The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Contrastin­g personalit­ies finding GOP success

Front-runners Trump, Carson show different styles in Atlanta area.

- By Daniel Malloy dmalloy@ajc.com

GAINESVILL­E — Ben Carson began Sunday morning with a soft-spoken prayer in front of a packed Hall County megachurch before delivering a measured defense of God as part of the fabric of American government.

Donald Trump took the stage in Norcross on Saturday afternoon bobbing his head along with Aerosmith’s “Dream On,” reveling in the roars of thousands of supporters. Trump bragged in an hourlong speech of how he has upended political convention this year in the name of liberating the nation from its feckless

leaders.

Trump and Carson hold the top two spots in polls for the Republican presidenti­al nomination next year, and both spent their weekend courting Georgia voters with a night-and-day contrast.

The real estate mogul Trump trades in bombast. Cross him, and you feel the burn. He ridiculed his political opponents, from Jeb Bush to Marco Rubio to Hillary Clinton. He excoriated the “stupid” people now running the country, contrastin­g them with the master deal-maker he promised to be in the Oval Office.

Carson’s jokes were mostly at his own expense, about his poor childhood and bad grades in school. The former neurosurge­on did not mention other candidates by name. In denigratin­g the new health care law, Carson referred to it as “the so-called Affordable Care Act” instead of its colloquial name, Obamacare.

On the campaign trail, the two have circled each other without clashing, aside from a brief dust-up.

At a news conference, Trump pointed out that Carson apologized for a statement seen as dismissive of Trump’s faith, “which is a very honorable thing to do.”

“I love it when they hit me because so far, as you know, everybody I’ve hit has gone down the tubes,” Trump said.

Asked by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on about his and Trump’s shared success, Carson said it’s a sign of a public searching for something new.

“It says that the people are waking up and they’re starting to realize that listening to the pundits and the experts and the news media probably is not the right thing to do because it’s not leading us in the right place,” Carson said at a book signing Saturday in Lawrencevi­lle.

He said he had no idea Trump had been nearby just hours before.

Their Georgia supporters this weekend had much in common in backing two candidates who have never run for office.

“We always had people who have been in government — yet it’s still not working,” Terrance Hunter of Atlanta said.

Standing behind Hunter in line for Carson’s book signing in Lawrencevi­lle, Sandra Hopkins of Bremen jumped in.

“Amen!” she said, sharing a high-five with Hunter. “How many thousands of years of experience did (previous presidents) have in Congress and the Senate?”

Trump’s success in real estate and Carson’s steady hand in brain surgery — and his compelling climb from poverty — are satisfacto­ry real-world qualificat­ions for the presidency, their supporters said. They were confident the novice politician­s could surround themselves with the right experts in order to master national security and domestic policy.

While some of Carson’s fans interviewe­d by the AJC were fine with Trump, several turned up their noses at the billionair­e’s approach.

Carson is “bold, but he’s a quiet, controlled bold,” Linda Gore of Athens said. “Whereas Trump is all pomp and noise and stuff.”

Trump’s supporters, meanwhile, are fond of the swagger.

“He’s got the presidenti­al stature that we need back in the White House,” Wanda Raper of McDonough said.

The Trump fans interviewe­d by the AJC, while disdainful of traditiona­l politician­s, mostly embraced the fellow outsider Carson.

Trump “articulate­s, like Ben Carson is starting to articulate, these things that outside of the coasts of the country, people really do think this way, and they’re bashed for it all the time,” said Larry Wachs of Peachtree Corners, who attended the Trump rally and used to star on the local radio show “The Other Guys.”

“There’s nothing wrong with saying ‘I love America,’ but we’re presented as rednecks and idiots. It’s shocking to the media when Ben Carson says, ‘I don’t want a Muslim being president.’ But it’s not to most of America.”

The backers of both men share the candidates’ dim view of the current state of America.

“What China has done to the United States may be the greatest theft in the history of the world,” Trump said. “They’ve taken our jobs. They’ve taken our money. They’ve taken our base. They’ve really taken our spirit. We feel horrible.”

Carson said “you’re hard-pressed to find anybody who thinks this is the right direction.” But he quickly moves to optimism in the land of opportunit­y, which can be turned around with more faith in God — and a defeat of political correctnes­s.

“America is worth saving,” Carson said. “If that means getting into a war with the PC police, I’m ready to fight that war. And I hope you will join me.”

 ?? BRANDEN CAMP / SPECIAL ?? Republican presidenti­al candidate Dr. Ben Carson speaks during a church service at Free Chapel on Sunday in Gainesvill­e.
BRANDEN CAMP / SPECIAL Republican presidenti­al candidate Dr. Ben Carson speaks during a church service at Free Chapel on Sunday in Gainesvill­e.
 ?? BRANDEN CAMP / SPECIAL ?? A woman reads a copy of Republican presidenti­al candidate Dr. Ben Carson’s new book before a worship service Sunday in Gainesvill­e.
BRANDEN CAMP / SPECIAL A woman reads a copy of Republican presidenti­al candidate Dr. Ben Carson’s new book before a worship service Sunday in Gainesvill­e.
 ?? JOHN AMIS / AP ?? Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally held at the Atlanta Trade Center on Saturday in Norcross.
JOHN AMIS / AP Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally held at the Atlanta Trade Center on Saturday in Norcross.

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