Lodi News-Sentinel

Kemp declares victory in Georgia governor race

- By Greg Bluestein and Tia Mitchell

ATLANTA — Republican Brian Kemp’s campaign declared victory Wednesday in the Georgia gubernator­ial race after election returns showed he maintained a slim majority over Democrat Stacey Abrams with nearly all precincts reporting.

Abrams, meanwhile, said she wouldn’t concede the race until all ballots are counted, and her campaign started preparing for what could be a lengthy battle in the courtroom and in the media over the outcome of the nationally watched race.

Both the bitter rivals largely retreated from public view after an exhausting Election Day, but their campaign deputies held dueling teleconfer­ences trying to shape the narrative of the tense competitio­n.

Expressing confidence his lead at the ballot box was insurmount­able, Kemp moved swiftly to begin the transition to the state’s top office. He set up an event Thursday with Gov. Nathan Deal, the twoterm Republican who endorsed him.

“This election is over. The votes have been counted,” said Austin Chambers, a Kemp adviser. “And the results are clear: Brian Kemp is the governor-elect.”

Abrams has urged supporters to prepare for a Dec. 4 runoff, which would be required if neither candidate holds a majority of the vote when the counting ends. The latest vote tally had Kemp nearly 65,000 votes ahead of Abrams — and about 30,000 votes over the 50 percent threshold.

In an early-morning memo and a teleconfer­ence a few hours later, Abrams’ aides tried to outline a path to avoid a defeat even as they criticized Kemp for remaining in his role as secretary of state while he ran for governor.

Abrams campaign manager Lauren Groh-Wargo said the Democrat would benefit from thousands of provisiona­l ballots cast by voters who ran into difficulti­es at polling sites, and the possibilit­y that mail-in votes were delayed by complicati­ons related to Hurricane Michael.

“Overall, we feel that the onus is on our campaign to fight for fairness, for a fair election,” Groh-Wargo said. “And we’re up against an unfair system where our own opponent is overseeing his election.”

As some of the final returns trickled in, Kemp’s campaign aggressive­ly made the case to reporters that it’s mathematic­ally impossible for Abrams to force the race into overtime.

Glen Bolger, the Republican’s pollster, said there were about 3,000 absentee ballots still pending and an estimated 22,000 provisiona­l ballots. He also said he was unaware of ballots being delayed due to the hurricane. Even if all those outstandin­g votes swung to Abrams, Bolger said, Kemp still finishes above 50 percent with room to spare.

“What they do moving forward doesn’t matter,” Chambers said of Abrams. “Because Brian Kemp has secured this victory. At this point, Stacey should do what’s right for Georgia and unite behind Brian. This election is over, and nothing they do is going to change that.”

The two candidates have fought over voting rights and ballot access since long before they were candidates for governor, and it seems fitting — if awkward — that yet another clash over Kemp’s oversight of elections threatens to consume the days after the election.

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