Los Angeles Times

California­ns volunteer in Georgia runoffs

Some canvass from home, others on the ground, for Jan. 5 races to decide which party controls U. S. Senate.

- By Brian Contreras

From her home in Daly City, Calif., Judith Bolker is working to f lip Georgia blue.

The 69- year- old calls voters, urging them to vote for Jon Ossoff and the Rev. Raphael Warnock, the two Democrats seeking to topple Republican senators in the Peach State’s Jan. 5 runoff elections.

Bolker writes postcards and sends texts to Georgia voters of color for Reclaim Our Vote, a nonpartisa­n project focused on voter suppressio­n. She also f inds time to lead phone banks for the progressiv­e organizing group Swing Left.

Bolker’s volunteeri­ng has the intensity of a full- time job. It can last from 8 a. m. to 11 p. m., she said, meals and exercise breaks notwithsta­nding. And she’s doing it from a spare bedroom over 2,000 miles from Atlanta.

“Some people have called [ it] ‘ canvassing from your couch,’ ” Bolker said.

With control of the Senate hinging on the outcome of the runoffs that pit Ossoff and Warnock against Republican Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeff ler, the Georgia races have attracted national attention, attracting a f lood of out- ofstate volunteers.

Among those volunteers are California­ns like Bolker who — in a different, pandemic- free year — might have traveled to Georgia to help the Democrats or Republican­s directly.

Although COVID- 19 limits door- knocking and other in- person outreach, the volunteers say, they haven’t felt too hampered by being forced to work from their couches.

West Coast Democrats and liberals appear to be leading the charge in virtual campaignin­g — sending postcards, making calls, hosting Zoom meetings — and in grass- roots donations.

Republican­s are also hard at work, some from home and others on the ground, pushing a message with a homegrown twist: Avoid the California pitfalls that we know all too well.

“The skyrocketi­ng cost of living, the homelessne­ss crisis, the opioid crisis.… Do not let what happened in California happen to Georgia,” said Krista Pittman, the Republican National Committee’s California state director during the general election, summarizin­g the California GOP’s pitch to Georgia voters.

It’s a tricky line to walk. Republican­s “want to draw the message that … we don’t want to bring California values to Georgia,” GOP strategist Chip Lake said — but it’s hard for campaigns on either side to turn down free labor.

“I know that there are boots on the ground here from other states helping our candidates, meaning Republican candidates; but I also think there’s just as many, if not more, from the other side,” Lake said. “It’s a delicate balance, but it’s one you’ve got to play.”

Volunteeri­ng from afar is a unique experience: sometimes frustratin­g, sometimes exhilarati­ng.

Debbie Raucher, who has been working the phones from Oakland, recalled talking with an older man during a call with Swing Left’s East Bay branch.

The man had his absentee ballot but didn’t know where to deliver it. From the other side of the country, Raucher helped him out.

“I gave him the address, and his wife was there as well; I could hear her in the background,” said Raucher, 51. “He was like, ‘ Oh, OK,’ whatever it was, ‘ 123 Fourth St. at the library.’ And [ his wife] was like: ‘ Oh, yeah, I know where that is. I’ve seen that; it’s in the lobby.’ … He seemed like he needed some support in figuring out exactly how to get from Point A to Point B.”

Bolker, the Daly City political activist, hears about these small but meaningful interactio­ns all the time during debriefs she runs after each shift at the virtual phone bank.

One caller reached a pastor, and they connected over Warnock’s idea that “a vote is a prayer for the future.”

Another wound up talking to a mother who hadn’t realized her child would be turning 18 in time to vote. With a day to go before the registrati­on deadline, the volunteer successful­ly walked the family through registerin­g the teen.

The pandemic isn’t keeping all volunteers away. Two weeks after the general election, the Republican National Committee told Pittman, a 24- year- old Riverside native, to hop on a plane and head to Georgia.

Before the holidays, Pittman and f ive California Republican Party employees were stationed in a “very rural,” largely uncanvasse­d part of the state, knocking on doors in support of Loeff ler and Perdue — albeit with masks on and from six feet away, Pittman said.

Recently, while Pittman was knocking on doors in a neighborho­od decked out in Christmas lights and wreaths, a woman noticed that she didn’t have a Southern accent and asked where she was from.

Standing on the stoop, Pittman said she’d come from California; the woman said some of her friends had been getting letters about the election from California Democrats, and Pittman was pleased to let her know that California Republican­s were doing the same thing.

“They’re just so shocked that other outside folks, such as myself from California, and then the California Dems, are participat­ing in the election,” Pittman said. “It’s an all- hands- on- deck effort, that even people on the other side of the country ... are sending postcards to voters.”

It’s unclear how much time California­ns are spending on the Georgia runoffs — but the money they’re spending is substantia­l.

A FiveThirty­Eight analysis found that between Nov. 4 and Nov. 23, the Democratic grass- roots fundraisin­g platform ActBlue raised $ 25.8 million from California­ns supporting Warnock and Ossoff.

The equivalent Republican platform WinRed raised $ 6.8 million from California­ns supporting Loeff ler and Perdue.

Even if California­ns are sometimes cast as meddlesome outsiders, Bolker, Raucher and Pittman say Georgians have been exceedingl­y friendly, even after weeks of being hounded by campaign workers.

“The majority are appreciati­ve,” Raucher said. “It’s such a great feeling when I’ve called somebody and given them informatio­n that they did not have that’s going to allow them to vote.”

Bridging the California-Georgia divide can be complicate­d. Sometimes, Raucher said, it feels as though there’s very little differenti­ating her from the Georgians on the other end of the line; at other times, they feel a world away.

“When you talk to a real person, you’re reminded that they’re a real person,” she said “Despite how divided we are, we probably have more in common than we have difference­s.”

But people at her phone banks have also had conversati­ons with Republican­s who “believe with all their heart of hearts” that the November election was fraudulent or antifa is “coming to get” them.

“There’s just a lot of people who have received their informatio­n from sources that are not providing accurate informatio­n, and so it’s a big challenge,” she said. “How do you come back from that?”

 ?? Elijah Nouvelage Getty I mages ?? A VOLUNTEER takes a photo Oct. 3 with Senate candidates Jon Ossoff, left, and the Rev. Raphael Warnock in Lithonia, Ga. Ossoff and Warnock are running to unseat Republican­s David Perdue and Kelly Loeff ler.
Elijah Nouvelage Getty I mages A VOLUNTEER takes a photo Oct. 3 with Senate candidates Jon Ossoff, left, and the Rev. Raphael Warnock in Lithonia, Ga. Ossoff and Warnock are running to unseat Republican­s David Perdue and Kelly Loeff ler.

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