Rome News-Tribune

Democrats challenge Republican­s for control of Georgia House

- By Beau Evans

Will the balance of power shift in the Georgia state legislatur­e following the highly anticipate­d general election on Nov. 3?

For the first time in nearly two decades, Georgia Democratic leaders believe they have a real shot at wresting control of the state House of Representa­tives, which has been in Republican hands since 2005.

But state and national Republican­s are deploying millions of dollars into local races to keep that from happening, targeting Georgia as perhaps the only state where one of its most influentia­l Democratic lawmakers in the House could be toppled.

“For Democrats to flip the House, they have to win what looks like virtually all of the marginal seats now,” said Charles Bullock, professor of political science at the University of Georgia.

According to Bullock, Democratic candidates flipped 13 seats in the House during the 2018 election that they are likely not in danger of losing next month, prompting Democrats to focus on 17 other seats that could be won in the 2020 general election.

For Democrats, the magic number to flip the House is 16 seats out of the body’s total of 180 seats.

The targets are a cluster of suburban Atlanta districts plus some districts around many of the state’s other urban areas including Athens, Milledgevi­lle, Albany, Columbus, Savannah, Warner Robins and Suwanee.

The Georgia Senate is likely not in play with only five seats potentiall­y open for Democrats that would cut the Republican majority in that body down to a four-seat advantage, according to Bullock’s analysis.

But the Georgia House is the holy grail this year. A shift in the balance of power would not only inject more say for Democrats into the state’s legislativ­e policies, but also giving the party a stronger bargaining hand in the upcoming process to redraw district boundaries next summer.

Redistrict­ing at stake

Based on each new census count every 10 years, the Georgia General Assembly rearranges state and congressio­nal district borders to align with shifts in population. Whichever political party is in charge of that process could tweak the boundaries in their favor to capture potentiall­y decisive voting blocs for the next decade, according to Bullock.

“If the people who draw the districts have good data and are careful with it, they could cast the die in terms of what a legislatur­e’s partisansh­ip looks like for a decade,” Bullock said in an interview last week.

With demographi­cs shifting around urban areas across the state, the key for Democrats will be to sway suburban women voters who may have voted for President Donald Trump in 2016 but have had second thoughts since then, said Andra Gillespie, political science professor at Emory University.

At the same time, some Republican­s holding vulnerable seats have begun shifting closer to the center in a bid to win more moderate voters who could turn the tide in a close election, Gillespie said. An example is Rep. Chuck Efstration, R-dacula, who sponsored bipartisan hate-crimes legislatio­n in an election year that Georgia Democrats had long sought.

“The idea that they would then pick the low-hanging fruit of the hate-crimes bill which has stalled for years in the General Assembly, was the easy thing to do,” Gillespie said in an interview last week. “They’re trying to get a clear majority of the overall universe of voters in their district.”

Outside groups from both sides have pumped large dollars into contested legislativ­e races, particular­ly for Republican­s’ bid to unseat Georgia House Minority Leader Bob Trammell, D-luthersvil­le, whose West Georgia district went to Trump in 2016 and Gov. Brian Kemp in 2018.

The Republican State Leadership Committee, a national group focused on state legislativ­e contests, is poised to pump $1 million into the campaign of Trammell’s Republican competitor, emergency-medical helicopter pilot David Jenkins, marking a huge amount of money for one local race.

The strategy is twofold: By forcing Trammell to step back and focus on his own race, Democrats may have to spend more money on a single district than they anticipate­d and divert some attention from other competitiv­e races elsewhere in the state, said RSLC President Austin Chambers.

“This is a great opportunit­y for us to take out the leader of their caucus,” Chambers said. “It just creates chaos on their side.”

Republican­s also have the stout backing of Georgia House Speaker David Ralston, RBlue Ridge, who as one of the party’s most influentia­l leaders has leaned into the campaign season alongside other top Republican lawmakers at the state Capitol.

“Georgia Republican­s aren’t taking anything or any vote for granted,” said Jen Ryan, a spokeswoma­n for the campaign efforts of Ralston and the House Majority Caucus.

Despite that confidence, Democrats aren’t sweating it. They are leaning on a partyaffil­iated organizing and fundraisin­g initiative called the Legislativ­e Victory Fund to splash millions of dollars into local legislativ­e races across the state, including Trammell’s.

Tied to Fair Fight, the group founded by Democratic Party star and former gubernator­ial candidate Stacey Abrams, the Legislativ­e Victory Fund has recruited and backed Democratic candidates in vulnerable Republican-held House districts from the campaign season’s start this year, said the fund’s organizing director, Patricia Lassiter.

“We are running a fullfledge­d, multi-faceted movement to show Georgia what needs to be done,” Lassiter said. “We know that once these candidates get into office, they’re going to change what Georgia looks like (and) leadership is going to actually represent Georgians.”

For his part, Trammell has swatted aside recent polls indicating he may be trailing in his race. He points to the bigmoney moves focused on his own district as evidence that Republican­s are “holding on by their fingernail­s here.”

“They started pumping money into Georgia a few months ago because they know they’re in trouble,” Trammell said in a recent interview. “Voters in the district don’t want a vote that’s for sale. My vote is not for sale and will never be for sale.”

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