The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Over $22N pumped into Ga. race

Candidates for governor add millions more to their fundraisin­g hauls as May 22 primary approaches.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

The candidates for Georgia governor added millions of dollars more to their campaign fundraisin­g hauls over the past two months.

The two Democrats and five leading Republican­s collected thousands of new donors — and began to seriously ratchet up their spending — ahead of the May 22 primary. In all, according to financial reports filed late Friday, the candidates have raised or loaned themselves more than $22 million.

The report covers a two-month period between Jan. 31 and March 31. State officehold­ers are banned by law from raising campaign cash during the legislativ­e session, which ended March 30. It’s why three of the GOP candidates had little new fundraisin­g to show in the latest filing.

Here’s a breakdown of where each candidate stands:

DEMOCRATS Former House Minority Leader Stacey Abrams

Abrams outraised her primary opponent, former state Rep. Stacey Evans, by about 3-to-1 over this period as she began to stockpile more campaign cash. The former Atlanta legislator’s report at the end of January showed she had spent about 80 percent of her contributi­ons; in this latest report, her rate of spending dropped to

about 73 percent. (Her campaign has long said it has embraced an unconventi­onal strategy that

relies less on TV advertisin­g and more on personnel and organizing.) About two-thirds of her contributi­ons came from out of state, but the $325,000 her campaign said she raised from Geor- gia donors outpaced Evans over

all during this period. Among her donors are two children of billionair­e George Soros, whose family hosted a fundraiser for her last year; author Judy Blume; and Stephanie Blank, a prominent children’s advocate who is the ex-wife of Atlanta Falcons owner Arthur Blank.

Total contributi­ons this period: $1,006,947.23

Total contributi­ons to date:

$3,280,652.59

Cash on hand: $898,553.85

Former state Rep. Stacey Evans

After pumping in more than $1.2 million of her own money into her account earlier this cycle, the former legislator from Smyrna didn’t dip deeper into her own wallet to reinforce her campaign. She wound up spending more money this cycle — about $400,000 — than she took in as she begins to ramp up her TV time. She has twice as much cash on hand available for the primary as her opponent, with nearly $1.4 million in the bank, compared with about $560,000 for Abrams. (The rest of the money is partitione­d for a runoff or general election.) Evans’ donors include Jane Kidd, a former chairwoman of the Democratic Party of Georgia; former U.N. Ambassador Andrew Young; and Dan Halpern, a restaurate­ur and major Democratic National Committee fundraiser. She also collected donations from Cousins Chief Executive Larry Gellersted­t, who leads a task force charged with helping to recruit Amazon’s second headquarte­rs, shortly after he criticized a move by Cagle and Republican­s to spike a tax break that would have benefited Delta Air Lines.

Total contributi­ons this period: $321,496.32

Total contributi­ons to date: $2,617,889.90

Cash on hand: $1,486,522.63

REPUBLICAN­S Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle

The GOP front-runner remains, by far, the leading fundraiser despite scant new donations this period due to the legislativ­e session. He has set aside $4.5 million to fund a wave of advertisin­g that started last month and will escalate through the primary, and he has relied on the Capitol crowd — a collection of lobbyists and powerful industry groups — to help pad his campaign coffers. He also started spending that money at an accelerate­d pace, dishing out $1.2 million on expenses including consulting fees and TV airtime. His donors include the foundation of golfer Davis Love III and GOP strategist John McLaughlin.

Total contributi­ons this period: $20,206.50

Total contributi­ons to date: $6,790,315.32

Cash on hand: $4,535,511

Former state Sen. Hunter Hill

The former legislator from Buckhead is in a tight race for what could be a No. 2 spot in a GOP runoff, and he’s tapped the well-heeled district he once represente­d as well as retirees in Sea Island. Among his notable donors this quarter are Atlanta Braves Chief Executive Terry McGuirk and Robert Loudermilk of the Loudermilk Cos. real estate firm. He spent about twice as much as he raised this period, including more than $500,000 on campaign ads.

Total contributi­ons this period: $442,891.90

Total contributi­ons to date: $2,702,053.54

Cash on hand: $1,120,864.48

Secretary of State Brian Kemp

Faced with the same constraint­s as other officehold­ers, the Athens Republican raised little new cash and dipped deeper into his coffers to start airing sustained TV ad campaigns touting his immigratio­n crackdown proposals. He spent more than $500,000 over the past two months, largely on TV airtime and associated costs.

Total contributi­ons this period: $34,970.26

Total contributi­ons to date: $2,920,108.74

Cash on hand: $1,631,521.28

Businessma­n Clay Tippins

The executive for Capgemini, a Paris-based consulting and outsourcin­g firm, kept pace with several of his top rivals in campaign donations in the final stretch of the race. With help from several well-known executives, including carpet magnate Bob Shaw and attorney Lin Wood, he ended the quarter with roughly as much money on hand as Kemp. He shelled out $540,000 this period, including roughly $300,000 with two firms linked to Georgia operative Nick Ayers: Target Enterprise­s and Bask Digital Media.

Total contributi­ons this period: $405,177

Total contributi­ons to date: $2,544,518.28

Cash on hand: $1,591,518.83

State Sen. Michael Williams

The accountant has fueled his campaign with about $1.5 million in loans but has had trouble raising cash. His latest fundraisin­g figures show he’s collected about $300,000 in donations and has most of his take — about $1.27 million — still in the bank.

Total contributi­ons this period: $4,501.45

Total contributi­ons to date: $1,786,003.86

Cash on hand: $1,268,818.23

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