The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Candidates looking at runoffs

Party groundswel­l saw crowded fields in 6th, 7th districts.

- By Tamar Hallerman tamar.hallerman@ajc.com Jeremy Redmon jredmon@ajc.com

So many candidates were running in Tuesday’s Democratic primaries for the Atlanta region’s two most closely watched congressio­nal elections that it is likely both races will require extra innings.

In Georgia, election runoffs are triggered when no single candidate captures more than 50 percent of the vote.

In the state’s 6th District — which includes parts of Cobb, DeKalb and Fulton counties — first-time candidate Lucy McBath was leading the pack of Democrats, followed by Kevin Abel and Bobby Kaple. Steven Griffin was a distant fourth. They are vying to take on Republican U.S. Rep. Karen Handel of Roswell. Handel had no opponent on the GOP primary ballot.

Meanwhile, Carolyn Bourdeaux and David Kim were neck and neck and had begun to open up substantia­l leads over the four other candidates in their party’s primary for Lawrencevi­lle Republican Rob Woodall’s 7th District seat. Kathleen Allen, Melissa Davis, Ethan Pham and Steve Reilly were also vying for the Democratic Party nomination. That district hadn’t seen a Democratic primary fight in years. In the GOP primary, Woodall had a convincing lead over Shane Hazel, a U.S. Marine Corps veteran, according to early poll results.

For years, Democrats did not seriously contest congressio­nal seats in Atlanta’s staunchly Republican northern suburbs. But changing demographi­cs and the political groundswel­l on the left following President Donald Trump’s election, combined with last year’s surprising­ly competitiv­e 6th District special election, invigorate­d Democratic circles in the run-up to this year’s primary.

A record number of women stepped up to run for congressio­nal seats, as well as several first-generation Americans. Nearly all the Democratic challenger­s looked to appeal to their party’s left flank ahead of the primary, adopting staunchly anti-Trump positions on issues such as immigratio­n, gun rights and health care. Several vowed to buck Nancy Pelosi for speaker should their party win control of the House in November.

Meanwhile, many of the Democratic challenger­s said it was too soon for their party to push for impeaching Trump on Capitol Hill. Few if any of them publicly embraced the campaign from some prominent liberals, including California-based megadonor Tom Steyer, to boot the commander-in-chief ahead of the midterms. Most have either dodged the question entirely or argued that Congress should wait until after special counsel Robert Mueller concludes his investigat­ion of Russia’s involvemen­t in the 2016 election before making any decisions.

Handel and Woodall largely avoided the spotlight in the run-up to the primary. Woodall fully and unapologet­ically backed Trump as he ran for a fifth term in his district, a majority-minority immigrant hub that narrowly voted for Hillary Clinton in 2016. Meanwhile, Handel fundraised heavily to steel herself against future political attacks.

Despite the energy on the left, none of the congressio­nal races achieved anything close to the circuslike quality that characteri­zed last year’s 6th District special election and made it one of the nation’s most expensive. The parties, major donors and super PACs largely sat on the sidelines or focused on other, more competitiv­e contests. Georgia’s open governor’s race also siphoned off much of the money and attention.

All 14 of Georgia’s U.S. House members are up for re-election this year, and 12 face opposition of some kind. Most if not all are expected to win their seats in November since incumbents tend to enjoy superior name identifica­tion and fundraisin­g help.

 ?? REANN HUBER/REANN.HUBER@AJC.COM ?? Gwinnett County residents took part in primary election voting Tuesday at Buford City Hall.
REANN HUBER/REANN.HUBER@AJC.COM Gwinnett County residents took part in primary election voting Tuesday at Buford City Hall.

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