“He also believed in climate change back in those days,” she continued, taking aim at the Republican for toeing party lines in recent years. “I saw him as somebody who, you know, had been working to try to figure out what he believed and how he could do things.”

“Has he sold his soul to the devil?” Stern prodded.

“I don’t know,” Clinton responded. “That’s a fair question, however.”

“I'll be honest with you,” she continued. “I haven't talked to him in a long time ... It's like he had a brain snatch, you know?”

During her run against President Donald Trump in the 2016 campaign, Graham pegged Trump as a “nutjob” and a “race-baiting, xenophobic, religious bigot,” predicting if the GOP nominated him, they would be “destroyed … and we will deserve it.”

But Graham, McCain’s close friend in the Senate, transformed from one of Trump’s sharpest Republican critics to a Trump loyalist, despite the President’s public insults of McCain, including his denial of McCain’s status as a war hero because “he was captured.”

“What I don't understand is how [Graham] went from being the friend and the real confidant of the Maverick — John McCain — who I didn't agree with politically, but I found him to be a man of integrity, a man of real strength and conviction,” Clinton lamented in the sprawling interview, which covered her 2016 loss to Trump, religion and the 2020 Democratic candidate field.

Clinton recalled Graham’s tribute to her in TIME Magazine’s 100 leaders and revolutionaries in 2006, a decade prior to the Republican’s shift to attacking her during the 2016 election cycle for her use of a private email server during her time as secretary of State.

“I don’t know what’s happened to Lindsey Graham,” she said.

