Chattanooga Times Free Press

Georgia Lt. Gov. unlikely to run again after taking on Trump

- BEN NADLER

ATLANTA — Georgia’s lieutenant governor is unlikely to run for a second term, his chief of staff said Thursday, after he was among the most high-profile Republican­s to openly contradict former President Donald Trump’s false claims about fraud in the November election.

Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan may instead take on a greater role with GOP 2.0, a group he co-founded that is trying to help shape the party’s path forward in the post-Trump era, said Duncan’s chief of staff, John Porter.

Duncan has yet to make a final decision, Porter said.

Speaking out against Trump has given Duncan a national platform and won plaudits from moderates and even some Democrats. But it has also made him a target among the conservati­ve base of the Republican Party, with some vowing to back a primary challenger against him.

Elected in 2018, Duncan became one of the first and most prominent Republican­s in Georgia to break with Trump and the state Republican Party by pushing back on Trump’s baseless claims about election fraud in a series of interviews on national television. Duncan said

misinforma­tion spread by Trump would hurt Republican­s’ chances in two U.S. Senate runoffs held in January, which Democrats went on to sweep, giving them control of the chamber.

Duncan has also broken with other Republican­s over changes to Georgia’s election laws that sprang from Trump’s claims. In an interview with CNN on Wednesday, Duncan criticized a sweeping new election bill signed into law last month, calling parts of it “punitive.”

The law adds restrictio­ns to mail voting, strips the secretary of state from being chair of the state election board and gives the GOP-controlled board the ability to remove and

replace local election officials, among many other provisions.

“This is really the fallout from the 10 weeks of misinforma­tion that flew in from former President Donald Trump,” Duncan said.

In early March, Duncan refused to preside over a state Senate debate on a GOP-backed proposal that would have severely limited who can vote absentee by mail, instead watching it on a TV in his office. The provision was not included in the final version of the bill that became law.

Trump lost Georgia’s presidenti­al contest to Democrat Joe Biden by more than 12,000 votes but quickly mounted a campaign to overturn the results.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA AP ?? Georgia Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan speaks at a news conference at the Georgia State Capitol in Atlanta on March 22. Duncan likely won’t run for a second term, his chief of staff said.
ALYSSA POINTER/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA AP Georgia Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan speaks at a news conference at the Georgia State Capitol in Atlanta on March 22. Duncan likely won’t run for a second term, his chief of staff said.

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