Miami Herald (Sunday)

Georgia runoffs at center of battle for U.S. Senate

- BY DAVID CATANESE AND FRANCESCA CHAMBERS dcatanese@mcclatchyd­c.com fchambers@mcclatchyd­c.com

WASHINGTON

Georgia — the state that produced the closest finish of the 2020 presidenti­al election — is about to endure an unpreceden­ted political encore that will decide control of the U.S.

Senate.

The runoff campaigns for both of the state’s Senate seats are set to attract hundreds of millions of dollars in spending, a slew of national figures from both parties and notoriety that will cement Georgia’s status as a premiere battlegrou­nd for years to come.

One race pits first-term Republican Sen. David

Perdue against Democratic challenger Jon Ossoff, who ran unsuccessf­ully in a special U.S. House election in the state three years ago. The other features Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler versus Rev. Raphael Warnock, a Democrat who is attempting to become the state’s first African-American senator.

The outcomes are likely to prove more significan­t than the eventual winner of Georgia’s 16 Electoral College votes, which Democrat

Joe Biden was awarded by media organizati­ons pending a recount of his 14,000vote lead over President Donald Trump.

“Most of us insiders are fielding questions about ‘How can I come in to help?’ and ‘What can I do?’ from Andrew Yang on down to friends from college,” said Wendy Davis, a Democratic National Committee member from Rome, referring to the former

A pair of runoff elections in Georgia will decide which party controls the Senate and test Republican­s and Democrats after the close 2020 presidenti­al race.

2020 Democratic presidenti­al candidate who said in a tweet he was moving to Georgia. “We literally haven’t finished counting from last week.”

But both sides know they need to regroup quickly in order to seize control of the messaging war.

Republican­s are planning to present the races as key to keeping control of the U.S. Senate and as a critical check on the Democratic­run administra­tion and the House of Representa­tives. Democrats will stress to their voters that they need to prevent the Senate from staying in Republican hands so that Biden can move his agenda forward.

Jack Kingston, a former Republican congressma­n from Georgia, said the argument for the slice of GOP-leaning voters who abandoned Trump is straightfo­rward.

“I think voters understand the benefits of divided government, particular­ly when you have a fear of the radical element of the Democrat party,” he said. “When you’re looking at the Elizabeth Warrens, and the Bernie Sanders and the AOCs, you’re fearful. It’s, ‘I’ve got to tap the brakes.’ ”

That messaging effort is somewhat complicate­d by the president’s nationwide legal efforts and refusal to concede the race to Biden. On Monday, both Perdue and Loeffler stunned even some Republican­s by calling on the state’s GOP secretary of state to resign due to what they called his failure “to deliver honest and transparen­t elections.”

Democrats, meanwhile, are attempting to craft a case that appeals to voters’ frustratio­n with continued Washington gridlock, highlighti­ng ideas popular with both parties, including improving health care access during a festering pandemic and infrastruc­ture modernizat­ion. Party strategist­s estimate they’ll need to raise close to $200 million to successful­ly compete as well as build on the work Fair Fight founder and former Georgia House of Representa­tives minority leader Stacey Abrams has done registerin­g 800,000 new voters since 2018.

If Democrats can swipe both seats on Jan. 5 it would produce a 50-50 tie in the Senate, allowing the vice president, which will be Kamala Harris, to cast tiebreakin­g votes.

But the party faces historical headwinds in Georgia runoffs where Republican­s usually prevail.

Perdue, who slightly outperform­ed the president’s vote total, received about 90,000 more votes than Ossoff in the first round of voting. And Republican­s expect the vast majority of Republican

Rep. Doug Collins’ voters to move their support to Loeffler over Warnock, who employed a lightheart­ed approach in his first TV advertisem­ent to warn voters of the harsh attacks he would face.

Democrats plan to brand Loeffler as extreme, highlighti­ng an endorsemen­t from a QAnon supporting congresswo­man-elect and an advertisem­ent in the primary in which Loeffler cast herself as more conservati­ve than Atilla the Hun.

