Chattanooga Times Free Press

Georgia Gov. Kemp rakes in $726K after the session for his re-election

- JAMES SALZER THE ATLANTA JOURNALCON­STITUTION (TNS)

Gov. Brian Kemp has only been in office six months, but he is already preparing for a tough, costly re-election campaign in 2022.

Kemp reported Monday that his campaign had raised $726,000 between the end of the 2019 General Assembly session in April and June 30.

As of last week, his campaign for re-election had $1.27 million socked away for a possible rematch with Democrat Stacey Abrams, who has yet to indicate whether she’ll have another go at the Republican in 3 1/2 years.

While Abrams hasn’t announced what she might run for, Kemp is building a war chest with the expensive 2018 campaign fresh in his memory.

Kemp narrowly beat Abrams in a hotly contested gubernator­ial race that cost about $100 million when the candidates and groups supporting them are included in the calculatio­n.

In her end-of-the-year report, Abrams’ campaign said she spent $27.4 million, the most any candidate has ever spent to run for governor in Georgia. Kemp wasn’t far behind at $21.4 million.

Abrams has a national fundraisin­g reach, taking in thousands of donations from outside of Georgia, while Kemp raised most of his money locally.

But Republican­s currently run the statehouse, and that advantage for Kemp has shown up in his most recent reports.

Before Kemp won the nomination, statehouse lobbyists, political action committees and traditiona­l big donors backed then-Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle. But that all changed when Kemp hammered Cagle in the July GOP primary runoff. The lobbyists and other donors’ allegiance, and money, shifted to Kemp.

A quick review of Kemp’s latest report — from April through the end of June — showed he collected about $100,000 from statehouse lobbyists and their firms. Lobbyists for Georgia Link, which may have the longest list of powerful clients at the statehouse, contribute­d $23,500 alone. Mark Middleton, a longtime lobbyist who served on Kemp’s transition team, and his wife contribute­d $14,000.

PACs and business groups with lobbyists gave an additional $75,000 to Kemp’s re-election campaign. They included Georgia Power, the Alliance of Community Hospitals, the Community Bankers Associatio­n, UPS and nursing home giant United Health Services.

Kemp’s campaign also received a boost from numerous leading business executives, such as automobile dealer Mark Hennessy ($19,000) and boutique hotel developer Richard Kessler ($18,100).

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Brian Kemp

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