The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ga. gov. race already feels Trump effect

Hopefuls on both sides shape messages with the president in mind.

- ELECTION 2018 By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com COURT RULING

President Donald Trump is shaking up the emerging race for Georgia governor, forcing Republican­s to gamble on how closely to tie themselves to his presidency — and speeding up plans for Democrats who think they have a tantalizin­g opportunit­y to exploit his setbacks.

A fight is already under way on the GOP side of the ticket between candidates pledging to “drain the swamp” vying against more mainstream Republican­s with long records of experience in public office who aren’t tying themselves directly to Trump’s presidency.

The battle lines have already being drawn: Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle didn’t mention Trump at his campaign kickoff, while Secretary of State Brian Kemp’s official announceme­nt practicall­y oozed Trump-ian themes. More Trump

loyalists could join the race, including a top aide to Vice President Mike Pence.

Democrats are practicall­y salivating over the chance to energize left-leaning voters by painting whichever Republican emerges as “Trump lite.” A pair of Democratic rising stars — state Reps. Stacey Abrams and Stacey Evans — both figure to put their opposition to Trump at the center of their bids.

The maneuverin­g underscore­s the volatility of the race to replace a term-limited Gov. Nathan Deal as the growing field starts to solidify a year before the primary. Each candidate well knows that what could help them win the GOP nomination could be devastatin­g in a general election.

“If Donald Trump was running for governor of Georgia, I’m not sure he would come and say good things about himself right now,” said Chip Lake, a veteran GOP strategist. “He’s just as calculatin­g as the rest of these guys, and he’d be hedging his bets.”

‘Georgia First’

Cagle is the presumed Republican front-runner, with three statewide election victories under his belt and a proven fundraisin­g bona fide that leans heavily toward big-money donors with statehouse connection­s. The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on reported earlier this month that a fund tied to Cagle collected more than $2 million from special interests in the months before the 2017 session.

Cagle came out with an establishm­ent Republican message in his May announceme­nt for the race, pledging to create 500,000 new jobs in his first term while slashing taxes by $100 million.

His rivals consider him to be vulnerable, and he hasn’t cleared the field. At his campaign kickoff, he praised Deal, and revived the governor’s campaign mantra to make Georgia the No. 1 place to do business. He steered clear of Trump.

“I agree with the fact that we need tax reform at the national level. We need to repeal and replace Obamacare. We need conservati­ve justices,” he said of Trump’s agenda. “But I’m Casey Cagle. And Georgia knows Casey Cagle. And what I’ll be focused on are the needs of the state.”

Kemp sees an open lane, for now, as the most aggressive­ly pro-Trump candidate in the race. He’s pledged a “Georgia First” motto echoing Trump’s promise to crack down on illegal immigrants. And he nodded to Trump’s imagery of the “forgotten” with a populist vow to help rural Georgians he said are being left behind.

“I feel like I understand the state as well as anyone outside the Capitol,” said Kemp, who has served as either a state lawmaker or Secretary of State for most of the past 15 years. “Look, we’ve got to do stuff for rural Georgia for better jobs, simply getting them the same convenienc­es we have in metro Atlanta.”

A third candidate, state Sen. Hunter Hill, is running on an intensely local message of bringing more efficiency to government and launching a school-voucher program.

“The overarchin­g goal is an education system where every child has an opportunit­y to succeed, and expanding choice plays a large role in that,” said Hill, a combat veteran who represents a swath of Atlanta and east Cobb.

Shaking up the Gold Dome

But the GOP field could get a lot more crowded, and soon, with pro-Trump candidates. State Sen. Michael Williams, the first state elected official to endorse Trump, has been sending signals for months that he’s running for governor, most recently with a new website and a spate of fundraiser­s.

In a recent pitch to donors, the Cumming Republican wrote that it was time to send a jolt through the establishm­ent in Atlanta and “get rid of the career politician­s and bureaucrat­s running our state government.”

An even higher-profile Trump supporter is also said to be considerin­g a run. Nick Ayers, a former aide to Gov. Sonny Perdue, helped steer Mike Pence’s campaign for Indiana governor and remains an adviser to the vice president. Although he’s been tight-lipped, Georgia political circles have rumbled for months about his potential bid for governor.

Ayers, who is married to a cousin of Perdue, also served as executive director of the Republican Governors Associatio­n. He has never held elected office.

“I am aware that Nick is certainly being encouraged by a lot of people to run for governor,” said Rayna Casey, the Atlanta businesswo­man who chaired Trump’s Georgia campaign. “He would be a great governor I would be proud to support.”

Still more pro-Trump candidates are eyeing the race. Former U.S. Rep. Jack Kingston, who served more than two decades in Congress, has transforme­d his image from an establishm­ent-friendly conservati­ve to a staunch Trump defender over the past year as an adviser to the president and a pundit on CNN. He, too, hasn’t ruled out a run.

‘This is possible’

Georgia Democrats, spurned in their last four campaigns for governor, can’t help but see an opportunit­y.

They figure if 30-year-old Jon Ossoff — hardly a household name among Georgia politicos until this year — can turn the conservati­ve-leaning 6th Congressio­nal District into a battlegrou­nd, they have a shot at the governor’s race. After all, Republican­s routinely won landslide victories in the 6th District, while statewide contests have been much closer.

House Minority Leader Stacey Abrams, who has filed paperwork to run for governor, said Trump isn’t changing her strategy but that there’s no doubt he has energized left-leaning voters, and unnerved independen­ts and moderates who might be receptive to the Democratic Party’s message.

“What he creates is an even sharper example of why this is possible. Not just Trump, but the entirety of this administra­tion and the national reaction to his antics. It’s galvanized voters,” she said.

It’s also made clear the consequenc­es of not voting, she added, and that “just a small number of people can dramatical­ly change the trajectory of the nation.”

Supporters of Democratic state Rep. Stacey Evans, who launched her campaign for governor Thursday, hope she’ll be better able to attract disgruntle­d Trump supporters and other Republican­s. She said her message about “hope” — the scholarshi­p and the concept — will resonate with them.

“Voters are much more interested in what candidates are for than for what they are against,” said Evans. “But make no mistake: Trump is well on his way to being one of the worst presidents the nation has ever seen.”

Republican gubernator­ial candidates rallied behind George W. Bush in 2006. Democrats dodged Barack Obama in 2010 and 2014. With Trump, though, it’s anyone’s guess how he’ll factor into the race by this point next year.

”In the past these things were a lot more predictabl­e,” said Lake, the Republican strategist. “Donald Trump doesn’t like predictabl­e.”

‘In the past, these things were a lot more predictabl­e. Donald Trump doesn’t like predictabl­e.’ Chip Lake Republican strategist

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