The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
GOP group ties Ossoff, Griffin
Controversial comedian lauded candidate in tweet.
In the past week, both Jon Ossoff and Karen Handel have found that, when you’re in the middle of a nationalized campaign for Congress, you can find yourself at the mercy of every loose cannon from your party’s side of the ledger.
This week, Ossoff was handed the bill for a twomonth-old Twitter endorsement by comedian Kathy Griffin.
Griffin provoked a firestorm for photos that showed her holding up a bloody head resembling President Donald Trump. The Georgia Gun Owners quickly posted a web video describing her as one of the “Hollywood liberals” backing the Democrat’s campaign.
A day later, the Congressional Leadership Fund — a super PAC with ties to House Speaker Paul Ryan — entered the fray. It released an ad labeling Griffin an “Ossoff supporter” amid footage of that disastrous photo shoot. It’s part of the group’s $6.5 million campaign to thwart Ossoff.
“Now a celebrity Jon Ossoff supporter is making jokes about beheading the president of the United States,” the narrator says. “It’s not funny. These angry liberals will go to any extreme to elect Jon Ossoff.”
Griffin, for her part, has apologized and posted a video saying she “went too far.” CNN cut her from her most prominent role — as co-host of the network’s annual New Year’s Eve bash. And aside from her tweet, there seems to be no connection between Ossoff and Griffin. Federal records show she hasn’t donated to his campaign, either.
Ossoff ’s campaign reacted with outrage.
“Jon Ossoff believes what Kathy Griffin did was despicable, and for Karen Handel’s super PAC to say otherwise is a disgrace,” Ossoff spokeswoman Sacha Haworth said. “Karen Handel should immediately demand this ad be pulled before any more children have to see these disturbing images on TV.”
Both campaigns are seeking any edge they can get in the June 20 runoff for the 6th Congressional District, which spans from east Cobb County through north Fulton County to north DeKalb County. Republicans see the race as a must-win and hope to avoid an embarrassing setback. Upset-minded Democrats hope a victory in the district can give them a path to flipping the U.S. House next year.
In Handel’s case, the loose cannon was a controversial congressman-elect directly raising money for House Republicans.
When Greg Gianforte, the future Montana congressman who has been charged with assaulting a journalist in the last days of his campaign, sent a fundraising plea last week to defeat “liberals in Georgia,” the Democratic Party of Georgia sent a dispatch wondering whether Handel condoned violence against reporters.
“Georgia Democrats demand that Karen Handel condemn Gianforte’s violent behavior,” party spokesman Michael Smith wrote, “and return every single dime raised by his email.”