Rome News-Tribune

Jon Ossoff wins Senate primary; will face Perdue

- By Ben Nadler

Jon Ossoff, a young Georgia media executive known for breaking fundraisin­g records during a 2017 special election loss for a U.S. House seat, beat back a field of Democratic primary opponents to win a spot taking on Republican Sen. David Perdue in November.

Ossoff received about 50.5% of the votes, according to votes tallied as of Wednesday night. He had maintained a steady lead in public polling and fundraisin­g despite some significan­t competitio­n from former Columbus Mayor Teresa Tomlinson and 2018 candidate for lieutenant governor Sarah Riggs Amico.

Ossoff’s victory allows him to avoid a potentiall­y bruising primary runoff that had been seen as likely and sets up a showdown with Perdue as Republican­s look to hold the White House and Senate majority.

The election on Tuesday was plagued by problems that, combined with a massive influx of mail-in paper ballots because of the coronaviru­s, delayed final results.

A lack of poll workers, trouble with new voting equipment, coronaviru­s restrictio­ns and high turnout contribute­d to long lines, with 20 of Georgia’s 159 counties having to extend voting hours for at least one precinct.

Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger sent absentee ballot applicatio­ns to 6.9 million active registered voters in Georgia, and more than 1 million ballots had been received as of Monday, Raffensper­ger spokesman Walter Jones said Wednesday. That’s a huge increase in the number of paper ballots that counties have traditiona­lly had to process in past elections.

Ossoff entered the race in September with the endorsemen­t of civil rights icon Rep. John Lewis, as well as some built-in name recognitio­n from his highly publicized special election loss to Republican Karen Handel for an Atlanta-area U.S. House seat in 2017. He has made fighting inequality and corruption a core part of his message.

Ossoff’s opponents often took aim at his lack of experience in elected office, with Tomlinson proclaimin­g that she was “the only one in this race who has ever won an election and governed.” But those attacks seemed to have little effect.

Meanwhile, changes to campaignin­g necessitat­ed by the pandemic, including a move away from in-person events in favor of online engagement, seemed to play toward the strengths of Ossoff’s media-savvy campaign.

 ??  ?? Jon Ossoff
Jon Ossoff
 ??  ?? Sen. Perdue
Sen. Perdue

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