and the spoilers dont say he debuted either.
{{Current U.S Senators}}
[[user:Buddah Bless you|Buddah Bless you]] 21:50, 11 october 2008 (UTC)

:He didn't actually debut, it was just a vignette. ♥[[User:NiciVampireHeart|<font color="black">'''Nici'''</font>]]♥[[User_talk:NiciVampireHeart|<font color="purple">'''Vampire'''</font>]]♥[[Special:Contributions/NiciVampireHeart|<font color="red">'''Heart'''</font>]]♥ 12:24, 12 October 2008 (UTC)
{{DEFAULTSORT:Graham, Lindsey}}
[[Category:1955 births]]
[[Category:American military personnel of the Iraq War]]
[[Category:Baptists from the United States]]
[[Category:Current members of the United States Senate]]
[[Category:Kentucky colonels]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Members of the South Carolina House of Representatives]]
[[Category:Members of the United States House of Representatives from South Carolina]]
[[Category:Prosecutors]]
[[Category:United States Air Force officers]]
[[Category:United States Senators from South Carolina]]
[[Category:South Carolina Republicans]]
[[Category:University of South Carolina alumni]]
[[Category:South Carolina lawyers]]

[[fr:Lindsey Graham]]
[[nl:Lindsey Graham]]
[[no:Lindsey Graham]]
[[pl:Lindsey Graham]]
[[ru:Грэхам, Линдси]]
[[fi:Lindsey Graham]]
[[sv:Lindsey Graham]]

Revision as of 12:25, 12 October 2008

Template:Future election candidate

Lindsey Graham
United States Senator
from South Carolina
Assumed office
January 7, 2003
Serving with Jim DeMint
Preceded byJ. Strom Thurmond
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from South Carolina's 3rd district
In office
January 4, 1995 – January 3, 2003
Preceded byButler Derrick
Succeeded byJ. Gresham Barrett
Personal details
Political partyRepublican
Spousenone
ResidenceSeneca, South Carolina
Alma materUniversity of South Carolina
Occupationattorney
Military service
Branch/serviceUnited States Air Force
Years of service1982 – 1988 (active)
1988 – present (reserve)
RankColonel
UnitJudge Advocate General's Corps
Battles/warsGulf War
Iraq War

Lindsey Olin Graham (born July 9, 1955) is an American politician from South Carolina. A member of the Republican Party, he is currently the senior United States Senator from that state. He serves on the Armed Services and Judiciary Committees.

Early life and education

Graham was born in Central, South Carolina, where his father, Florence James Graham, owned a liquor store. After graduating from high school, Graham became the first member of his family to attend college and joined the Reserve Officer Training Corps. When he was 21 his mother died, and his father died 15 months later. Because he and his sister were now left orphaned, the service allowed Graham to attend University of South Carolina Columbia so he could be near home and care for his sister, whom he adopted. At the University he became a member of the fraternity Pi Kappa Phi.

Graham graduated from the University of South Carolina Columbia with a B.A. in Psychology in 1977 and from its school of law with a J.D. in 1981. Upon graduating Graham was sent to Europe as a military prosecutor, and eventually entered private practice as a lawyer.

Military service

Graham decided to join the United States Air Force in 1982, and served on active duty until 1988. Following his departure he stayed in the military,joining the South Carolina Air National Guard[1] and the U.S. Air Force Reserves. During the Gulf War, he was recalled to active duty, serving as a Judge Advocate at McEntire Air National Guard Station in Eastover, South Carolina, where he helped brief departing pilots on the laws of war.

In 2004, Graham received a promotion to Colonel in the U.S. Air Force Reserves at a White House ceremony officiated by President George W. Bush.

Graham served in Iraq as a reservist on active duty for short periods during April and two weeks in August 2007, where he worked on detainee and rule-of-law issues.[2] That makes him the only Iraq war veteran serving in the United States Senate.

Political career in the House of Representatives and the Senate

In 1992, Graham was elected to the South Carolina House of Representatives from a district in Oconee County. After only one term, he was elected to the United States House of Representatives from South Carolina's 3rd congressional district in the northwestern part of the state after 20-year incumbent Butler Derrick retired. He won by a surprisingly large margin; the 3rd had never elected a Republican before. In his first reelection bid, in 1996, Debbie Dorn, daughter of longtime 3rd District congressman W.J. Bryan Dorn and Derrick's niece, challenged Graham. However, Graham turned back this challenge fairly easily, and was reelected in 1998 and 2000 with no substantive opposition.

