Chattanooga Times Free Press

Black candidates absent in 2020 Georgia Senate race

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

ATLANTA — Months after Stacey Abrams narrowly lost her bid to become the state’s first black governor, some Democrats are eyeing the growing U.S. Senate field in Georgia with a concern: There are no African American contenders in the running yet for the state’s biggest prize in 2020.

The five Democratic candidates in the race or those known to be seriously considerin­g a challenge to Republican U.S. Sen. David Perdue are all white. The two who have launched campaigns, Clarkston Mayor Ted Terry and former Columbus Mayor Teresa Tomlinson, are tailoring their appeals to energize black voters.

Still, it can seem incongruou­s that Georgia lacks a toptier African American candidate at a time when the black electorate in the state is as powerful as ever. Turnout among black voters surged last year, helping Abrams clobber a primary opponent and nearly defeat Brian Kemp.

Democratic strategist­s and politician­s say the Senate field is sure to continue to evolve after Abrams’ decision not to run left the party without a clear favorite. Other high-profile African Americans have either passed on the race or are noncommitt­al about a potential run.

“I think it’s unfortunat­e that we don’t have any black candidates, especially since we have so many qualified black leaders in the state. But the field cleared for Stacey and she took longer than people expected, and it may be that people are now playing catch-up,” said state Rep. Dar’shun Kendrick, a black legislator not interested in a statewide run next year.

Kendrick added that she’s “not shouting for joy, as I think a black leader would motivate the Democratic base. I would have loved to see a black leader, but it’s a good, solid field.”

Other prominent African Americans who seem unlikely to run include the Rev. Raphael Warnock of Ebenezer Baptist Church, DeKalb County District Attorney Sherry Boston and state Sen. Nikema Williams, the chairwoman of the state Democratic Party. The three declined to comment for this story.

Still, it’s early. DeKalb Chief Executive Michael Thurmond, a former labor commission­er who was the first non-incumbent African American to win a statewide race in Georgia, said an experience­d black candidate can enter in six months and still “automatica­lly move to front-runner status.”

“What’s causing people to hesitate is not the opportunit­y to win the Democratic nomination,” said Thurmond, who added that he’s not planning to run. “It’s the challenge of raising at least $20 million and a very difficult November campaign.”

‘RIGHT MESSAGE’

Any Democrat who challenges Perdue, a former Fortune 500 chief executive, must contend with that steep fundraisin­g curve.

Perdue’s close ties to Georgia’s GOP establishm­ent and President Donald Trump will help him raise heaps of campaign cash for a re-election bid, and any Republican on the ballot comes in with a decided edge: No Democrat has won statewide office in Georgia since 2006.

Still, Democrats hope to turn Perdue’s relationsh­ip with Trump into a liability, and White House hopefuls are pledging to compete for Georgia’s 16 electoral votes next year rather than bypass the state for other battlegrou­nds. A part of that blueprint hinges on mobilizing voters of color, the party’s most reliable electorate in Georgia.

Abrams’ strategy reaped dividends in 2018. The number of black voters rose 43% in the May 2018 primary compared with 2010, the last time there was a competitiv­e race for governor, according to an Atlanta Journal Constituti­on analysis of demographi­c data. Exit polling showed at least 90% of black voters backed Abrams for governor.

Newly released census data point to an accelerati­ng trend: Georgia’s electorate is growing less white — about 59% of Georgia voters in 2018 were white, down from 64% in 2014 — and African Americans make up about 30% of the state’s active registered voters.

Just as important to any Democratic road map to victory is the party’s growing success in the more moderate suburbs of Atlanta. Down-ticket Democrats won a swath of once-solid Republican territory in November’s midterms, and party leaders hope to build on those gains next year.

Tharon Johnson, a veteran strategist who headed up Barack Obama’s presidenti­al campaign in the South in 2012, said he’d welcome a person of color in the contest because “we need more competitio­n.” But Johnson, who does not have a candidate in the race, said there are other factors that will likely matter more.

“What I’m more focused on is electing the right person that has the ability to fund-raise, can fire up the base,” Johnson said, “but also do it in a way that doesn’t turn off independen­ts and moderate Republican­s, which I believe are people that are persuadabl­e in 2020 if we have the right message.”

‘SPEAKING FRANKLY’

In separate interviews, Terry and Tomlinson pledged to capitalize on the playbook pioneered by Abrams to mobilize minority voters who have long felt ignored by politician­s.

(Other Democrats who are evaluating a run include Sarah Riggs Amico, a logistics executive who ran for lieutenant governor last year; Jon Ossoff, an investigat­ive journalist and former 6th Congressio­nal District candidate; and Matt Lieberman, an educator who is the son of former U.S. Sen. Joseph Lieberman.)

Tomlinson said she plans to spend significan­t time in rural, majority-black stretches of Middle and South Georgia that had previously received little attention from some statewide candidates.

“I will be speaking as frankly about race as I possibly can because I think that people are hungry for the conversati­on,” said Tomlinson, who added that the nation’s “outdated civic and economic infrastruc­ture that disproport­ionately weighs on black Americans” helped shape her priorities.

Those include a proposal to revive sections of the federal Voting Rights Act struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court, legalizing marijuana, and expanding Medicare and Medicaid. She also backs a federal bill to study reparation­s for African Americans.

Terry, 36, casts himself as a voice for young adults who are disenchant­ed with Washington’s unwillingn­ess to tackle complex issues such as climate change, the student loan crisis and economic inequality.

“The millennial generation is the most diverse generation in American history, and when I think about my peers, my friends, just people I’d meet randomly in Clarkston or throughout Georgia, I would say there’s a lot of people who care more about your ideas and what you’re going to fight for as opposed to the color of your skin,” he said.

His platform echoes policies he pushed as mayor of the small DeKalb city, including a higher minimum wage and more lenient marijuana policies. But he said he also plans to “do a lot of listening” in diverse communitie­s as he develops stances on issues such as housing affordabil­ity.

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