Los Angeles Times

Key race in Georgia heads for runoff

Democratic neophyte seeking a House seat is far ahead of GOP rivals in a vote seen as referendum on Trump.

- By Cathleen Decker and Jenny Jarvie cathleen.decker @latimes.com Decker reported from Los Angeles and special correspond­ent Jarvie reported from Atlanta.

ATLANTA — Republican­s on Tuesday forced the front-running Democratic candidate for an Atlantaare­a House seat into a runoff, extending until June a congressio­nal contest that has become a nationaliz­ed referendum on President Trump.

With a small percentage of votes uncounted because of a balloting glitch, Jon Ossoff, a 30-year-old former Democratic congressio­nal aide and filmmaker making his first run for public office, easily finished in first place. But he narrowly missed the 50%-plus-one-vote mark that would have given him the seat outright.

Instead he will meet Republican Karen Handel, a former Georgia secretary of state, in the June 20 runoff.

Ossoff had fought for a majority vote with the help of millions of dollars from restive activists, most of them outside the district. The Republican onslaught against him — which included robocalls to voters from Trump — means he now faces a tougher challenge, as GOP voters have the opportunit­y to coalesce around one candidate instead of being split among nearly a dozen.

Still, his finish was remarkable given that the district is strongly Republican in registrati­on. Until February, the seat was held by Trump’s new Health and Human Services secretary, Tom Price.

In remarks delivered while vote counting was stalled, Ossoff said his standing represente­d a victory, regardless of the runoff.

“We have defied the odds. We have shattered expectatio­ns,” he told a screaming crowd of supporters. “We are changing the world and your voices are going to ring out across this state and across this country. We will be ready to fight on and win in June if it is necessary.”

The fight over Georgia’s 6th Congressio­nal District is a precursor of what is expected to be a huge battle for the House in 2018, assuming that Trump remains unpopular. Republican­s hold a margin of more than 40 House seats at present, and the only opportunit­ies for gains by Democrats rest on flipping seats where voters are somewhat ambivalent about the new president.

Special election races in an off year are unreliable as predictors of elections to follow, but both sides were grasping at Tuesday’s results to generate momentum. The Georgia race is one of four to be contested this spring in districts with vacancies caused by the elevation of incumbents to senior positions in the Trump administra­tion. Republican­s retained a House seat in Kansas last week, although their margin of victory was about 20 percentage points smaller than typical for the conservati­ve area surroundin­g Wichita — a result taken by both parties as a sign of Democratic enthusiasm and GOP discontent.

The northern suburbs of Atlanta loomed as a better shot for Democrats. The district is home to the sort of highly educated voters, many of them women or nonwhite, who had spurned Trump during his presidenti­al run in 2016.

Trump carried the district by less than 2 points, dramatical­ly lower than the margin won by the 2012 Republican nominee, Mitt Romney. Price, in the same election as Trump, won his race by more than 20 points.

The site of the battle also had symbolic value beyond the district’s borders. The 6th District was long represente­d by Newt Gingrich, and served as the incubator for the anti-establishm­ent Republican majorities that took hold in the 1990s and helped to propel Trump.

Trump did not endorse a candidate in the crowded Republican field but openly encouraged party members to show up Tuesday and deny Ossoff an outright victory. Since Monday, he delivered six tweets either criticizin­g Ossoff — often misleading­ly — or asking voters to side with a GOP candidate.

“Republican­s must get out today and VOTE in Georgia 6. Force runoff and easy win! Dem Ossoff will raise your taxes-very bad on crime & 2nd A.,” Trump tweeted Tuesday. After midnight East Coast time, he tweeted that the results were a “BIG ‘R’ win” and that he was “Glad to be of help!”

Ossoff argued that the race centered on local values, although the Democratic machinery aiding him made it clear that embarrassi­ng Trump was high on the agenda. National Democratic groups mounted a fierce early-voting push, recorded robocalls from Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez and fanned out across the district to implore voters to deliver a negative verdict on the president.

“I think we need some fresh leadership and some fresh ideas in Congress,” Ossoff told interviewe­r Chuck Todd on MSNBC on Tuesday. He insisted that if elected he would not seek to block Trump but would work with anyone of either party to “represent this district effectivel­y.”

National Republican groups spent millions against Ossoff, but the differing arguments forwarded by the GOP candidates spoke to the disarray that has marked the party’s message. Second-place finisher Handel is a longtime ally of Price’s; she played up that connection and cast herself as independen­t when it came to Trump. Another Republican, businessma­n Bob Gray, declared himself happy to work with Trump.

The ambitions of both parties were evident in the affluent neighborho­ods that dot the district. Unlike in previous years, when Republican­s were expected to easily win, bright blue signs dotted manicured lawns. On Tuesday, campaign banners urging Georgians to “Vote Blue” and “Flip the Sixth” were draped over a bridge on a highway that cuts through the district.

Republican­s in the late days of the campaign focused on the fact that Ossoff was unable to vote for himself, because he does not reside in the district.

Members of Congress are not required to live in their districts, but Ossoff took pains to remind voters that he grew up in the area and has been residing 10 minutes from the district border while his girlfriend finishes medical school.

 ?? Erik S. Lesser European Pressphoto Agency ?? D E M O C R AT Jon Ossoff greets campaign volunteers in Atlanta on Tuesday morning. He later told supporters: “We are changing the world and your voices are going to ring out across this state and across this country.”
Erik S. Lesser European Pressphoto Agency D E M O C R AT Jon Ossoff greets campaign volunteers in Atlanta on Tuesday morning. He later told supporters: “We are changing the world and your voices are going to ring out across this state and across this country.”
 ?? David Goldman Associated Press ?? REPUBLICAN Karen Handel, right, at an election night party in Roswell, Ga. She came in second.
David Goldman Associated Press REPUBLICAN Karen Handel, right, at an election night party in Roswell, Ga. She came in second.

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