Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Biden tells Ga. voters GOP Senate would block his agenda

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ATLANTA — Presidente­lect Joe Biden told Georgia voters on Tuesday they must deliver two Democratic Senate runoff victories in January so his administra­tion can forcefully confront the coronaviru­s pandemic and other national challenges.

Fresh off the Electoral College affirming his victory, Mr. Biden campaigned alongside Jon Ossoff and the Rev. Raphael Warnock as they try to unseat Republican Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler in Jan. 5 runoff elections that will determine which party controls the Senate. The presidente­lect, who won Georgia in November, warned Republican victories would leave him to face the kind of GOP obstructio­n that hampered former President Barack Obama for most of his two terms.

“We can get so much done, so much that can make the lives of the people of Georgia and the whole country so much better,” Mr. Biden said at a drive-in rally outside downtown Atlanta on the second day of early voting. “And we need senators who are willing to do it, for God’s sake.”

Mr. Biden criticized Mr. Perdue and Ms. Loeffler as “roadblocks” for not supporting a sweeping new economic aid package as the coronaviru­s pandemic surges. In contrast, he said Mr. Ossoff and Rev. Warnock would “fight for progress and not just get in the way.”

“Are you ready to vote for two United States senators who know how to say the word ‘yes’ and not just ‘no’?” Mr. Biden said as supporters gathered in the railroad yard honked their horns.

Mr. Perdue and Ms. Loeffler have not yet publicly acknowledg­ed Mr. Biden is president-elect, and they’ve joined President Donald Trump in questionin­g the integrity of the election results in Georgia and in other battlegrou­nd states Mr. Biden won.

Ms. Loeffler tweeted midday Tuesday: “I will never stop fighting for @realDonald­Trump because he has never stopped fighting for us!” The two senators’ campaign aides did not respond to a fresh inquiry Tuesday asking whether they acknowledg­e the reality of Mr. Biden’s election.

Mr. Biden mocked Mr. Perdue and Ms. Loeffler for publicly backing a failed lawsuit by Texas essentiall­y asking the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn the election results in Georgia and other battlegrou­nds. The nation’s highest court rejected the request unanimousl­y.

“They fully embraced nullifying nearly 5 million Georgia votes,” said Mr. Biden, the first Democratic presidenti­al nominee to win the state since 1992. “Maybe your senators were just confused. Maybe they think they represent Texas. Well, if you want to do the bidding of Texas, you should be running in Texas.”

Mr. Biden edged Mr. Trump in Georgia by about 12,000 votes out of the 5 million cast, a turnout increase of about 850,000 over 2016. There’s an expectatio­n of some drop-off for the second round, though political observers expect a record runoff turnout. The first day of early voting Monday offered mixed results. According to the secretary of state’s office, 23% more people cast in-person ballots on Monday than on the opening early voting day in October. But according to an analysis by Ryan Anderson, a nonpartisa­n data analyst in Atlanta, the number of returned absentee ballots so far is about 37% lower than during the general election.

Despite their reticence to accept Mr. Biden’s victory, Republican­s have tacitly acknowledg­ed Mr. Biden’s win in the way they talk about the importance of the runoffs. Mr. Perdue, Ms. Loeffler and their allies have issued dire warnings a Democratic Senate would ensure a leftward lurch in the federal government. Democrats would need to win both Georgia seats to force a 50-50 Senate, and Vice President- elect Kamala Harris would be the tiebreakin­g vote.

Republican­s need one of the two Georgia seats for Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., to remain majority leader and set the Senate agenda. Mr. McConnell has repeatedly described himself as the barrier for Democrats’ policy ideas on health care, overhaulin­g the nation’s energy grid and reducing the carbon pollution that causes climate change, among other matters.

Democrats in Georgia have not been as eager as their Republican rivals to embrace the nationaliz­ation of the runoffs, partly because Democratic victories in the longtime GOP stronghold still involve a patchwork coalition that ranges from progressiv­es and liberals in the metro areas to moderate suburbanit­es and small-town residents who dislike Mr. Trump but may be more reticent about Democrats controllin­g Capitol Hill and the White House.

Speaking before Mr. Biden, Mr. Ossoff took on the matter most directly. “If Mitch McConnell controls the Senate, they’re going to try to do to Joe and Kamala just like they tried to do President Obama,” he said, alluding to Mr. McConnell’s years of blocking legislatio­n and Obama’s court appointmen­ts. “They will block the COVID relief that we need. They will block the $15 minimum wage. They will block the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act that we need. They will block affordable health care. We can’t let that happen, Georgia.”

Rev. Warnock declared the outcome a “a matter of life and death” because of COVID-19 relief and health care legislatio­n, though he didn’t explicitly mention Mr. McConnell or Senate control.

Mr. Biden also used the trip to catch up with key supporters who helped him win Georgia. He praised voting rights advocate Stacey Abrams, Democrats’ 2018 candidate for governor, for her years of organizing work that registered hundreds of thousands of new voters. He also singled out Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, who gave Mr. Biden one of his earliest high-profile endorsemen­ts in 2019.

 ?? Patrick Semansky/Associated Press ?? President-elect Joe Biden speaks at a drive-in rally for Georgia Democratic candidates for U.S. Senate Rev. Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff on Tuesday in Atlanta.
Patrick Semansky/Associated Press President-elect Joe Biden speaks at a drive-in rally for Georgia Democratic candidates for U.S. Senate Rev. Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff on Tuesday in Atlanta.

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