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WATCH: Senate Majority Leader John Thune Breaks Down In Tears On Senate Floor
The Senate chamber went still Monday when Majority Leader John Thune reached the final lines of a tribute he could barely finish.
Thune was honoring his longtime friend and colleague, Sen. Lindsey Graham, who died Saturday at 71 after a sudden medical emergency.
For several minutes, the South Dakota Republican spoke about Graham’s loyalty, humor and relentless energy. Then his voice tightened.
“I will miss Lindsey’s friendship more than I can say,” Thune told the chamber.
He paused, fought through the emotion and finished with one line that landed like a punch: “We will laugh together again.”
Watch the moment here:
Senate Majority Leader John Thune grew emotional as he honored the late Sen. Lindsey Graham on the Senate floor Monday.
— CBS News (@CBSNews) July 13, 2026
This was not a manufactured cable-news moment.
It was the Senate majority leader, a man accustomed to negotiating through pressure and speaking through chaos, trying to complete a goodbye on the floor he and Graham shared for more than two decades.
Thune said he took comfort in believing that his friend had merely “changed his address.” Then, in the formal language of the chamber, he yielded the floor.
His own account later put the loss in even simpler terms: the Senate already feels empty.
It is difficult to believe that Lindsey Graham is no longer here with us. The halls of the Senate already feel empty.
— Leader John Thune (@LeaderJohnThune) July 13, 2026
The Associated Press reported that Graham’s Senate desk had been draped in black cloth and topped with a vase of white roses when lawmakers returned to Washington, the chamber’s traditional display when a sitting senator dies.
Thune told the chamber it was difficult to count all the ways Graham’s friendship had made the work richer and its burdens lighter. He remembered Graham as a fiercely loyal friend and a trusted adviser whose presence could change the energy of a room, ease the strain of a difficult vote and make long days in the Capitol feel shorter.
The tribute carried extra weight because Graham’s death came with almost no warning, just hours after he returned from overseas and one day after he and Democratic Sen. Richard Blumenthal announced progress on a major Russia sanctions package.
His office said preliminary medical findings pointed to an aortic dissection associated with cardiovascular disease, a tear in the inner wall of the body’s main artery. A final official cause of death is expected after toxicological and microscopic testing is completed.
Graham’s empty chair also changed the work waiting for senators after their two-week recess.
He chaired the Senate Budget Committee and held seats on the Judiciary and Appropriations committees, placing him at the center of fights over spending, national security and President Trump’s nominees.
The chamber returned with government funding, defense legislation, major confirmations and a bipartisan Russia sanctions package all demanding action. Graham had helped drive several of those efforts right up until the final day of his life.
With former Republican leader Mitch McConnell still away from the Capitol while recovering from a fall and pneumonia, Graham’s death also left Thune managing a narrower working majority during a packed election-year calendar.
Graham’s political legacy was never small or simple.
The Air Force veteran served in Congress for more than three decades, became one of Washington’s most forceful national-security hawks and emerged as a crucial Senate ally of President Trump.
He could infuriate Republicans, work with Democrats and then walk onto television five minutes later ready for another fight. That combination made him one of the chamber’s most recognizable and consequential figures.
On Monday, however, the policy fights briefly gave way to grief.
In an official White House proclamation, flags were ordered lowered to half-staff at federal buildings, military posts, naval stations and U.S. vessels through 6 p.m. on July 18. The date and hour establish a national period of mourning rather than a ceremonial gesture confined to Monday’s Senate session.
The directive is not limited to Capitol Hill or Washington. It applies at the White House and across all federal buildings and grounds in the United States, its territories and possessions.
It also reaches American embassies, consular offices and other facilities abroad, including military ships and stations. By including those overseas sites, the order extends the visible tribute to American diplomats and service members around the world.
The proclamation described the nationwide honor as a mark of respect for Graham’s memory and longstanding service.
The loss recognized inside one grieving Senate chamber will therefore be reflected far beyond the Capitol at American installations across the globe for the rest of the week.
The order was issued Monday, two days after Graham’s death, and gives the country a formal period of mourning while his family, staff and colleagues prepare to say goodbye.
The respect crossed party lines inside the Senate, too.
C-SPAN captured Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer urging Thune to bring Graham’s Russia sanctions package to the floor in the late senator’s honor.
“I urge Senator Thune, in honor of Lindsey, to put the Russia sanctions bill on the floor immediately.”
— CSPAN (@cspan) July 13, 2026
Graham and Democratic Sen. Richard Blumenthal had announced progress on that sanctions package just one day before Graham died. Even in death, the work he championed was shaping the Senate’s next debate.
Washington will argue over Graham’s record for years. He would probably have preferred it that way.
But what Thune showed on the Senate floor was not an argument about legislation, party strategy or power.
It was a man saying goodbye to his friend.
This is a Guest Post from our friends over at WLTReport. View the original article here.
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