Chattanooga Times Free Press

› Senate control brings urgent turnout drive,

Parties pour money, resources into get-out-the-vote effort

- BY SUDHIN THANAWALA

MILTON, Ga. — In a black face mask and cap, activist Garrett Bess walked up driveway after driveway of milliondol­lar homes in suburban Atlanta on a recent afternoon, placing a flyer in each door, ringing the bell and stepping away to make a socially distanced pitch to vote for the conservati­ve candidates in Georgia’s pivotal U.S. Senate runoff elections.

Bess’ group, Heritage Action for America, plans to knock on half a million doors before the state’s two Jan. 5 contests that will determine whether Democrats or Republican­s control the Senate.

“Everyone in Georgia knows the candidates,” said Janae Stracke, a colleague of Bess’ who also canvassed the subdivisio­n. “There’s not a lot of convincing to do. They’ve made up their mind. It’s mostly knowing when to vote, how to vote, encouragin­g them to vote.”

This election season, the coronaviru­s pandemic has upended traditiona­l get- outthevote efforts where campaign workers go door to door to encourage people to cast ballots. With people staying at home and limiting contact with outsiders, an extended conversati­on with a campaign worker who shows up uninvited may actually encourage people to vote for someone else.

But it’s a sign of how important the two Senate elections are that both parties and independen­t advocacy groups are going all in on their in-person get-outthe-vote efforts.

After the GOP lost the presidenti­al election in Georgia for the first time in 28 years, conservati­ves are urging

Republican­s to get more aggressive with their turnout efforts in the state to match the outreach of former Democratic gubernator­ial candidate Stacey Abrams.

After Abrams lost the 2018 governor’s race, she devoted herself to voter outreach, convinced that the state was a genuine battlegrou­nd if Democrats galvanized young voters, minorities and people moving in from other states. She raised millions of dollars to organize and register hundreds of thousands of voters in the state — efforts credited with helping Democrat Joe Biden win Georgia.

Republican­s have to catch up, Republican operative Karl Rove told Fox News.

“Let’s not kid ourselves: This is a real race,” said Rove, who is leading fundraisin­g efforts for the runoffs.

The National Republican Senatorial Committee expects to have 1,000 staffers on the ground in Georgia. For comparison, the Republican National Committee had a total of 3,000 paid field staff across the whole country during the presidenti­al race.

Democrats carry their own baggage into the runoff. In many parts of the country, they limited face- to- face campaignin­g ahead of the Nov. 3 election because of the pandemic, arguing that was the responsibl­e thing to do. But that decision was second- guessed in places such as Florida.

The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee plans to spend millions on voter registrati­on and turnout efforts.

Outside groups are also hitting the ground, and the in-person appeals will be supplement­ed with a fusillade of phone calls, text messages, mailers and ads aimed at boosting turnout for the races pitting Republican Sen. David Perdue against Democrat Jon Ossoff and Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler against Democrat Raphael Warnock.

Turnout tends to drop precipitou­sly in runoff contests in Georgia. And activists fear there might be even more of a falloff this time, when the excitement of the Trump-Biden race is over. So getting voters to come back to the polls becomes more of a focus than “trying to find new voters or win over voters who voted for your opponent,” said Charles Bullock, an expert on Southern politics at the University of Georgia.

Historical­ly, that dropoff has disproport­ionately affected Democrats, so the party faces strong headwinds heading into January. The Republican candidate has beaten the Democrat in seven out of eight runoff elections since 1992, including two U.S. Senate races.

Democrats have reason for optimism after Biden’s win, but his margin of victory was tiny — less than 13,000 votes of nearly 5 million cast — and it’s been 20 years since the state elected a Democrat to the U.S. Senate.

But groups whose efforts tend to favor Democrats are charged. On Friday, representa­tives of the Neighborho­od Assistance Corporatio­n of America went door to door in a neighborho­od just outside Atlanta encouragin­g people to vote for Ossoff and Warnock.

“If we don’t get those two seats in Congress, everything we did to flip Georgia blue is not going to help us,” Phyllis Morrow told a couple that pulled over in their car.

The African Methodist Episcopal Church in Georgia, which has more than 150,000 parishione­rs in the state, is asking members to call eligible voters in their congregati­ons, encourage them to vote early and assist with rides if they need help getting to the polls on Jan. 5.

Bishop Reginald T. Jackson said Black voters are excited and “realize the eyes of the nation are on Georgia.”

“They know people are going to be looking to see whether or not Blacks turn out,” he said.

“If we don’t get those two seats in Congress, everything we did to flip Georgia blue is not going to help us.”

– PHYLLIS MORROW

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States