Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

President’s election attacks unsettle Georgia races

Thanks to Trump, Republican­s find themselves divided as the crucial Senate runoffs draw near.

- By David Lauter

WASHINGTON — Just over three weeks from now, voters in Georgia will choose the state’s two senators and, with that vote, decide which party will have a majority in the chamber.

Just maybe, by then the rest of the Republican­s in the Senate will have publicly admitted that President Trump lost the November election. But that concession, which should be something Americans could take for granted, no longer comes guaranteed.

Trump’s open defiance of the election result, which many Republican­s initially brushed off as nothing more than a temper tantrum, has turned far grimmer, more serious and longer lasting, thanks in large part to Republican officials who have enabled him.

On Monday, the members of the electoral college will meet in their state capitals and formally ratify Joe Biden’s victory, but it’s no longer clear that even that will end the effort to subvert the election. Some Trump supporters in the House say they plan to challenge the result when Congress meets on Jan. 6, the day after the Georgia runoff.

The drive to overturn the election by ginning up groundless claims of fraud has split the GOP. The fault line showed plainly last week as 17 Republican state attorneys general — many of them ambitious for higher office — several Republican senators and 106 GOP members of the House publicly backed a long-shot effort by Texas Atty. Gen. Ken Paxton to have the Supreme Court throw out the election results from Georgia and three other states Biden won.

A few Republican elected officials, including the attorneys general of Georgia and Ohio, publicly opposed the Texas suit, which the Supreme Court rejected Friday night. Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska said Friday she was “surprised” and “really disappoint­ed” by the degree of support the move had received from her fellow Republican­s. Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) called the idea of further challenges to Biden’s victory “madness.”

Many more, however, stood uneasily on the sidelines, trying to avoid taking a position.

The consequenc­es of that split in the GOP have played out most dramatical­ly in Georgia — one of the two states that gave Biden his closest victories. Trump’s claims have pitted his ardent supporters, including Sens. Kelly Loeff ler and David Perdue, against those who oversaw the election, including Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger and his predecesso­r in that job, Gov. Brian Kemp, whom Trump has publicly denounced.

That intraparty fight has added still more uncertaint­y to a double runoff election that remains impossible to predict.

Only a few things can be said for sure about the Jan. 5 runoff election that pits Perdue against Jon Ossoff and Loeffler against the Rev. Raphael Warnock. The most important is that fewer people will vote in a special election a few days after New Year’s than the roughly 5 million who cast ballots in the presidenti­al contest.

It’s a cliche of political reporting that election results depend on turnout. In truth, most elections depend on a mix of persuading swing voters and mobilizing your own supporters. In this case, however, the cliche is true: After a year of nonstop campaignin­g, the number of persuadabl­e swing voters is almost surely tiny. Victory will go to the side that does the best job of minimizing the drop-off from November.

In that first round, Perdue ran almost exactly even with Trump statewide, getting slightly more votes than the president in the Atlanta suburbs, slightly fewer in the extremely pro-Trump counties in the state’s northweste­rn corner. Ossoff, by contrast, ran nearly 100,000 votes behind Biden. A significan­t chunk of Biden’s voters appear to have taken part in the presidenti­al contest but didn’t fill out the rest of their ballot, a fairly common occurrence in elections.

The pattern in the Loeffler-Warnock race is more complicate­d since they’re running in a special election to fill a vacancy. The November election in their case was a free-for-all featuring multiple candidates from each party. Biden, however, did a bit better than all the Democratic candidates combined.

So the Republican­s, especially Perdue, start out with a bit of an advantage. But several big factors could erase that edge, and Trump plays a large role in each of them:

Start with Black voters, who were key to Biden’s victory.

Ossoff ran most seriously behind Biden in Atlanta and parts of south Georgia, a pattern that suggests he didn’t do as well as he needed to among Black Georgians. That’s a problem he encountere­d in 2017 when he narrowly lost a special election to fill a seat in the House.

The history of Georgia runoffs might suggest that problem would get worse in January: Turnout among Black voters often has declined significan­tly in the state’s runoff elections.

But Warnock’s presence on the ballot — and the prospect of his becoming the first Black senator from Georgia — could help keep Black voter turnout high, helping both Democratic candidates.

So could Trump. Many Democratic strategist­s feared that their party’s voters, many of whom were heavily motivated to defeat Trump, might lose interest in voting once he lost his reelection bid. But Trump’s refusal to accept the results and his attacks on the legitimacy of the vote have kept Democratic motivation high.

In particular, Trump and his chief lawyer, former New York Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani, have made race a key element of their claims. They’ve repeatedly asserted that Trump had the election stolen from him by corruption in cities with large Black communitie­s, such as Detroit, Philadelph­ia and Atlanta, even though the biggest swings against Trump came in suburban areas. Those barely veiled attacks on the legitimacy of voting by Black Americans could act as a powerful mobilizing force.

At the same time, Trump’s attacks on the election have kept fervor high among his strongest supporters. Even though many of them believe the election was fraudulent, there’s little evidence that they’ll pass up a chance to vote in the runoff.

But the strife might hurt Loeffler and Perdue among a small, but important, slice of voters — traditiona­l Republican­s who voted for Biden in November because they couldn’t stomach Trump, but who weren’t ready to cast a vote for a Democratic Senate candidate.

Just as the videotaped killing of George Floyd this year caused a significan­t number of white Americans to reassess their reluctance to believe what Black Americans have long told them about systemic racism, Trump’s virulent, racebased attacks on the election might cause some white Georgians to reconsider their doubts about what Stacey Abrams and other Black leaders in Georgia have long said about race bias in the state’s elections.

Moreover, as Georgia’s Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan, a Republican, said in an interview Thursday with Judy Woodruff on PBS’ “Newshour,” the attacks on the electoral process may have seriously damaged the party’s image with less partisan voters.

“A small group of folks have been willing to put out misinforma­tion based on fractions or slivers of the facts or truth and spun it out there to large crowds and said, ‘Hey, look, we don’t like the outcome of this election, so we’re going to stir the pot,’” Duncan said.

At some point, he added, Trump’s supporters will start to realize they’ve been “duped.”

“It’s not American. It’s not democracy,” he said. “This is not our finest moment, and my hope is that we quickly move past this.”

 ?? Brynn Anderson Associated Press ?? GEORGIA Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger, a Republican, has come under attack from President Trump and the state’s two GOP senators facing runoffs.
Brynn Anderson Associated Press GEORGIA Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger, a Republican, has come under attack from President Trump and the state’s two GOP senators facing runoffs.

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