In Congress, Graham quickly became powerful as a member of the Judiciary Committee during the impeachment of President Bill Clinton in 1998. Graham opposed some articles, but vigorously supported others. In January and February of 1999, after two impeachment articles had been passed by the full House, he was one of the managers who brought the House's case to Clinton's trial in the Senate. Though the Senate did not convict Clinton, Graham became nationally known.

He was reelected to the House in 1996, 1998 and 2000. In 2002, upon the retirement of the long-serving Senator Strom Thurmond, the much younger Graham defeated his Democratic opponent, Alex Sanders. He became South Carolina's first new Senator since 1965, and the state's first freshman Republican Senator since the dark days of Reconstruction when harsh sanctions were imposed on South Carolina by Radical Republicans. He is not expected to face substantive Democratic opposition for a second term.

Legislative and Congressional committees on which Graham has served

SC House of Representatives: Judiciary Committee

U.S. House of Representatives

U.S. Senate

Political views

Though Graham's stances are often conservative, he has gained a reputation for sometimes speaking out against or criticizing the party line, as well as being open to making compromises. Graham votes as a conservative roughly 90 percent of the time, roughly the same as Thurmond's record, but is considered to be more independent-minded than his Senate colleague, Jim DeMint.

Graham notably supported John McCain's presidential bid in 2000, and is currently national co-chairman of McCain's 2008 presidential bid.

Gang of 14

On May 23 2005, Graham was one of the Gang of 14 senators to forge a compromise that brought a halt to the continued blockage of an up or down vote on judicial nominees. This compromise negated both the Democrats' threatened use of a filibuster and the so-called Republican "nuclear option" as described in the media. Under the agreement, the Democrats would retain the power to filibuster a Bush judicial nominee only in an "extraordinary circumstance", and three conservative Bush appellate court nominees (Janice Rogers Brown, Priscilla Owen and William Pryor) would receive a vote by the full Senate.

However, during the confirmations of John Roberts and Samuel Alito to the Supreme Court, Graham let it be known that he did not consider Supreme Court nominations to be "extraordinary circumstances." If the Democrats had filibustered these nominations, Graham would have voted to implement the "nuclear option."

Detainee interrogations

In July 2005, Graham secured the declassification and release of memorandums outlining concerns made by senior military lawyers as early as 2003 about the legality of the interrogations of prisoners held at Guantanamo Bay.[3]

In response to this and a June 2004 U.S. Supreme Court decision allowing detainees to file habeas corpus petitions to challenge their detentions, Graham authored an amendment[4] to a Department of Defense Authorization Act attempting to clarify the authority of American courts which passed in November 2005 by a vote of 49-42 in the Senate despite opposition from human rights groups and legal scholars because of the lack of rights it provides detainees.[5][6]

The Graham amendment was itself amended by Democratic Senator Carl Levin so that it would not strip the courts of their jurisdiction in cases like Hamdan v. Rumsfeld that had already been granted cert; this compromise version passed by a vote of 84-14, though it did little to satisfy many critics of the original language. The Graham-Levin amendment, combined with Republican Senator John McCain's amendment banning torture, became known as the Detainee Treatment Act and attempted to limit interrogation techniques to those in the U.S. Army Field Manual of Interrogation. Verbal statements by Senators at the time of the amendment's passage indicated that Congress believed that Levin's changes would protect the courts' jurisdiction over cases like Hamdan, though Levin and his cosponsor Senator Kyl placed in the Congressional Record a statement indicating that there would be no change.

In February 2006, Graham joined Senator Jon Kyl in filing an amicus brief in the Hamdan v. Rumsfeld case which appears to have been an attempt to mislead the Supreme Court by presenting an “extensive colloquy” added to the Congressional record but not included in the Dec 21 debate as evidence that "Congress was aware" that the Detainee Treatment Act of 2005 would strip the Supreme Court of jurisdiction to hear "pending cases, including this case" brought by the Guantanamo detainees.[7]

Immigration reform

Graham has been an adamant supporter of "comprehensive immigration reform" and of S. 2611, the McCain-Kennedy Immigration Reform Bill of 2006 as well as the equally hotly debated S. 1348 of 2007, the Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act of 2007. Despite Graham's support the bill failed on a key Senate vote on June 28, 2007 and is unlikely to be revived. His view and support of the bill earned him the name Lindsey Grahamnesty by the media and staunch conservatives.

