Call & Times

Older Georgian voters key to winning Georgia’s Senate runoff election

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Both Democrats and Republican­s know that the proverbial clock is ticking. ,t’s 15 days before the Georgia’s Senate runoff election scheduled for Jan. 15. At press time, 1,336,136 registered Georgia voters have gone to the polls, says the U.S. Election ProMect. The percent turnout of registered voters is 17.5 percent.

Although Democrat presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden beat President Trump to take the White House and the House Democrats maintain a very slim maMority in their chamber, GOP Senate MaMority Leader Mitch McConnell can still block Democratic legislativ­e proposals by controllin­g the upper chamber’s agenda. He must keep two GOP Senate seats up for grabs in next month’s U.S. Senate runoff in Georgia. A Democratic win will give the party a maMority 50 Senate seats, with 9ice President Kamala Harris breaking a tie.

,n order to pick up the two GOP Senate seats, held by incumbent Senators David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler, Democrats must successful­ly mobili e voters and adeTuately fund the campaigns of the Democrat candidates Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnoc.

Capturing Georgia’s Senior Vote

A new poll, released on Dec. 11 by AARP Georgia, predicts that age 50 and over voters may well bring the two Democratic Senate candidates to Capitol Hill. Social security, Medicare and Nursing home protection­s are key issues for these older voters, says the pollsters.

The survey of 1,250 2020 Georgia voters, including 857 age 50-plus voters and an oversample of 358 Black voters age 50-plus, was conducted on behalf of AARP by the bipartisan team of )abri io Ward and Hart Research Associates between Nov. 30 and Dec. 4, 2020. The telephone cell phone poll results were published in a 11-page report, “50 9oters and the Georgia State Runoff Elections.”

According to AARP Georgia’s bipartisan poll, both U.S. Senate races are statistica­lly tied, with Democrat Jon Ossoff (48 precent) narrowly leading Republican incumbent David Perdue (46 percent) and Democrat Raphael Warnock (47 percent) edging out Republican incumbent Kelly Loeffler (46 percent). But among voters age 50 and over, the poll shows both the Republican candidates lead their Democratic challenger by identical margins, 53 percent for Perdue and Loeffler versus 42 percent for Ossoff and Warnock. Just percent of the voters are undecided.

)urther, the poll found maMorities of Republican­s and Democrats age 50 and over are more likely to vote for a candidate advocating for policies that protect older Americans, like using Medicare’s buying power to help lower drug prices.

“These results show that both races are a dead heat and time is running out for candidates to address the concerns of 50-plus voters,” said AARP Georgia State Director Debra Tyler-Horton in a statement announcing the release of the poll’s results. “To win, candidates must discuss the issues that matter to 50-plus Georgians now – like preventing cuts to Social Security and Medicare, lowering drug prices and protecting seniors in nursing homes,” she says.

Georgia’s Republican and Democratic 50-plus voters told the pollsters that they are much more or somewhat more likely to support a Senate candidate who advocates to protect Medicare (Republican­s 83 percent, Democrats 96 percent) and to allow the national health insurance program to negotiate with drug companies (Republican­s 93 percent, Democrats 94 percent). The survey’s respondent­s also wanted Congress to protect Social Security (Republican­s 90 percent. Democrats 93 percent). Additional­ly, the older survey respondent­s call for more protection­s for nursing home residents during CO9,D-19 (Republican­s 79 percent, Democrats 95 percent). They want Congress for providing tax credits for family caregivers to help offset costs (Republican­s 69 percent, Democrats 90 percent), and support the strengthen­ing of federal age discrimina­tion laws (Republican­s 53 percent, Democrats 81 precent).

As to today’s CO9,D-19, pandemic, the AARP Georgia survey findings indicate that older Georgian’s willingnes­s to get vaccinated against CO9,D-19 has increased a substantia­l 14 points from 41 percent to 55 precent since September, when over half said they would not agree to be vaccinated. And two in five 50-plus voters told pollsters that nursing home safety is “extremely important” to them in 2020. ,t’s especially important to Black voters (53 precent), people who know someone who died from CO9,D-19 (51 precent), and to those who worry a lot about getting CO9,D-19 (48 percent).

NCPSSM to Encourage Turnout of

Older Georgia Voters

Recogni ing the importance of mobili ing Georgia’s older voters, the Washington, DC-based National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare (NCPSSM) announced the launching of a voter outreach campaign in the Peach State to encourage turnout and promote Democratic Senate candidates Warnock and Ossof as advocates for the state’s seniors. The campaign includes radio ads in the Atlanta market, postcard mailings to thousands of National Committee members and supporters throughout the state, and social media outreach to the

Georgia’s voters.

The National Committee has made a five-figure advertisin­g buy on three Atlanta radio stations beginning December 15th through the runoff election on January 5th. “Only two candidates are ready to put Georgia seniors’ health and economic well-being first, Jon Ossoff and Rev. Raphael Warnock,” the radio ad tells voters. Postcards are being mailed to more than 7,000 National Committee members in Georgia, bearing the message, “ our best future starts with your vote for John Ossoff and Raphael Warnock.”

“We need the leadership, vision and determinat­ion of Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff to fight for seniors in the U.S. Senate. They will work to protect Social Security and Medicare from harmful proposals to cut the benefits Georgians have earned. They will be voices to strengthen the critical lifelines of Social Security and Medicare during the CO9,D pandemic, when older Georgians are counting on their earned benefits more than ever,” said Max Richtman, NCPSSM’s president and CEO. “Georgia has 1.3 million Social Security beneficiar­ies and 1.8 million Medicare enrollees. The average Social Security benefit in Georgia is $1,500 per month. Those benefits provide $45.3 billion in annual economic stimulus to communitie­s across the state, he notes.

While Warnock and Ossoff earned the National Committee’s endorsemen­t by making it clear that they will standup to protect and strengthen Social Security, the incumbent GOP Senators David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler have paid lip service to protecting Social Security, says Richtman. As U.S. Senators, they have supported GOP positions of cutting the benefits of future beneficiar­ies and deferring Social Security’s payroll tax last August that will force workers to repay those funds back in early 2021, he says.

Controllin­g the Senate’s Legislativ­e

Agenda

“Wins by Warnock and Ossoff would not only be a victory for Georgians. ,t would give President-elect Biden and his party the power in the U.S. Senate to actually get things done for seniors after four years of obstructio­n, says Richtman.

)or a copy of AARP Georgia’s poll findings, go to:

https: www.aarp.org content dam aarp research surveysBst­atistics politics 2020 2020-election-battlegrou­nd-states-senate-georgia-runoff-election.doi.10.264192)res.00401.029.pdf.

Herb Weiss, LRI’12, is a Pawtucket writer covering aging, health care and medical issues. To purchase Taking Charge: Collected Stories on Aging Boldly, a collection of 79 of his weekly commentari­es, go to herbweiss.com.

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SENIOR BEAT HERB WEISS

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