Chattanooga Times Free Press

David Perdue challenges fundraisin­g law

- BY KATE BRUMBACK

ATLANTA — Georgia gubernator­ial candidate David Perdue and his campaign are challengin­g a new state law that they say gives incumbent Gov. Brian Kemp a huge and unfair fundraisin­g and spending advantage in the Republican primary.

The law passed by state legislator­s last year and signed by Kemp allows certain top elected officials, including the governor, and party nominees, to create “leadership committees” that can raise campaign funds without limits, including during a legislativ­e session. In a federal lawsuit filed Thursday in Atlanta, Perdue and his campaign allege that the law creates “an uneven election playing field” and ask a judge to declare it unconstitu­tional.

Under Georgia law, candidates for statewide office cannot collect more than $7,600 from an individual donor for a primary or general election and $4,500 for a runoff election. But leadership committees aren’t bound by those limits.

The new law allows for leadership committees controlled by the governor, lieutenant governor, a political party’s nominee for governor or lieutenant governor, and by the Republican and Democratic caucuses in the state House and Senate.

Kemp’s campaign created the Georgians First Leadership Committee in July, just after the law took effect. In the month since Perdue declared his candidacy, Kemp has already spent more than $1 million on ads attacking him, the lawsuit says.

The new law has allowed Kemp to create “a de facto second campaign committee” that disadvanta­ges Perdue, the lawsuit says.

“When he thought no one was watching, Kemp gave himself power to raise unlimited campaign funds, while challenger­s have to play by different rules,” Perdue tweeted Friday. “Only a 20-year career politician like Kemp would create an unfair advantage for his own self-preservati­on.”

Kemp committee spokesman Cody Hall said, “David Perdue’s record of shady stock deals makes clear that he really doesn’t like playing by the rules, so this laughable lawsuit shouldn’t surprise anyone.”

The new law was generally supported by Republican­s and opposed by Democrats. Democrats argued the legislatio­n would increase the influence of money interests in Georgia politics since leadership committees can accept contributi­ons during the legislativ­e session, unlike state elected officials.

State Sen. Elena Parent, Democratic Caucus chair, tweeted Thursday: “One thing I agree with Perdue on: the corrupt ‘leadership committee’ slush fund law is bad.”

The law infringes on Perdue’s constituti­onal rights to free speech and equal protection, the lawsuit says. It asks a judge to declare the new law unconstitu­tional and to prohibit any activity by a gubernator­ial leadership committee establishe­d under the law. It also asks the judge to order the state Government Transparen­cy and Campaign Finance Commission to revoke Kemp’s committee’s registrati­on, order the refunding of all contributi­ons made to it and to prohibit it from spending money to support Kemp’s re-election.

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David Perdue

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