Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Abrams ends Georgia governor bid, says she’ll file lawsuit

- By Bill Barrow and Kate Brumback

ATLANTA >> Democrat Stacey Abrams ended 10 days of post-election drama in Georgia’s closely watched and even more closely contested race for governor Friday, acknowledg­ing Republican Brian Kemp as the victor while defiantly refusing to concede to the man she blamed for “gross mismanagem­ent” of a bitterly fought election.

The speech Abrams delivered at her campaign headquarte­rs Friday evening marked the close of the 44-year-old attorney and former lawmaker’s unsuccessf­ul attempt to make history as America’s first black woman governor. Since Election Day her campaign fought on, insisting efforts to suppress turnout had left thousands of ballots uncounted that otherwise could erode Kemp’s lead and force a runoff election.

Kemp, the 55-year-old businessma­n who oversaw the election as Georgia’s secretary of state, will keep the governor’s office in GOP hands as the state’s third Republican governor since Reconstruc­tion. He responded to Abrams ending her campaign by calling for unity and praising his opponent’s “passion, hard work, and commitment to public service.”

The kind words came just days after Kemp’s campaign spokesman derided Abrams’ efforts to have contested ballots counted as a “disgrace to democracy.”

Abrams made no such retreat from her criticisms of Kemp, saying she refused “to say nice things and accept my fate.” Instead, she announced plans to file a federal lawsuit to challenge the way Georgia’s elections are run. She accused Kemp of using the secretary of state’s office to aggressive­ly purge the rolls of inactive voters, enforce an “exact match” policy for checking voters’ identities that left thousands of registrati­ons in limbo and other measures to tile the outcome in his favor.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States