Chattanooga Times Free Press

Democrats, GOP both see opportunit­y in 6th District vote

- BY GREG BLUESTEIN AND TAMAR HALLERMAN NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

ATLANTA — The 6th Congressio­nal District vote on Tuesday is more than an opportunit­y for Democrats to score an early victory against President Donald Trump and his agenda. It’s also a chance for Democrats to test a different sort of message in fast-changing suburban districts they’ll need to retake the U.S. House.

That’s because the wealthy and well-educated suburbs spanning from east Cobb County to north DeKalb County exactly are the kinds of places Democrats see as the key to their future. And it’s why both parties have turned Atlanta’s suburbs into a last stand, pouring more money into the contest than some major presidenti­al candidates managed to muster last year.

After getting trounced in November in the rural, blue-collar districts they once controlled, Democrats hope a cocktail of changing demographi­cs in conservati­ve-leaning suburban seats mixed with grass-roots anger against Trump will return them to power in 2018. That could start with the candidacy of Jon Ossoff, a 30-year-old former congressio­nal aide.

And Republican­s see Tuesday’s vote as a chance to send a message of their own: that Democrats can’t compete in GOP bastions with centrist-sounding messages that they see, as Karen Handel so often says, as “fake.” Many are casting their vote as a defense of Trump, a stand for conservati­ve values or a strike against national Democrats who think they understand Georgia.

By just about any metric, the race is neck-andneck, and analysts from both sides of the partisan

divide often say it’s a coin flip. Ossoff has marshaled more than 12,000 volunteers who have relentless­ly contacted voters across the territory; Handel has had a string of big-name Republican­s, starting with Trump, help her rally conservati­ves to her side.

Two of those high-profile supporters gave a pep talk Saturday to a crowd of more than 200 people at a steamy airport hangar. Former U.S. Rep. Tom Price and ex-Gov. Sonny Perdue — both now Cabinet members — played up the sweeping implicatio­ns of the race.

“This is a harbinger of national politics. The world is looking, the nation is looking — and all the money has flowed in here,” Perdue said. “Don’t be fooled by someone who doesn’t have a record.”

Ossoff campaigned Saturday with U.S. Rep. John Lewis, the civil rights icon who helped spark his interest in politics.

“The hours you spend today can make the difference,” Ossoff told a group of volunteers. “There are a lot of folks counting on us now. Let’s continue to unite people.”

MATH AND MAPS

The Democrats need 24 seats to retake the U.S. House next year, and party leaders see places such as the 6th District and other suburban regions in California, Florida and New York as the most fertile ground.

The metro Atlanta territory is projected to favor Republican candidates by about 8 percentage points above the national average, making it the 165th-most-Republican-leaning in the country according to the Cook Political Report, a nonpartisa­n political analysis firm.

But Cook also estimates the district has been quickly moving toward the center in recent years. And the theory goes, at least among some Democratic leaders, that if Ossoff wins today and Trump remains in the White House, a score of other changing House districts currently held by Republican­s could also be winnable for the Democrats in 2018.

“It really is a new map,” said Chip Lake, a former GOP congressio­nal staffer who is now a campaign strategist. “The dynamic of Donald Trump has certainly, at least temporaril­y, created a new map of competitiv­eness.”

In practice, though, it could be much more difficult for Democrats. This contest is the premier election in 2017, which has helped both Ossoff and Handel attract unpreceden­ted gobs of money and attention from out-of-state voters and groups. Many Georgia Republican­s say no candidate of either party can count on replicatin­g that in 2018, when 435 House seats, 33 Senate positions, 36 gubernator­ial slots, and thousands of state and local offices are on the ballot.

Ossoff’s fund-raising haul of more than $23 million has smashed records that likely won’t soon be matched, and the tide of grass-roots enthusiasm is hard to maintain.

“Because of the sheer amount of money that went into this, it’s just really difficult to make the case that this is somehow indicative of what would happen in 2018,” said Mark Rountree, a local pollster for the Republican-leaning firm Landmark Communicat­ions. “This race is not the norm.”

On the other hand, bragging rights are no small factor. The sheer amount of money and national attention the race has attracted is one of the reasons why both sides want to win so badly.

“The Democrats have bet the house, the car, the farm and a couple of their kids on winning this election,” said Rusty Paul, the Republican mayor of Sandy Springs and a former state party chairman. “If you can blunt them, you’ve dealt them a huge psychologi­cal blow, particular­ly when it comes to fund raising.”

NEW ENTHUSIASM

Beyond sending a message to Republican­s ahead of 2018, the stakes are a little more psychologi­cal for Democrats when it comes to today’s runoff.

Ossoff was able to harness the left’s anti-Trump energy thanks to Democrats who began organizing in person and on social media — many of them for the first time. Those nascent groups, which sprouted in some of the most conservati­ve parts of the district, supplied a stream of volunteers who made thousands of phone calls or trekked from house to house searching for votes.

What many Democrats are waiting to see is whether that grass-roots enthusiasm can be replicated in other traditiona­lly right-leaning suburban districts. Being able to do that, as well as turn out voters who traditiona­lly don’t vote in midterm elections, will be crucial for the party’s mission to wrest control of the House.

“If Democrats can change the makeup of the electorate in dozens of races in November 2018, that would have a big impact,” said Nathan Gonzales, the editor of the election analysis company Inside Elections.

Unclear is whether Ossoff’s traction in the 6th could also spur other political newcomers to run as Democrats elsewhere in Georgia and across the country. There already are signs it has.

Several Democrats are eying the increasing­ly diverse Gwinnett Countybase­d 7th Congressio­nal District, where GOP incumbent Rob Woodall has not faced serious opposition since he was first elected in 2010. One of those challenger­s is David Kim, a Harvardedu­cated Asian-American businessma­n who winked at Ossoff when announcing his candidacy earlier this month.

“I want to be a voice that’s independen­t minded — thinking about what’s best for the long term for all of us,” he said in a note to supporters.

WALKING THE LINE

Republican leaders say they’re confident about Handel’s chances, but they caution an upset defeat isn’t a sign of electoral doom in 2018. Asked whether an Ossoff win means a Democrat with a centrist-sounding message could compete in Georgia, Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle was dismissive.

“I wouldn’t necessaril­y say that,” said Cagle, the presumptiv­e GOP front-runner in next year’s race for governor. “I think you have to connect with people and give them a clear understand­ing of not just who you are, but what you want to do. ”

Democrats have tried to walk this sort of line before in Georgia, vouching for moderate-sounding proposals while trying to keep a base of left-leaning supporters energized. It hasn’t worked. Few know that as well as Jason Carter, the party’s 2014 candidate for governor who voted for a gun rights expansion and centered his campaign on a pledge to boost k-12 funding.

Those races were before Trump. Carter said the “swirling political chaos” that Trump’s election summoned forth gives the right type of candidate an opening. And Ossoff, he said, has “matched the moment.”

“When you say both parties are complicit,” Carter said, echoing one of Ossoff’s lines, “you’re acknowledg­ing that people feel alienated by the system on both sides. And it’s clear that moderate Republican­s are willing to listen.”

 ?? FILE PHOTO BY BRANDEN CAMP/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA AP ?? Candidates in Georgia’s 6th Congressio­nal District race Republican Karen Handel, left, and Democrat Jon Ossoff shake hands after a June 6 debate in Atlanta.
FILE PHOTO BY BRANDEN CAMP/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA AP Candidates in Georgia’s 6th Congressio­nal District race Republican Karen Handel, left, and Democrat Jon Ossoff shake hands after a June 6 debate in Atlanta.

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