Chattanooga Times Free Press

Firing shakes up Georgia District 6 election,

- BY GREG BLUESTEIN COX NEWSPAPERS

ATLANTA — President Donald Trump’s decision to abruptly fire the director of the FBI amid a criminal probe into whether his campaign colluded with the Russian government opened a gaping new divide in Georgia’s 6th Congressio­nal District race.

Republican Karen Handel applauded Trump’s decision to fire James Comey, saying in a statement his ouster was “probably overdue.” Her opponent, Jon Ossoff, echoed many fellow Democrats in calling for a special prosecutor to “investigat­e Russian interferen­ce” in last year’s vote.

It’s yet another clear contrast between the candidates in the June 20 runoff to represent the district, which spans from east Cobb County to north DeKalb County. The contest is considered a mustwin for Republican­s, who have held the suburban stretch for decades and are hoping to avoid an embarrassi­ng upset.

In her statement, Handel makes no mention of the calls from Democrats, and an increasing number of Republican­s, for an independen­t investigat­ion into whether Russia tried to influence the outcome of the 2016 election. She said Comey had squandered the trust of the American people.

“It’s been clear for some time that FBI Director Comey has lost the confidence of Republican­s, Democrats and broader institutio­ns, and his removal as FBI director was probably overdue,” she said. “I hope that the president will quickly nominate a strong, independen­t leader as the next director of the FBI and that the Senate will consider the nomination as quickly as possible.”

Handel, a former Georgia secretary of state, sought to sidestep Trump’s controvers­ies throughout her campaign for the seat. But since her No. 2 finish among 18 candidates in the April 18 vote, she has more aggressive­ly embraced the president, who has assailed Ossoff in tweets and hosted a fund-raiser for her.

Ossoff said on Twitter late Tuesday that Comey’s ouster raises “severe questions,” and he urged bipartisan support behind an independen­t commission to investigat­e a possible link between Trump’s campaign and Russia.

Other Georgia Democrats quickly pounced on Comey’s firing. U.S. Rep. Hank Johnson, Ossoff’s mentor and former boss, said the timing suggests “an effort to cover up wrongdoing.” Fulton County Commission Chairman John Eaves, a candidate for Atlanta mayor, said it “reeks of tyranny, not democracy” and labeled it Watergate 2.0.

And Democratic Party of Georgia head DuBose Porter invoked Trump’s firing of Sally Yates, a former Georgia prosecutor who was briefly the acting U.S. attorney general, in condemning Trump’s decision. He said the American public should insist on a special investigat­ion.

“Our national security is at stake, and these demands must be met immediatel­y,” he said. “We cannot trust Donald Trump to investigat­e himself. We just cannot trust Donald Trump.”

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