Lindsey Graham Expresses Deep Concern Over Biden in Office For Next 4 Months

(FeaturedHeadlines.com) Republican Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina voiced his concerns about President Joe Biden remaining at the helm of affairs for the next four months in the wake of his deteriorating mental abilities.

The GOP Senator noted that American enemies are seeing the compromised President and the Commander-in-Chief, which is an extremely worrying situation. According to Graham, there is enough evidence to believe that Biden does not possess enough mental capabilities and that his denial to take a cognitive test is beyond sanity.

Nearly 70% of the American public, Graham continued, do not think that Biden is mentally capable to run the country.

The conservative senator also recalled that Biden’s special counsel interview was conducted just a day after the Hamas attack on Israel, which suggested that the President has a “bad memory” and that any jury is unlikely to convict him in any criminal case.

As Americans continue to live through the dangerous time under the leadership of a captain who cannot sail the ship correctly, the president should at least step forward and commit to a competency test, Graham added.

The South Carolina Senator urged Donald Trump, every presidential nominee in the future and people present in the line of presidential succession to take cognitive tests and prove their capabilities to serve as the President of the United States.

Graham’s comments came in the wake of Biden’s poor performance in the first presidential debate, which left lawmakers from both sides of the aisle stunned. He noted that if Kamala Harris rises to the top of the Democratic presidential ticket, she will have to select her running mate, which will completely change the existing electoral dynamics.

Graham gave the example of his predecessor, Strom Thurmond, who was the president pro tempore of the Senate at the age of 100 and was third in the presidential succession hierarchy when he left the Congress.

The Presidential Succession Act mentions 18 office holders who can serve as the president in a pre-established hierarchy that starts with the Vice President and ends with the Secretary of Homeland Security.

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