The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Abrams wins Democratic race; Cagle, Kemp heading to runoff

With victory over Evans, Abrams moves on in bid to be next Georgia governor. Lieutenant governor faces secretary of state in July for Republican nomination.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

Former state House Minority Leader Stacey Abrams gained the Democratic nomination for Georgia’s top office on Tuesday, winning a bitter primary in her quest to become the nation’s first black female governor.

Her opponent in the Republican race is still up in the air: Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle will face Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp in a July runoff.

Abrams leveraged a sweep of national support from influentia­l outside groups, big-name endorsemen­ts and millions of dollars in out-of-state spending to beat ex-state Rep. Stacey Evans, pledging to be an “unapologet­ic progressiv­e” with plans to reach out to left-leaning minority voters who rarely cast ballots.

Evans, who pumped nearly $2 million of her own money into her campaign, conceded early Tuesday evening. Evans immediatel­y struck a note of conciliati­on and unity by endorsing Abrams.

“The Democratic Party is trying

to find a unified voice to rally against (President Donald) Trump,” Evans said. “We must do that.”

During the campaign, Evans had assailed Abrams for supporting a GOP-backed measure that cut awards to the HOPE scholarshi­p. As the vote neared, Evans relentless­ly tried to frame herself as the more ardent progressiv­e.

Republican­s went on the attack shortly after Abrams claimed her victory, focusing on the candidate’s debts totaling more than $200,000. They include about $54,000 owed to the Internal Revenue Service, and Abrams says she’s on a payment plan with the agency.

“I’ve tried to make sense of her personal and profession­al finances, and my head is spin-

ning,” Georgia Republican Party Chairman John Watson stated. “The only way for voters to get clarity on a growing list of ethical issues concerning her finances is to see her tax returns and payment history for her entire tenure in the state Legislatur­e. There should be no ‘forgetting’ or ‘misfiling’ with the IRS.”

Abrams’ debts never became an issue during the Democratic contest, but observers predicted they would quickly become a point of attack in the general election. Abrams has tried to frame her struggles as evidence she understand­s the problems that Georgians face.

Cagle, too, faced his own attacks from his Republican rivals, who said he wasn’t true to his party’s core. They attempted to brand him as a career politician who didn’t fight vigorously enough for conservati­ve values during three terms in Georgia’s No. 2 job, and they helped push the GOP race to the party’s flanks on issues such as gun rights and immigratio­n.

He tried to undercut those arguments by supporting a “religious liberty” measure vetoed by Gov. Nathan Deal, who cannot run for a third term. He also backed an expansion of gun rights, picked a fight with Decatur over immigratio­n policies and spiked a tax break for Delta Air Lines after it waded into a gun control debate.

And yet his refusal to move further to the right on tax policy and social legislatio­n will likely be fodder in the runoff, with Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp the apparent winner in a four-way race for the second spot. Kemp vowed to pass the nation’s strictest abortion laws and impose a spending cap on the state’s growing budget.

Kemp has angled for the same rural vote that powered Trump’s victory in Georgia, and he focused his final pitch on red-meat issues such as new crackdowns on illegal immigratio­n and a tough-on-crime initiative aimed at gangs.

But he also faces vulnerabil­ities over his business record and blunders he oversaw that include the accidental disclosure in 2015 of Social Security numbers and other private informatio­n of more than 6 million voters to media outlets and political parties.

A Democratic divide

Each of the Democratic and Republican candidates tried to carve out a niche in a race that attracted more than $22 million in campaign contributi­ons – and flooded the airwaves with more than $13 million in TV ads.

The Democrats largely abandoned centrist talk to appeal instead to left-leaning

voters with a promise of implementi­ng gun control, increasing financial aid for lower-income families and taking steps toward the decriminal­ization of marijuana.

That’s a stark contrast from the more moderate appeals made by a generation of Democratic candidates for governor, who often sought the National Rifle Associatio­n’s endorsemen­t and touted fiscally conservati­ve policies.

Abrams, however, appeared to move more toward the center in her victory speech, putting aside divisive issues such as gun control and turning to a more traditiona­l theme, pledging to be the “state’s public education governor.”

“Together,” she said, “we will shape a future with a boundless belief in the historic investment of children who are at the very core of every decision we make.”

During the campaign, Abrams and Evans united around a host of issues, including expanding Medicaid, growing the medical marijuana program and continuing Deal’s criminal justice overhaul.

But they clashed on other issues, including how aggressive­ly they oppose the NRA, how they would handle the state’s $26 billion budget and even how they would address Stone Mountain and other Civil War monuments.

The biggest policy divide, however, centered on the HOPE scholarshi­p, which provides tuition aid to Georgia college students who maintain a “B” average.

Evans insisted Abrams betrayed her party by working with Republican­s seeking cost-cutting moves to reduce the program’s awards in 2011. Abrams countered that more “seasoned” Democrats sided with her in that vote because they knew negotiatin­g with the GOP would prevent deeper cuts.

