The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Beyoncé vs. Taylor Swift: Georgia edition

- Jim Galloway Political Insider

If certain parties have their way, next year’s Democratic race for governor in Georgia could have the feel of a feud between Beyoncé and Taylor Swift.

Or so I have been informed. I have let my attention to music industry politics slide since Simon & Garfunkel broke up.

What I do know is that state Rep. Stacey Abrams is attempting a profound shift in how Democratic primaries are won in Georgia, which in turn could have broad implicatio­ns for biracial dynamics within the party.

Abrams, an Atlanta lawmaker and former House minority leader, is one of two major candidates on the Democratic side of the 2018 contest. The other is state Rep. Stacey Evans of Smyrna. Both are lawyers. Both have admirable, by-the-bootstraps biographie­s. Abrams is black. Evans is white. In politics, you often lead with candidates who look like the voters you need — but don’t have. This is one reason why Republican­s give prominent roles to African-Americans within their camp.

Likewise, Evans fits the pattern of recent Democratic attempts to return to power by appealing to white, independen­t voters — even though a strong majority of the party’s voters and activists are black. It is a general election strategy.

A video that accompanie­d the launch of Evans’ campaign, entitled “16 Homes,” told of Evans’ mobile-home upbringing in far North Georgia. It set many Democratic mouths to watering.

“She has a powerful message,” Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed said of Evans early this month, via Twitter.

This is the thinking that Abrams wants to subvert, with a nationaliz­ed campaign that unites white Democratic progressiv­es with African-American women.

“I’m not going to shy away from the fact that people of color have to be centered in my campaign, because I know I can talk to people of color and white people at the same time, and they’re not going to recoil from one another,” Abrams said Thursday on Hellbent, a feminist podcast.

“We have to stop recruiting the candidates that look like what we wish we had, and we have to recruit candidates that look like where we are,” she said.

Enter Beyoncé. Or at least a slice of her lyrics.

“Get in Formation” is the effort by three national, black-oriented political organizati­ons that debuted earlier this month — with the goal of rallying black women behind Abrams. The Beyoncé reference was no accident. “Formation” was

a hit from last year’s “Lemonade” album.

“It honors the power and solidarity of black women. It definitely resonated with black women, but also with all types of women,” explained Sharline Chiang, a spokeswoma­n for San Francisco-based Democracy in Color, one of the three groups behind the project.

Then there’s the convenient book contract that Abrams nailed down last week. Publicatio­n of “Minority Leader: How to Lead from the Outside and Make Real Change” is convenient­ly set for next April.

“It is aimed at emerging female leaders and leaders of color who must grapple with the implicatio­ns of race, class, gender and otherness,” according to the press release.

Finally, we have last week’s endorsemen­t of Abrams by U.S. Rep. John Lewis of Atlanta. Who is central to Abrams’ argument.

Jesse Jackson’s 1984 and 1988 runs for president attracted little support from African-American political leaders who saw his campaigns as merely symbolic. When Barack Obama, an Illinois senator, launched his presidenti­al run in 2007, many African-American leaders similarly stuck with a proven friend, Hillary Clinton.

John Lewis was among them. That is, until Obama’s candidacy was recognized as not just symbolic, but entirely viable. Racial unity was demanded by Obama supporters, and Lewis switched.

One suspects that Abrams would like the 2018 primary for governor to follow a similar path. And Lewis is a good

start.

But this is not a fait accompli. Power within the Democratic Party of Georgia is widely diffused. Former Gov. Roy Barnes, who is backing Evans, remains very popular among black voters.

And while she has gathered up an impressive national following who would like to see her as the first black woman governor in the nation, Abrams is not uniformly popular at home.

Her relationsh­ip with Mayor Reed is chilly at best, for instance. And Abram’s tenure as leader of the House Democratic caucus was rife with complaints about a management style that was aloof and often uncommunic­ative.

Last Monday, the House Democratic caucus — a body that is overwhelmi­ngly African-American — chose Abram’s successor. Members rejected state Rep. Carolyn Hugley of Columbus, a 24-year veteran and, as minority whip, a member of Abrams’ leadership team.

Instead, the caucus settled on state Rep. Bob Trammell of Luthersvil­le, who joined the Legislatur­e in 2015. Trammell told me that his victory was in no way a backlash against Abrams.

“There’s no one in the General Assembly who has been more effective at making the argument for Democratic policies,” he said.

Yet in private, several Democrats tell me that an Abrams backlash is precisely what doomed Hugley — who is African-American. Trammell is white.

Sherry Boston is the DeKalb County district attorney, an Evans supporter, and African-American. Last week, Boston was Evans’ host at a gathering of the Georgia Associatio­n of Black Women Attorneys.

“She got a great response,” Boston said. “A lot of people walked up to introduce themselves.” But the district attorney was careful to add that plenty of Abrams supporters were in the house, too.

Boston chose her words carefully when she explained her support for Evans, a personal friend. “I believe that Stacey Evans’ message of hope for all Georgians is one that can resonate with anyone in the state,” she said. “And I think that it’s important for each of us to make decisions on the basis of the candidate that we believe can best move Georgia forward.”

To counter Abrams, Evans will need more support from African-American leaders like Boston to offset the stampede of black voters that Abrams would clearly like to create.

But Abrams has her own challenge: To persuade cautious Democrats, thirsty for a statewide win, that a primary in which racial identity is heightened and the party is pushed significan­tly to the left will still have mathematic­al possibilit­ies in November.

‘We have to stop recruiting the candidates that look like what we wish we had, and we have to recruit candidates that look like where we are.’ State Rep. Stacey Abrams An Atlanta lawmaker and former House minority leader

 ??  ??
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS 2016 ?? State Rep. Stacey Abrams, shown speaking at last year’s Democratic National Convention in Philadelph­ia, is hoping to become the country’s first African-American female governor.
ASSOCIATED PRESS 2016 State Rep. Stacey Abrams, shown speaking at last year’s Democratic National Convention in Philadelph­ia, is hoping to become the country’s first African-American female governor.
 ?? BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM ?? State Rep. Stacey Evans, shown speaking during this year’s legislativ­e session, is targeting Georgia’s Democratic voters — including African-American women — in her bid to become governor.
BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM State Rep. Stacey Evans, shown speaking during this year’s legislativ­e session, is targeting Georgia’s Democratic voters — including African-American women — in her bid to become governor.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States