Chattanooga Times Free Press

Gov. Kemp aims to boost Walker in Senate runoff

- BY GREG BLUESTEIN

ATLANTA — Gov. Brian Kemp on Saturday campaigned for the first time with Republican U.S. Senate hopeful Herschel Walker, the most significan­t effort yet to persuade voters who backed both the governor and Democratic U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock to return to the GOP fold for the runoff.

“We cannot rest on our laurels here, everyone,” Kemp said to a crowd of hundreds outside a Smyrna gun store that plays hosts to many GOP rallies. “We have got more wood to chop.”

Those split-ticket voters the governor is targeting played the most decisive role in this month’s election, and they could also determine the Dec. 6 runoff in the last U.S. Senate battle of the 2022 election cycle — and a final chance for Republican­s to pick up a coveted seat after an underwhelm­ing midterm.

About 200,000 Georgians voted for Kemp but not Walker, whose campaign has been plagued by controvers­y. While Kemp and other statewide Republican­s easily prevailed, Walker trailed Warnock by 35,000 votes. A four-week runoff was required when neither won a majority of the vote.

Now both candidates are taking steps to woo those swing voters. Warnock launched TV ads that highlight a Republican who said she was “proud” to back both Kemp and Warnock. And Democrats held a nearby event Saturday featuring other wavering Republican­s.

“Our governor and Sen. Warnock are good men who I can trust to represent Georgia and lead our state well. But I can’t say the same about Herschel Walker,” said Heidi Moriarty of Atlanta. “His well-documented pattern of lies and disturbing behavior make it clear that he’s wrong for our state.”

Republican­s hope Kemp is a powerful closing messenger for Walker now that he can no longer make a case that Senate control is on the line, depriving the GOP of one of its most potent arguments to skeptical voters.

With victories in Arizona and Nevada last weekend, Democrats have already clinched 50 seats in the Senate. Vice President Kamala Harris’ tie-breaking vote guarantees them a majority.

“Kemp won in a big way and he’s got momentum now,” said Jackie Kidd, who was among the large crowd gathered in the parking lot of Adventure Outdoors. “Now it’s just about getting people back to vote in Christmas season. And Kemp might be the most popular Republican in Georgia.”

The tag-team rally comes as Republican­s fret about recent bizarre statements from Walker, including a rant about vampires that he inserted into his stump speech and his allegation that Warnock didn’t “keep” his children — leading to a sharp comeback from the Democrat.

Kemp steered the conversati­on back to the issue that helped him win his November rematch against Democrat Stacey Abrams: an effort to cast the GOP as the party working to blunt the effect of decades-high inflation on President Joe Biden’s watch.

“He will go fight for those values that we believe in here in our state. And that’s why it’s time to retire Raphael Warnock,” Kemp said, adding: “I know that Herschel Walker will do like we’ve done in Georgia and be fiscally conservati­ve and cut runaway spending.”

Walker, who until recently avoided mention of Kemp on the campaign trail, framed himself as a faithful political partner to the governor at Saturday’s rally.

“We need someone in Washington that’s going to row the boat with Gov. Kemp. And we’ve got to row in the same direction,” said Walker, pivoting to an attack on his Democratic opponent. “What he’s been doing is rowing against Gov. Kemp, so that’s the reason why on the federal level we’re not getting anything done.”

Speaking to canvassers in Sandy Springs, Warnock shrugged off the Kemp rally and talked of his work across party lines — and his rival’s appearance­s with polarizing GOP figures such as Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene.

“My opponent seems to be leaning in on the politics of division, which is why he has spent so much time campaignin­g with some of the most divisive members of Congress,” he said.

“I would like to fashion my tenure and my work in the order of two men that I admire greatly. One is John Lewis and the other is Johnny Isakson, and you never had any doubt about the depth of their commitment to the work and their love for Georgia. That’s the type of senator that I intend to be.”

There’s a strategic reason Republican­s picked Atlanta’s suburbs for the rally, as Walker lagged far behind Kemp’s vote totals in the bedroom communitie­s circling the city.

 ?? AP PHOTO/BILL BARROW ?? Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp campaigns alongside Senate candidate Herschel Walker on Saturday in Smyrna, Ga.
AP PHOTO/BILL BARROW Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp campaigns alongside Senate candidate Herschel Walker on Saturday in Smyrna, Ga.

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