The New Zealand Herald

Take charge of future, Biden tells Dems

Fierce contest to cajole Georgia voters to cast ballot continues until last minute

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US President-elect Joe Biden yesterday told Georgia Democrats they had the power to “chart the course” for a generation as President Donald Trump urged Republican voters to “swamp” the polls ahead of runoff elections that will determine control of the US Senate.

Trump made his final-hours pitch to voters at a night-time rally in north Georgia, where Republican­s were banking on strong voter turnout today to re-elect Senator Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue and hold control of the chamber.

Biden campaigned with Democrats Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock in Atlanta, hoping he could recreate the coalition that secured him a narrow victory in the presidenti­al race in November.

“Folks, this is it. This is it. It’s a new year, and tomorrow can be a new day for Atlanta, for Georgia and for America,” Biden said at a drive-in rally. “Unlike any time in my career, one state — one state — can chart the course, not just for the four years but for the next generation.”

The stakes have drawn hundreds of millions of dollars in campaign spending to a once solidly Republican state that now finds itself as the nation’s premier battlegrou­nd. Biden won Georgia’s 16 electoral votes by about 12,000 votes out of five million cast in November, though Trump continues pushing false assertions of widespread fraud that even his nowformer attorney general and Georgia’s Republican secretary of state — along with a litany of state and federal judges — have said did not happen.

The president’s trip yesterday came a day after disclosure of a remarkable telephone call he made to the Georgia secretary of state over the weekend.

Trump pressured Republican Brad Raffensper­ger to “find” enough votes to overturn Georgia’s election results ahead of Thursday’s joint session of Congress that will certify Biden’s Electoral College victory. The call highlighte­d how Trump had used the Georgia campaign to make clear his continued hold on Republican politics.

Angry after the Raffensper­ger call,

Trump floated the idea of pulling out of the rally but was persuaded to go ahead with it so he would have a chance to reiterate his claims of election fraud. Republican­s were wary that Trump would focus only on himself and fail to promote the two GOP candidates.

A top Georgia election official said hours before Trump’s rally that he “wanted to scream” after hearing audio of the president’s call with Raffensper­ger.

“Do not self-suppress your own vote,” said Gabriel Sterling, Georgia’s voting-system implementa­tion manager.

But Trump, at the rally in Dalton, Georgia, spent much of his address on message, making an impassione­d case that Loeffler’s and Perdue’s races were among the most important Georgia voters would ever face and made the case that “the fate of our country is at stake”.

To be sure, he also spent a fair amount of time rehashing false claims that the November election was “rigged”. He fumed that Republican Governor Brian Kemp was “incompeten­t” and replayed many of the same debunked claims that he raised days ago in his call with Raffensper­ger.

“The Democrats are trying to steal the White House, you cannot let them,” Trump said. “You just can’t let them steal the US Senate, you can’t let it happen.”

Biden yesterday took aim at Trump’s scheme by declaring that “politician­s cannot assert, take or seize power” by underminin­g legitimate elections.

Biden said he needed a Senate majority to pass legislatio­n to combat the coronaviru­s, and he blasted Perdue and Loeffler as obstructio­nist Trump loyalists. Loeffler says she will join other Republican lawmakers in objecting to the Electoral College certificat­ion of Biden’s victory by Congress tomorrow.

“You have two senators who think they’ve sworn an oath to Donald Trump, not the United States Constituti­on,” Biden said.

Earlier yesterday, Vice-President Mike Pence told a crowd of conservati­ve Christian voters at a campaign event in Milner, Georgia, to stop a

One state . . . can chart the course, not just for the four years but for the next generation. President-elect Joe Biden

Democratic takeover in Washington. “We’re going to keep Georgia, and we’re going to save America,” Pence said at Rock Springs Church in Milner.

Perdue addressed the church crowd in Milner by telephone while quarantini­ng over coronaviru­s exposure, claiming that “the very future of our republic is on the line” and declaring the duty to vote “a calling from God”.

Trump amplified the sentiment, warning that Ossoff and Warnock wins would lead to a sharp leftward swing in American policy-making.

“These Senate seats are truly the last line of defence,” Trump said. He added, “It’s really a fight for our country, not a fight for Trump”.

Republican­s need just one victory to maintain Senate control and force Biden to contend with divided government. Democrats need a sweep for a 50-50 split, giving the tiebreakin­g vote to Vice-President-elect Kamala Harris, who will succeed Pence as the

Senate’s presiding officer. That would give Democrats a Senate majority to go along with their control of the House and executive branch.

Pence, who will preside over tomorrow’s congressio­nal joint session, sidesteppe­d Trump’s denials yesterday until a man yelled out that he must “do the right thing on January 6”. Pence promised that “we’ll have our day in Congress”, though he offered no details about what that might mean. Scores of Republican­s in Congress have pledged to protest the Electoral College count, but Pence has no legal authority to override Biden’s win.

Facing those passions from the Republican base, Perdue, whose first

Senate term expired on Monday, and Loeffler, an appointed senator trying to win her first election, have run as unabashed Trump Republican­s and spent the two-month run-off blitz warning of a “radical” and “dangerous” lurch to the left.

Ossoff and Warnock have countered with warnings that a Republican Senate will stymie Biden’s administra­tion, especially on pandemic relief.

Warnock pushed back at the deluge of Loeffler television ads casting him as a socialist. “Have you noticed she hasn’t even bothered to make a case, Georgia, for why you should keep her in that seat?” Warnock said, speaking ahead of Biden. “That’s because she has no case to make.”

A closely divided Senate — with the rules still requiring 60 votes to advance major bills — lessens the prospects of sweeping legislatio­n regardless. But a Democratic Senate would at least assure Biden an easier path for top appointees, including judges, and legitimate considerat­ion of his legislativ­e agenda. A Senate led by McConnell would almost certainly deny even an up-or-down vote on Biden’s most ambitious plans.

More than three million Georgians already have voted. Yesterday’s push focused on getting voters to the polls today. Democrats ran up a wide margin among 3.6 million early votes in autumn, but Republican­s surged on Election Day.

 ?? Photos / AP ?? Clockwise from left: Democrat Senate candidate Raphael Warnock bumps elbows with Joe Biden, Democratic candidate Jon Ossoff and Republican senators David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler.
Photos / AP Clockwise from left: Democrat Senate candidate Raphael Warnock bumps elbows with Joe Biden, Democratic candidate Jon Ossoff and Republican senators David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler.
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