Chattanooga Times Free Press

THE NEW SWING STATE?

WITH GOVERNOR’S RACE, GEORGIA AUDITIONS FOR 2020

- BY BILL BARROW

ATLANTA — Move over, Ohio. Make room, Florida and Pennsylvan­ia. Georgia wants in on the swing-state action.

The state’s gubernator­ial contest comes into greater focus today after Republican­s choose between Brian Kemp, who has the endorsemen­t of President Donald Trump, and Casey Cagle, who has the backing of the incumbent GOP governor. The victor in their party runoff will take on Democrat Stacey Abrams in her bid to become the first black woman elected governor in the U.S.

Abrams, a 44-year-old former state House leader, faces significan­t hurdles in a state that continues to be deeply conservati­ve outside its metropolit­an areas. No Democratic nominee for governor or U.S. Senate has carried the state since 1998. Bill Clinton was the last Democratic presidenti­al candidate to win there — in 1992.

Yet in the last decade, GOP standard-bearers typically have garnered no more than 53 percent of the vote. Some Republican­s said that margin isn’t enough as AfricanAme­ricans, Latinos, AsianAmeri­cans and white transplant­s

become a larger share of the electorate.

The themes that likely will dominate the general election campaign for governor, including immigratio­n and race, will help determine whether Democrats can become consistent­ly competitiv­e in the Deep South after years of stinging defeats.

“This is a light-red state,” GOP pollster Mark Rountree said. “I don’t think Georgia will be a national afterthoug­ht for either side anymore”

regardless of what happens in November, he added.

A close loss for Democrats will still be a loss. “There are no more moral victories in Georgia,” said Democratic consultant Tharon Johnson. It’s time for Democrats to capitalize on demographi­c changes and a “talented candidate” who should have plenty of campaign cash thanks to her national celebrity, he said.

Georgia’s potential evolution toward swing-state status comes at a critical time for Democrats. Gains in coastal and Sunbelt states — Virginia, North Carolina and potentiall­y Arizona — could offset growing challenges for the party in the upper Midwest, where Trump shocked many Democrats in 2016 by sweeping a band of states Hillary Clinton’s campaign had considered a “blue wall.”

Ohio and Iowa are of particular concern for Democrats long term, given that Trump’s victory margin in both states neared double digits in 2016.

“These changes in states like Georgia aren’t occurring in a vacuum,” said Democratic pollster Zac McCrary. “The party cannot afford to get in a situation where their only path to 270 [electoral votes] has to include Ohio, so we need to bring a state like Georgia online as a possibilit­y.”

That reality and Abrams’ candidacy have been enough to draw visits already from senators — and potential Democratic presidenti­al candidates — Cory Booker of New Jersey and Kamala Harris of California. Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who sought the Democratic nomination in 2016 and is considerin­g a repeat bid, also has endorsed Abrams and told The Associated Press that he’d come to Georgia if Abrams asks.

Party interest spiked when Abrams won what initially was expected to be a competitiv­e primary in May with 76 percent of the vote.

“I started getting a lot of calls then,” recalled Johnson, the Democratic consultant. “‘Can she win?’ Can she win?’ they’d ask.”

The question is whether Republican­s can continue to rely on a large share of the white vote outside Georgia’s cities to ensure victory.

“Predicting the tipping point is impossible … but if Stacey just tells people what she thinks, the votes are out there,” said Democrat Jason Carter, who is former President Jimmy Carter’s grandson and ran for governor in 2014, losing by 8 percentage points.

Since Carter’s loss, which he notes came in a midterm that was bad for Democrats nationally, Democrats have flipped several state legislativ­e seats in the northern suburbs of Atlanta. In 2016, despite losing by 5 percent statewide, Clinton led Trump in the populous suburban Atlanta counties of Cobb and Gwinnett. No Democratic presidenti­al nominee had done that since Jimmy Carter, himself a former Georgia governor, in 1976.

Abrams acknowledg­es she must piece together suburban swing voters, urban liberals, young voters and nonwhites from the cities and rural areas. But she insists the way to do it isn’t by shying away from liberal policy positions — something she says Georgia Democrats already tried in losing efforts.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Right: Georgia Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle stands with his wife, Nita, before taking the stage to speak to supporters May 22 during an election-night watch party in Gainesvill­e, Ga.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Right: Georgia Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle stands with his wife, Nita, before taking the stage to speak to supporters May 22 during an election-night watch party in Gainesvill­e, Ga.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA AP ?? Left: Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp and his wife, Marty, make a campaign stop during his “Putting Georgians First Fly Around” at Peachtree DeKalb Airport on Monday in Atlanta.
CURTIS COMPTON/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA AP Left: Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp and his wife, Marty, make a campaign stop during his “Putting Georgians First Fly Around” at Peachtree DeKalb Airport on Monday in Atlanta.
 ?? AMY HARRIS/INVISION/AP ?? Democratic Georgia governor candidate Stacey Abrams speaks July 7 at the 2018 Essence Festival at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center in New Orleans. The candidate who wins the GOP Georgia governor runoff election will face Abrams in November.
AMY HARRIS/INVISION/AP Democratic Georgia governor candidate Stacey Abrams speaks July 7 at the 2018 Essence Festival at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center in New Orleans. The candidate who wins the GOP Georgia governor runoff election will face Abrams in November.
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Republican candidates for Georgia governor Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle, left, and Secretary of State Brian Kemp shake hands July 12 after an Atlanta Press Club debate at Georgia Public Television in Atlanta.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Republican candidates for Georgia governor Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle, left, and Secretary of State Brian Kemp shake hands July 12 after an Atlanta Press Club debate at Georgia Public Television in Atlanta.

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