His positions on immigration, and in particular collaborating with Senator Kennedy, earned Graham the ire of conservative activists.[8] Graham responded by saying, "We are going to solve this problem. We're not going to run people down. We're not going to scapegoat people. We're going to tell the bigots to shut up, and we're going to get this right."[9] The controversy prompted conservative activists to support a primary challenge in 2008 by longtime Republican national committeeman Buddy Witherspoon,[10][11] but Graham won the nomination by a large margin.[12]

Alito confirmation hearings

During the Judiciary Committee confirmation hearings for Judge Samuel Alito for a seat on the United States Supreme Court, Graham was accused by Democrats of having coached Alito before the hearings. Graham did express his support for him during the hearings. One of the most controversial moments of the hearings occurred when Graham asked Alito, "Are you really a closet bigot?" Alito answered "I'm not any kind of a bigot, I'm not." and Graham continued his statement by expressing his opinion that Alito definitely was not a bigot. Alito’s wife cried and left the hearing briefly.[13]

Rosemary Alito, the judge's sister, said that her sister-in-law took the comments as a message of support. Rosemary responded with: "Martha understood them to be kind comments." "It was that expression of warmth, the feeling of support for Sam, that triggered an emotional response." After Samuel Alito's participation in the hearings ended, Martha-Ann Alito gave Graham a quick hug and he responded that he planned to give her children a book compiling "all the documents that we have from so many different people saying nice things about her husband."[14]

Electoral history

South Carolina's 3rd congressional district: Results 1994–2000[15]
Year Democrat Votes Pct Republican Votes Pct 3rd Party Party Votes Pct
1994 James E. Bryan, Jr. 59,932 40% Lindsey Graham 90,123 60% *
1996 Debbie Dorn 73,417 39% Lindsey Graham 114,273 60% Lindal Pennington Natural Law 1,835 1%
1998 (no candidate) Lindsey Graham 129,047 100% Write-ins 402 <1%
2000 George Brightharp
(On United Citizens line)
(Total)
64,917
2,253
67,170
29%
1%
30%
Lindsey Graham 150,180 68% Adrian Banks Libertarian 3,116 1% *
*Write-in and minor candidate notes: In 1994, write-ins received 13 votes. In 2000, Natural Law candidate LeRoy J. Klein received 1,122 votes and write-ins received 33 votes. George Brightharp ran under both the Democratic and United Citizens Parties.
South Carolina Senator (Class II): 2002 results[15]
Year Democrat Votes Pct Republican Votes Pct 3rd Party Party Votes Pct 3rd Party Party Votes Pct
2002 Alex Sanders 487,359 44% Lindsey Graham 600,010 54% Ted Adams Constitution 8,228 1% Victor Kocher Libertarian 6,648 1% *
*Write-in and minor candidate notes: In 2002, write-ins received 667 votes.

Notes

  1. ^ United States Senator Lindsey Graham, South Carolina : About Senator Graham
  2. ^ After Tour of Duty in Iraq, Graham Backs 'Surge' - washingtonpost.com
  3. ^ Military's Opposition to Harsh Interrogation Is Outlined, New York Times
  4. ^ S8859, The Graham Amendment
  5. ^ ACLU Urges Congress to Reject Court Stripping Measure
  6. ^ Right To Trial Imperiled by Senate Vote by Jeremy Brecher & Brendan Smith
  7. ^ Invisible Men: Did Lindsey Graham and Jon Kyl mislead the Supreme Court?, by Emily Bazelon — Slate Magazine
  8. ^ "Kennedy alliance costly to GOP senators" The Washington Times
  9. ^ Newt Gingrich on Immigration Bill, Foxnews
  10. ^ TheHill.com - Immigration stance hurts Graham at home, poll finds
  11. ^ TheHill.com - RNC official inches toward Graham battle
  12. ^ "Graham romps to easy win over challenger Witherspoon". The State. June 11, 2008. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  13. ^ Second Round of Graham Questioning Judge Alito, www.senate.gov
  14. ^ Kelley, Tina (January 13, 2006). "Thrust Into Limelight and for Some a Symbol of Washington's Bite". The New York Times. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  15. ^ a b "Election Statistics". Office of the Clerk of the House of Representatives. Retrieved 2007-08-08.

External links

U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from South Carolina's 3rd congressional district

1995 – 2003
Succeeded by
U.S. Senate
Preceded by U.S. senator (Class 2) from South Carolina
2003-
Served alongside: Ernest Hollings, Jim DeMint
Incumbent
U.S. order of precedence (ceremonial)
Preceded by United States Senators by seniority
72nd
Succeeded by

|}