Chattanooga Times Free Press

House Democrats’ leader takes first step for governor run

- BY KATHLEEN FOODY

ATLANTA — Stacey Abrams took the first step toward a run for Georgia governor Tuesday, filing paperwork to form a campaign committee for the 2018 contest to replace term-limited Gov. Nathan Deal.

Abrams, the top Democrat in the Georgia House, is widely expected to run and has built a profile in the national party, including an appearance at last year’s Democratic National Convention. Several other Democrats, including state Rep. Stacey Evans of Smyrna and Columbus Mayor Teresa Tomlinson, are considerin­g bids.

Three Republican­s already have launched full-on campaigns: Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle, state Sen. Hunter Hill of Smyrna and Secretary of State Brian Kemp.

Abrams, an Atlanta attorney, has represente­d portions of Atlanta, DeKalb County and the city of Decatur since 2007 and began leading House Democrats in 2010.

While she often says the Democratic minority must provide alternativ­es to plans proposed by the GOP majority, Abrams has worked with Deal and Republican legislativ­e leaders on contentiou­s issues, including changes to the state’s HOPE Scholarshi­p program when lottery funds failed to keep up with demand.

She made voting registrati­on a signature issue, founding an effort called the New Georgia Project in 2014 that focused on registerin­g minorities to vote. The move has earned Abrams frequent mentions in national media outlets, a speaking slot at the DNC and made her a top surrogate for Hillary Clinton in Georgia during the 2016 presidenti­al race.

“In the Trump era, we need state leaders who understand that a governor must serve every resident and face each challenge head on,” Jennifer Granholm, a former governor of Michigan, said in a statement. “Stacey has a model and a track record that cannot be beat.”

The New Georgia Project’s work also pitted Abrams against Kemp, one of the GOP hopefuls for governor. As secretary of state, Kemp began an investigat­ion in 2014 accusing the group of fraudulent­ly registerin­g voters. Abrams’ group and other voting-rights organizati­ons sued, accusing Kemp of delaying thousands of applicatio­ns ahead of the midterm elections. A judge declined to act in the case.

Some Democrats also have questioned whether the effort did anything to make the party more competitiv­e, considerin­g Republican­s’ recent track record.

Hillary Clinton lost to President Donald Trump here by about 5 points; former President Barack Obama lost the state in 2008 by about the same margin and by 7 points in 2012. Deal defeated Democrat Jason Carter in the 2014 gubernator­ial contest by about 8 percentage points. Democrat Michelle Nunn also fell to Republican David Perdue by a similar margin in the contest for an open U.S. Senate seat that year.

Still, Democrats in Georgia hope to link the eventual GOP nominee for governor to Trump. They point to the groundswel­l of support this spring for an unknown Democrat in a special election to fill the 6th Congressio­nal District seat.

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