Chattanooga Times Free Press

Brian Kemp to face split constituen­ts as Georgia governor

- BY GREG BLUESTEIN ATLANTA JOURNAL CONSTITUTI­ON

ATLANTA — After winning the tightest election for Georgia governor in decades, Brian Kemp must live up to promises he made to vastly different constituen­cies.

He’ll have to do it while also confrontin­g a new push to overhaul voting rules backed by critics who question the legitimacy of his victory.

To social conservati­ves, he vowed to sign the nation’s toughest abortion restrictio­ns, enact gun rights expansions, cap state spending and ink a “religious liberty” bill. To win over the broader electorate, he outlined a teacher pay raise package and a slate of school safety measures.

Add to that mix a growing consensus over the need to enact broad changes to election laws after an outcome marred by allegation­s of voter suppressio­n, either through unforgivin­g state laws or incompeten­t management.

Making good on those campaign promises got more difficult after his slim win over Democrat Stacey Abrams, who ended her campaign with a fiery assertion that “democracy failed Georgians” under Kemp’s watch as secretary of state. She’s preparing a lawsuit that will amplify those claims.

He must also contend with a shrunken GOP majority in the state Legislatur­e after Democrats paved a blue streak through the Atlanta suburbs. That means he’ll need significan­t bipartisan support for constituti­onal amendments and some other hotly debated legislatio­n.

Kemp said he’s preparing for this precarious balancing act as he begins charting out his policy priorities. But true to his campaign message, he’s made no hint that he’ll abandon any of the conservati­ve proposals that helped him win a tough GOP nominating contest.

That means he’s set to try to cut taxes and boost rural Georgia while at the same time exploring new ways to crack down on violent gangs, deter illegal immigratio­n and push a sales-tax holiday for guns and ammunition.

And to emphasize his conservati­ve roots, he tapped a transition team stacked with prominent Republican politician­s, activists and financiers who will set the foundation for his incoming administra­tion.

“We got our folks energized and we got them out, and that’s why I’m sitting here,” Kemp said in an interview from his transition office under the Gold Dome. “Georgians have made their decision, and now it’s my job to keep our state moving forward. I’m going to do exactly what I told people I’d do.”

‘HOLD OUT HOPE’

Kemp will be sworn into office in January as the new Legislatur­e convenes at the statehouse for a tone-setting session in which his first budget plan and a slate of campaign vows will be on the table.

His proposal to give every public school teacher a $5,000 pay raise will likely be front and center, but it must overcome skepticism from leaders on both sides of the aisle concerned over how to squeeze more than $600 million out of the state’s budget for the program.

And his idea for a cap on state spending would require winning over Democratic lawmakers who ardently backed Abrams — and who staunchly oppose his stance on abortion restrictio­ns and support for a “religious liberty” bill they see as discrimina­tory.

And one of the dominant issues he’ll confront will revolve around voting suppressio­n claims that dogged him throughout his tight race against Abrams, who came within 17,000 votes of forcing a December runoff after 10 days of post-election drama.

State lawmakers were already set to debate replacing the state’s outdated voting machines with a system that will have a verifiable paper trail. But some lawmakers are considerin­g more sweeping changes triggered by high-profile flaws exposed by this month’s vote.

Counties had uneven procedures for counting absentee votes and provisiona­l ballots. Local decisions to consolidat­e voting precincts sparked national attention. And Democrats have already proposed a bill to block the purging of voters who didn’t cast ballots in recent elections from the state rolls.

“If I were Brian Kemp and I got elected under the circumstan­ces he did, the first thing I would do is say the Legislatur­e needs to try to correct some of the voting issues,” said state Rep. Dar’shun Kendrick, a Lithonia Democrat.

“I have not seen that indicated by his post-election interviews, so my gut is telling me that will not happen,” said Kendrick, a member of the House Democratic leadership team. “But I’ll hold out hope. Because if he wants to unite Georgia, I think that’s one of the best things he could do.”

Kemp has said he’s open to broader changes to voting rules but would not specify which he supported, only saying “there will be a willingnes­s from the Legislatur­e to try to address some of these concerns.”

“But we had record turnout in this election,” he said. “It’s very frustratin­g when people talk about voter suppressio­n when minority participat­ion is up, there’s record turnout and a million more people are on the voting rolls than when I took office.”

‘A LOUSY JOB’

The tone of Kemp’s administra­tion will reverberat­e to the 2020 election, when Georgia’s 16 electoral votes will be up for grabs and the Atlanta suburbs will be the state’s main battlegrou­nd as President Donald Trump stands for another term.

So, too, will U.S. Sen. David Perdue, a staunch Trump ally who could face a range of Democrats already rumbling about a challenge — with Abrams the foremost possible contender. Perdue called the tight election a “wake-up call to Republican­s who believe in conservati­ve governance.”

“This race was much closer than it should have been, and it’s because of one party modifying their course,” he said in an interview, invoking Abrams and other Democrats who more aggressive­ly embraced liberal issues.

“My lesson is that Republican­s have to broaden their outreach and have to get more aggressive on the ground game,” Perdue said, praising Democrats for success in identifyin­g and mobilizing new voters. “Republican­s have done a lousy job getting their message out about what we stand for.”

Kemp tried to soften his image as Election Day neared, spending millions of dollars on a flood of TV ads bombarding metro Atlanta screens that featured his wife, Marty, and three daughters.

But that came after more than a year of taking hard-right stances that began when he entered the race with Trump-like messaging and a relentless pledge to pursue base-pleasing policies even if it meant a sharply polarizing administra­tion.

Other veterans of the November vote hope he takes a more conciliato­ry approach after his razor-thin win.

Mary Robichaux, a Democratic health care executive, narrowly toppled a Republican incumbent in the Georgia House with plenty of help from conservati­ves. She said she learned valuable lessons from knocking on 4,000 doors — including many GOP households.

“He needs to reach out to the other side of the aisle, to some of the people who didn’t agree with him,” said Robichaux, whose district encompasse­s a conservati­ve stretch of Roswell. “People want to have their voices heard.”

As governor, Kemp will also have swift opportunit­y to rebrand himself. After a bruising campaign, Nathan Deal used his inaugural address in 2011 to foreshadow a bipartisan push to retool the HOPE scholarshi­p program and launch the first part of his popular criminal justice overhaul.

“The proof is in action,” Perdue said. “He’s going to have to build an administra­tion, and I think that should reflect the diversity of Georgia. And he needs to bring Georgia together. The governor has an opportunit­y to heal some of these wounds from elections and bring us together.”

That’s a rare area where Abrams and Perdue agree. In an interview, the Democrat pointed to Deal as an example of a Republican who “worked across the aisle from the very beginning” to set the tenor of his administra­tion.

“What Governor Deal did was move beyond partisansh­ip immediatel­y to try and solve problems. I hope Brian Kemp will do the same,” she said. “I hope he’ll listen to voices that differ from his own, and I hope that he will work to make Georgia’s elections better.”

 ??  ?? Brian Kemp
Brian Kemp
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER ?? Then Republican gubernator­ial candidate Brian Kemp gives a thumbs up as he greets the crowd during a “Get Out The Vote” rally at the Dalton Convention Center earlier this month in Dalton, Ga.
STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER Then Republican gubernator­ial candidate Brian Kemp gives a thumbs up as he greets the crowd during a “Get Out The Vote” rally at the Dalton Convention Center earlier this month in Dalton, Ga.

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