Loeffler’s spokesman Stephen Lawson said that she disavows QAnon and will be running as a political outsider and businesswo­man who has created jobs and opportunit­ies and delivered results in her short time in the Senate.

The senator, who has been in office for less than a year after being appointed to the seat to fill a vacancy, has the urgent task of consolidat­ing Republican support after a divisive primary against Collins. It was not immediatel­y clear how involved Collins would be in the runoff election after losing to Loeffler this month. He is currently overseeing Trump’s recount team in the state.

Lynn Westmorela­nd, a former GOP representa­tive from Georgia, said that he believed that Republican­s would coalesce around Loeffler given the dynamics of the Senate battle.

“I’m going to be out there campaignin­g hard for David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler,” said Westmorela­nd, who was critical of Loeffler’s candidacy during the primary. “We can’t lose the Senate.”

Also unclear was how involved Trump and Biden would be in the Senate races. Biden is trying to put together his Cabinet and choose top level officials for his administra­tion in preparatio­n for taking over the White House in January. Trump is legally contesting the outcome of the election in several states.

“The Republican­s’ strongest turnout machine is President Trump. Nothing else comes close to the energy and enthusiasm that he drives with the Republican base,” said Brian Robinson, a communicat­ions consultant who was an aide to former Republican Gov. Nathan Deal. “And if he goes out and tells his voters that it’s important that we keep Loeffler and Perdue in the Senate, that’s the Good Housekeepi­ng seal of approval for many in the Republican base who are and will remain loyal to him and follow what he says.”

The White House referred questions about Trump’s potential political activity to his campaign, which did not respond to a request for comment.

Jaclyn Rothenberg, a spokeswoma­n for Biden’s campaign in Georgia, said in a statement that voters in the state — which is in the throes of a recount — made it clear that they “are ready to usher in new leadership up and down the ballot” when they elected a Democratic presidenti­al ticket.

Biden has not said whether he or Harris will visit Georgia to rally their supporters to vote for the two Democrats before the Jan. 5 runoff election. But after watching the GOP’s turnout surge last week, some Democrats are urging a return to door-knocking and other campaign activities that were curtailed during the pandemic.

“Looking at how Republican­s fared, I’m convinced that we have to seriously consider a return to inperson campaignin­g — safely and creatively — in order to generate the excitement necessary to score another statewide victory,” said Howard Franklin, an Atlanta-based Democratic consultant.

Republican­s largely left Warnock alone in the jungle primary, when their top concern was the fight between the two GOP lawmakers competing. But they said that they would be working in the coming weeks to define Warnock as more progressiv­e than Abrams.

Loeffler’s spokesman said sermons Warnock delivered contained anti-police messages and invoked the Democrat’s defense of controvers­ial Chicago pastor Jeremiah Wright. Lawson also referred to a eulogy that Warnock delivered at the funeral of Troy Davis, an African American man convicted of murdering a police officer in Georgia. Davis said he was innocent and appealed his conviction. He was executed in 2011 over the objections of clergy and activists.

Terrence Clark, a spokesman for Warnock, said in a statement that the Democratic candidate had “worked to root out hate and division throughout his life and made clear he deplores any form of discrimina­tion or anti-Semitism.”

Republican­s have tended to fare better in runoffs in Georgia, when the number of people who come out to vote is often lower than in regular elections. But those elections, including one for Congress that Ossoff lost to Republican Karen Handel in 2017, were dissimilar to the Senate runoffs now.

Chapman Rackaway, a political science professor at the University of West Georgia, noted the rarity of having two Senate seats on the ballot at one time in any state and said the situation offers little existing data to base prediction­s on.

 ?? JOHN BAZEMORE AP ?? Republican incumbent, U.S. Sen. David Perdue.
JOHN BAZEMORE AP Republican incumbent, U.S. Sen. David Perdue.
 ?? JOHN BAZEMORE AP ?? Democratic challenger Jon Ossoff.
JOHN BAZEMORE AP Democratic challenger Jon Ossoff.

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