Chattanooga Times Free Press

Republican Kelvin King to challenge Warnock in 2022 Senate contest

- BY GREG BLUESTEIN

ATLANTA — A Republican owner of a metro Atlanta constructi­on company entered the race for U.S. Senate on Monday with an attack on “cancel culture” and a pledge to run against Democratic incumbent Raphael Warnock as a business-minded outsider.

Kelvin King becomes one of the first in a likely wave of Republican­s to challenge Warnock, the pastor of Atlanta’s Ebenezer Baptist Church who is up for full six-year term in 2022 after narrowly winning a January special election runoff.

King was one of former President Donald Trump’s most prominent Black supporters in Georgia and founded a political outreach group called Speak Georgia with his wife Janelle King, a conservati­ve pundit and operative.

In a statement, he attacked Warnock’s “divisive far left representa­tion” and said Georgia is ground zero for the GOP push to recapture the Senate, which flipped in January with the victories of Warnock and fellow Democrat Jon Ossoff.

“Career politician­s, woke corporatio­ns, and the cancel culture are all empowered while our families and small businesses are left to pay the price,” he said. “As the GOP, we have to decide right now if we are knocked down or knocked out.”

Long rumored to run, King is aiming to take advantage of the unsettled field in the wideopen GOP contest against Warnock. But he may soon have plenty more company.

Veteran Navy SEAL Latham Saddler, a banking executive and former White House fellow, recently filed paperwork to run.

Former U.S. Rep. Doug Collins is “seriously” considerin­g a bid, as is former U.S. Sen. Kelly Loeffler and U.S. Rep. Buddy Carter. The circling of the wagons around the election law could also lift Attorney General Chris Carr, who has vowed to defend the overhaul in court.

And Trump has pressured University of Georgia football legend Herschel Walker to run, though he has lived for years in Texas.

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