Evening Standard

Black woman lawyer versus rifle-toting cowboy-boot man: a showdown of the new South

- Robyn Curnow

AT this year’s Atlanta Pride, Stacey Abrams joined the state capital’s flamboyant festivitie­s. Wearing a red dress, she stood on a white jeep, surrounded by rainbow balloons, waving regally. Her participat­ion was a first for a governor candidate here. The LGBT voting bloc is among several key groups for Democrats, all crucial to the “Blue Wave” they hope will win back Congress in next month’s mid-term elections.

An urbane, African-American, Yaleeducat­ed, calmly spoken lawyer, Abrams is an unusual candidate for Georgia. But this traditiona­lly conservati­ve state in America’s South is changing.

Abrams poses a serious challenge to Republican Brian Kemp. He won his nomination by embracing the politics of Donald Trump. His TV ads were forthright, aggressive and, to many, offensive. In one he aimed a rifle at his teenage daughter’s prospectiv­e boyfriend. In another he sat in his truck and threatened to “round up criminal illegals” himself. “Yep, I just said that,” he smiled to the camera.

All this appealed to those who see Kemp, and Trump, as patriotic men of action who reject “political correctnes­s” and fight for ordi- nary working Americans and the right to carry guns. Days before Abrams was at Atlanta Pride, Kemp was in nearby Athens, home to the University of Georgia and its college football team, the Bulldogs. There the cowboy-booted candidate rallied a crowd of young Republican­s and yelled: “Go dawgs!”

History favours Republican­s in Georgia, but Kemp warned against complacenc­y. His campaign has attacked Abrams as “too extreme” for Georgia, casting her push for healthcare reforms, tax credits and gun control as a radical shift Left. They have even accused her of being soft on sex offenders. Abrams has largely avoided taking the bait.

Meanwhile, Kemp is mired in controvers­y after revelation­s that 53,000 people — nearly 70 per cent of them African-Americans — had their voting registrati­ons placed in limbo. As Georgia’s sitting secretary of state, Kemp denies accusation­s of impropriet­y.

Georgia is a state of contrasts. Atlanta has a vibrant economy and a large cultural footprint. It was the birthplace of the civil rights movement and Democrat Jimmy Carter. But its suburbs and countrysid­e remain staunchly conservati­ve. This contest mirrors much about modern America — the clash between urban and rural; progressiv­e versus traditiona­l. Like so much in today’s anything but United States, the election will be bitterly fought, and hard to predict.

⬤ Robyn Curnow is Anchor, CNN Internatio­nal.

Full coverage of the mid-terms is on

CNN Internatio­nal and at cnn.com

 ??  ?? Battle: Stacey Abrams and Brian Kemp
Battle: Stacey Abrams and Brian Kemp
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