The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

4 factors that could tip 6th District race

Handel, Ossoff await voters’ decision today in high-profile runoff.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

The nationally watched election to represent Atlanta’s northern suburbs in Congress will finally be decided today, as 6th District voters choose whether to send Republican Karen Handel or Democrat Jon Ossoff to Washington.

The race is much more than a vote to fill out the remainder of former U.S. Rep. Tom Price’s term after President Donald Trump tapped him to be health secretary. Both parties have poured unpreceden­ted resources into the race — the cost now tops $50 million — and both see it as a chance to send a message to the American electorate.

Democrats hope an Ossoff victory could deal a blow to Trump’s presidency and the GOP agenda, while giving other candidates a path to flipping more conservati­ve stronghold­s. Republican­s see a Handel win as a

chance to bolster incumbents in competitiv­e districts who are nervous about allying with Trump.

The contours of the race have been shaped for weeks. Once an insurgent outsider running against a corrupt political system, Handel casts herself in this contest as an experience­d politician and traditiona­l conservati­ve with deep roots in the district.

And Ossoff, a former congressio­nal aide and political newcomer, has centered his message on two audiences: There’s leftleanin­g voters infuriated by Trump and eager to elect a fresh-faced Democrat. And there’s the moderates and independen­ts who have backed GOP candidates but are turned off by national politics.

The rollicking race has been filled with twists and turns, and there is no shortage of wild cards as the race hurtles toward an end. Polls show the race neckand-neck, and analysts say it’s too close to call.

Here are a few factors that could decide the vote:

The stronghold­s

Stretching from east Cobb County to north DeKalb County, the district was drawn to favor Republican­s. But Ossoff has tried to change the electorate by attracting first-time voters and others who don’t traditiona­lly cast ballots in special elections.

He’s looking to run up the margins in the bluest parts of the territory, building on his April 18 turnout. He won a swath of land that extended through nearly all of north DeKalb to much of Sandy Springs, then darted up the Ga. 400 corridor before veering into parts of eastern Johns Creek.

Those territorie­s are some of the most diverse parts of the district, and Ossoff ’s campaign has targeted many of those voters with repeated mailers, phone calls and knocks on the door. An Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on poll of likely voters found that a majority of respondent­s were contacted in-person by his campaign.

Handel is focusing her final message on her core supporters: the conservati­ves who helped Price win one landslide victory after another since he won the seat in 2004.

That means winning big margins in east Cobb, the conservati­ve stronghold that helped launch the careers of Newt Gingrich and Johnny Isakson, as well as her hometown of Roswell and the deep-red city of Milton in the extreme north of the district.

“This is uncharted territory analytical­ly. The extremely high turnout, the uncertain political environmen­t,” Ossoff said. “It’s is a neck-and-neck race.”

The turnout

Turnout is set to far exceed the roughly 190,000 people who cast a ballot in the first round of voting in April, and some analysts expect the overall voter totals to top 250,000.

What such an eye-popping turnout means for both camps is unclear.

Mark Rountree of the pollster firm Landmark Communicat­ions sees a “bell curve” in the works. Smallertha­n-expected turnout helps Ossoff, he said, because his voters tend to be more enthusiast­ic. A huge swell of participat­ion could help him, too, because that likely means younger voters are turning out.

But he said there’s a “sweet spot” for Handel with a more traditiona­l level of turnout in the middle of those two extremes. And a surge of turnout could wind up helping Republican­s simply because they outnumber Democrats in the district.

Another wild card: Weather forecasts show scattered storms throughout the day, which could mean that some less-enthusiast­ic voters sit it out.

The early voting

In the first round of voting, Ossoff won a commanding majority of the early vote — propelling him to nearly win the U.S. House seat outright over a scattered GOP field.

In the runoff vote, analysts from both sides of the aisle say Republican­s have eaten into Ossoff ’s advantage and that the early-vote outcome should be much tighter.

Ossoff is still expected to have the edge, but just how wide the margin is could determine the race. After all, the majority of voters in the district have already cast their ballots: More than 140,000 people cast early ballots — including nearly 40,000 people who didn’t participat­e in the April vote.

Handel said her campaign has been “very competitiv­e” in early voting and that Ossoff was “unable to replicate what he did” in April. But Ossoff ’s supporters say they’re reaching deep into a universe of people who rarely vote in special elections — or any election at all — to help drive their numbers.

The Trump factor

By now, the dynamics are familiar to any 6th District voter: Trump barely carried the district in November, and his approval ratings are weak across the area, giving Democrats hope they can flip the district.

Ossoff launched his campaign with tough anti-Trump talk but has emphasized a more moderate message; Handel embraced Trump and his top priorities while saying she won’t be an “extension” of his White House.

Just how much will Trump factor into the outcome? The president has sent a flurry of tweets and robocalls supporting Handel’s campaign. But she’s also allied with other GOP leaders, including House Speaker Paul Ryan and Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal.

Ossoff has tried to home in on Republican­s frustrated with Trump. Mailers vow he’ll “stand up” to the president while he talks of how both parties are “complicit” in wasteful spending.

The reason for the dualtrack messaging: He needs at least 10 percent, perhaps as much as 15 percent, of GOP voters to back him. And if he doesn’t win over enough GOP support, he might be in for a long night.

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