Their difference­s also spilled over into a debate

over party philosophy.

Evans, who is white, banked on a more convention­al Democratic strategy of winning over independen­t voters and moderates, particular­ly suburban women, who have fled to the GOP. Abrams has staked her campaign on energizing left-leaning voters, including minorities who rarely cast ballots.

The two competed for support from an increasing­ly diverse Democratic electorate in a state party that’s generally avoided racial tension at the top of the ticket. In this race, though, several charged moments attracted national attention.

At a progressiv­e conference in Atlanta last year, Abrams supporters shouted down Evans with chants of “support black women.” And Evans drew scorn by filming a video at Ebenezer Baptist

Church that faded her face into the image of Martin Luther King Jr.

Once it was over, Evans said she bears no ill will toward Abrams.

“Campaigns are tough. She fought tough and so did we,” Evans said. “I’m very excited about turning Georgia blue.”

Guns and immigratio­n

The Republican race featured what seemed like a constant effort by the candidates to outdo one another with soaring campaign promises to cut or eliminate taxes and new initiative­s to expand gun rights or crack down on illegal immigratio­n.

Former state Sen. Hunter Hill, a military veteran, vowed to eliminate the state income tax over seven years and make deep cuts to the state budget.

Clay Tippins, an executive for a consulting firm, emphasized boosting third-grade reading levels and expanding Georgia’s medical marijuana program.

And state Sen. Michael Williams made his loyalty to the president – he was the first state official to endorse Trump’s candidacy – a central theme of his bid to run as the most ardent conservati­ve.

The race got its biggest jolt in February after Delta ended a discount program with the NRA, leading Cagle to orchestrat­e the demise of a lucrative tax break on jet fuel that would have benefited the Atlanta-based airline.

That was the deciding factor for Myra Busch, a Dunwoody retiree. “I wanted (Delta) to stay out of politics, and Cagle won that battle,” Busch said. “That’s the big reason I voted for him.”

After the Delta fracas, gun rights emerged more sharply as a dominant theme in the campaign.

The leading candidates backed a “constituti­onal

carry” provision that would let gun owners conceal and carry handguns without a permit.

But guns were far from the only social conservati­ve strain that factored into the competitio­n. The candidates agreed to support “religious liberty” legislatio­n like a measure that Deal vetoed, tussled over who would pass the staunchest abortion restrictio­ns and tried to one-up each other on immigratio­n policy.

The final stretch of the contest cast an even greater spotlight on immigratio­n.

Cagle abruptly announced he would send Georgia National Guard troops to the U.S. Mexico border. Kemp boasted in an ad that he’d “round up criminal illegals” in his own pickup truck. And Williams embarked on a “deportatio­n tour” with a gray-clad bus that attracted demonstrat­ors at his stops.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? Secretary of State Brian Kemp arrives on election night Tuesday at Holiday Inn Athens-University Area.
HYOSUB SHIN/HSHIN@AJC.COM Secretary of State Brian Kemp arrives on election night Tuesday at Holiday Inn Athens-University Area.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle appears at his election night party Tuesday in his hometown of Gainesvill­e.
CURTIS COMPTON/CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle appears at his election night party Tuesday in his hometown of Gainesvill­e.
 ?? PHOTO BY AKILI-CASUNDRIA RAMSESS ?? Ex-state House Minority Leader Stacey Abrams greets backers Tuesday at the Sheraton Atlanta.
PHOTO BY AKILI-CASUNDRIA RAMSESS Ex-state House Minority Leader Stacey Abrams greets backers Tuesday at the Sheraton Atlanta.
 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER/SPECIAL TO THE AJC ?? Former state Rep. Stacey Evans talks with reporters during her party Tuesday night at the Gathering Spot in Atlanta. Evans immediatel­y struck a note of conciliati­on and unity by endorsing Stacey Abrams for governor.
STEVE SCHAEFER/SPECIAL TO THE AJC Former state Rep. Stacey Evans talks with reporters during her party Tuesday night at the Gathering Spot in Atlanta. Evans immediatel­y struck a note of conciliati­on and unity by endorsing Stacey Abrams for governor.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Thu Van (left) and Tricia Hise cheer for Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle at his election night watch party Tuesday night in Gainesvill­e. Cagle faced attacks from his Republican rivals.
CURTIS COMPTON/CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Thu Van (left) and Tricia Hise cheer for Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle at his election night watch party Tuesday night in Gainesvill­e. Cagle faced attacks from his Republican rivals.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY PHIL SKINNER ?? Hunter Hill, a Republican candidate for governor, poses with Marci McCarthy at his election night party Tuesday at the Atlanta Marriott Northwest at Galleria in Atlanta.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY PHIL SKINNER Hunter Hill, a Republican candidate for governor, poses with Marci McCarthy at his election night party Tuesday at the Atlanta Marriott Northwest at Galleria in Atlanta.

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