Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Focus for Senate control: Georgia

Stakes high as parties gear up for two runoff races in state

- LISA MASCARO

WASHINGTON — Control of the Senate likely won’t be decided until a January runoff in Georgia, even after Vice President Joe Biden claimed victory in the presidenti­al election on Saturday.

That postelecti­on cliffhange­r will determine the balance of power in Washington, as neither party appears to have a lock on a Senate majority right now.

So far, the tally for the next Senate is 48 Republican­s and 48 Democrats after Tuesday’s election. Two seats in Georgia are headed to runoffs on Jan. 5. And seats in North Carolina and Alaska are still too early to call.

The stakes are high for for a momentous political struggle in Georgia during what could be President Donald Trump’s final lame-duck days in office. The state is closely divided, with Democrats making gains on Republican­s, fueled by a surge of new voters. But no Democrat has been elected to the U.S. Senate by Georgia voters in some 20 years. As much as $500 million could be spent on the two races, one strategist said.

“Now we take Georgia, and then we change America,” Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., told a crowd celebratin­g Biden’s projected victory Saturday on the streets of Brooklyn.

With Biden’s projected victory and a Democratic majority in the Senate, the party that also controls the House would have a firm grasp on power in Washington. Biden would have latitude over nominees, including for his Cabinet, and a chance to push major portions of his legislativ­e agenda through Congress. If Democrats fall short, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., could wield the power to check Biden’s ambitions.

“The Senate is the last line of defense,” tweeted the National Republican Senatorial Committee as soon as Biden was projected to be the winner of the presidenti­al race. It was a fundraisin­g appeal.

Republican­s have been working to retain their majority, but even if they secure the final two races where ballots are still being counted in North Carolina and Alaska, they would still fall short of the 51 seats needed.

In North Carolina, Sen. Thom Tillis is trying to fend off Democratic challenger Cal Cunningham in a tight race that is too early to call. Sen. Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska, is favored for another term against Al Gross, an independen­t running as a Democrat.

The political math problem for Republican­s is that the vice president of the party holding the White House casts the tie-breaking vote in the Senate. If Biden’s victory is confirmed, that would be his running mate, Sen. Kamala Harris. That means 50 seats for Democrats would result in control over the chamber. But Republican­s would need 51 seats to cement their hold on power.

That would put Georgia center stage, as many expect is about to happen.

Both Senate seats in the state are now held by Republican incumbents. They were forced into the January runoff contests after no candidate reached the 50% threshold needed to win in multi-candidate races.

GOP Sen. Kelly Loeffler will face Rafael Warnock, a Black pastor from the church where Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. preached. And Republican Sen. David Perdue, a top Trump ally, will face Democratic challenger Jon Ossoff.

“Now more than ever, we NEED to keep the Senate in Republican hands,” tweeted Loeffler. She said Saturday that she and Perdue are “the last line of defense against the radical left.”

Ossoff’s campaign aired a new ad, detailing a “path to recovery” from the coronaviru­s pandemic and its economic fallout. He calls for following the advice of medical experts to deal with the virus and a huge infrastruc­ture plan to create jobs.

“We need leaders who bring us together to get this done,” Ossoff says in the ad.

Biden had been mum on the Senate balance as he awaited the results in his own election, but he offered a preview before Tuesday’s election.

“I can’t tell you how important it is that we flip the United States Senate. There’s no state more consequent­ial than Georgia in that fight,” Biden declared at an Atlanta rally on Oct. 27, when he campaigned alongside Ossoff and Warnock.

Republican­s agree. “It’s all on the line in Georgia,” said Steven Law, the president of Senate Leadership Fund, the outside group aligned with McConnell that spent big trying keep Senate control.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., reminded her colleagues of the stakes for the entire party during the lame-duck sprint ahead.

“How we conduct it in the next two months will affect how we do in Georgia,” Pelosi told House Democrats, according to a person granted anonymity to discuss the private caucus call. She reminded colleagues to be “respectful.”

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