The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Record fundraisin­g in 6th district

Democrat’s $8.3M haul far outpacing competitor­s; top Republican will get full GOP backing in runoff.

- AJC EXCLUSIVE By Aaron Gould Sheinin aaron.gouldshein­in@ajc.com and Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

Democrat Jon Ossoff has raised more than $8.3 million for his campaign to represent suburban Atlanta in Congress, the most significan­t sign yet that the political newcomer has become a national symbol of the resistance to President Donald Trump.

Ossoff ’s financial disclosure, to be released today, shows he has $2.1 million on hand for the final stretch of the campaign. His contributi­ons came from across the nation, including more than $1 million raised by the liberal advocacy site the Daily Kos. Sure to raise eyebrows in Georgia, however, is the campaign’s revelation that 95 percent of all of Ossoff ’s donors are from out of state.

The fundraisin­g haul is an astounding figure for a 30-yearold former congressio­nal aide virtually unheard of in Georgia political circles before he jumped in the race to represent the state’s 6th District.

Meanwhile, former Georgia Secretary of State Karen Handel’s campaign announced it has raised $463,000 so far and has more than $183,000 in the bank with roughly two weeks

until Election Day. Handel’s campaign said nearly 90 percent of its reported 831 individual donors are from Georgia. (A detailed list has yet to be made available on the Federal Election Commission’s website.)

Former state Sen. Judson Hill previously disclosed that he’s raised $473,000 and that he had $113,000 on hand.

Hill has actually already filed his pre-election report with the Federal Election Commission. That filing shows his former colleagues in the General Assembly contribute­d more than $17,000 to his campaign. That includes money from 18 members of the Senate. State-level lobbyists kicked in an additional $3,800.

Former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich gave $500.

But the real news in Hill’s report is that special-interest groups, specifical­ly political action committees, contribute­d more than $47,000. While some of those were Georgia PACs, many are Washington-based.

Among other candidates, Republican Mohammad Ali Bhuiyan raised more than $25,000, according to his pre-election report, and he loaned himself an additional $7,700. Republican Keith Grawert, meanwhile, brought in $21,400 this period and raised more than $50,000 for the election, although that includes a $30,000 personal loan.

But Ossoff ’s massive haul will almost certainly overshadow all other candidates, and not just in Georgia. His fundraisin­g total is the most for a congressio­nal candidate since Democrat Randy Perkins put nearly $9 million of his own money into his bid for Florida’s 18th District in 2016, according to the campaign-finance website OpenSecret­s.org.

It’s worth noting that Perkins lost that race to Republican Brian Mast, who raised just under $3 million.

Among Georgians, Ossoff ’s take would appear to be a record. Former Democratic Congressma­n John Barrow raised more than $3.5 million when he lost his re-election bid in 2014. Republican Bob Barr raised $3.4 million in 2000 to defend his seat in Congress, although his Democratic opponent, Roger Kahn, raised $4 million.

Ossoff’s fundraisin­g is not only nearly 18 times greater than several of his leading rivals, he is also far outpacing the entire cost of Georgia’s last open congressio­nal election. Fundraisin­g in that November race to represent west Georgia’s 3rd Congressio­nal District totaled less than $3 million for 10 candidates.

Ossoff’s “Make Trump Furious” campaign has helped him emerge as the unquestion­ed leader in the 18-candidate field to represent a traditiona­lly Republican stronghold.

“The campaign’s goal is not to get into a runoff, though we’ll be ready to fight a runoff if necessary,” Ossoff said at a recent campaign stop.

With polls showing Ossoff hovering around 40 percent of the vote, that seems unlikely. And the odds are daunting in the runoff. There are 11 Republican­s in the April 18 contest, and they are feuding with each other for the same slice of voters and donors. But the full weight of the GOP is expected to be behind whichever Republican lands the runoff spot. The White House, too, has pledged to help; top Trump adviser Stephen Bannon is said to be closely monitoring the race.

The district — which spans from east Cobb County to north DeKalb County — has been in GOP hands since the 1970s, and losing it would be an epic embarrassm­ent for Republican­s and Trump’s new administra­tion. Tom Price, who vacated the congressio­nal seat to become Trump’s health secretary, routinely scored double-digit victories since first winning the seat in 2004. But the president barely carried the district in November, giving hope to Democrats eager to turn this race — considered the most competitiv­e congressio­nal race in the nation since Trump’s victory — into an early test of his presidency.

For now, Ossoff has far more financial firepower than his GOP rivals, and he has enough to keep his ad blitz on the airwaves into the summer.

Former Johns Creek Councilman Bob Gray and ex-state Sen. Dan Moody — both millionair­e executives — were also expected to dip into their personal fortunes to foot some of their campaign bills.

But they are largely focused on competing with other Republican­s — and not Ossoff — for what seems likely to be a sole spot in the runoff.

National Republican groups have rushed to try to fill that void, worried that the Democrat could hand them an early black eye.

The National Republican Congressio­nal Committee last week launched an attack ad depicting Ossoff as a stooge of U.S. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi who will “try and stop our Republican majority that’s getting things done.”

That’s on top of a $2.2 million blitz by the Congressio­nal Leadership Fund, which has at turns cast Ossoff as an inexperien­ced party boy with footage of him dressed as Han Solo from his Georgetown University days or a resume-inflater who improperly boasts about his experience as an adviser to Democratic U.S. Rep. Hank Johnson of Lithonia. Ossoff and his campaign have dismissed claims that he overstated his background as an aide who helped craft national security policy, and he released a timeline showing he had five months of “top secret” clearance.

The Republican National Committee plans to add nine additional staffers to the six already fanned out across the district and to open a second office in the north Atlanta suburbs. Dozens of voter training sessions are in the works to counter the grass-roots army that’s mustered for Ossoff.

Ossoff ’s nearly 200,000 donors gave an average of $42.52.

Alan Berns of Boston called himself a “proud citizen of an obviously blue and very progressiv­e state” who wanted to channel his money to candidates who needed it. He said he opposes both Trump and Price — which he said gave him more reason to donate to Ossoff.

“Ultimately, his victory would send an important message to our new president that there are certain values at our core that he should not mess with,” said Berns, a 70-year-old retiree.

Georgia Republican­s are preparing to hunker down. Former U.S. Rep. Lynn Westmorela­nd, a potential GOP contender for governor, said an Ossoff victory could send a discomfiti­ng signal to Republican­s in Georgia and otherwise red territory.

“This guy gets in the runoff and every Democrat in America — if not the world — is going to send him money,” Westmorela­nd said on GPB’s “Political Rewind.” “They’re going to use that as a launching pad ... to say, ‘See, he can do it.’ ”

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