The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Kavanaugh fires up voters on both sides

Outrage in Georgia spurs many to join fray for, against candidates.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com and Amanda C. Coyne Amanda.Coyne@ajc.com

CARTERSVIL­LE — Abby Levine was so upset by Brett Kavanaugh’s potential confirmati­on for a U.S. Supreme Court seat that it gave her an extra reason to spend the past few days volunteeri­ng for Stacey Abrams’ Democratic campaign for governor.

Darla Williams was so disappoint­ed by the “witch hunt” targeting President Donald Trump’s nominee for the high court that last week she started canvassing her neighborho­od to support Republican Brian Kemp’s bid for the top state office.

Georgia Democrats hope the outrage over Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on hearing will spark a backlash from female and independen­t voters who are furious about the sexual assault allegation­s swirling around the nominee.

But Republican­s are banking on an aftershock of their own to help vulnerable incumbents and challenger­s, and give conservati­ves a sense of momentum a month ahead of the midterm vote.

It exemplifie­s the intense polarizati­on over Kavanaugh, who

quickly became a Rorschach test in U.S. politics last week during a fraught U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee hearing.

Kavanaugh has denied Christine Blasey Ford’s accusation that he sexually assaulted her when both were in high school 36 years ago, and he angrily cast his confirmati­on process as “a national disgrace” and “a calculated and orchestrat­ed political hit” conducted by the Democrats.

His supporters are rallying behind him in what they see as a potentiall­y legacy-making appointmen­t on the court.

His opponents, mean- while, express outrage that Ford’s allegation has not disqualifi­ed Kavanaugh — the FBI this week launched an investigat­ion — and hope to unleash a wave of fury among voters who are crit- ical of Trump at a volatile political moment.

It’s already reverberat- ing across Georgia politics. Both Carolyn Bourdeaux and Lucy McBath, who are each running for competitiv­e U.S. House seats in Atlanta’s suburbs, demanded that Republican incumbents disavow Kavanaugh.

And Abrams, who has largely stuck to state issues in her campaign for governor, has recently focused on Kavanaugh at campaign stops and in fundraisin­g appeals ahead of a key deadline.

“I’m winning women. And I think if Brett Kavanaugh is endorsed and he is put on the Supreme Court, given that my opponent has said he believes not the survivor but someone that had a temper tantrum in a hearing,” she said during a recent campaign event in Brookhaven, “I think that’s going to help us get further and further along the line and across the finish line to governor.”

Kemp wrote a letter of support for Kavanaugh over the summer, and he said Tuesday amid a bus tour across the state that he hasn’t changed his mind.

“It’s firing our supporters up. I’m trusting in our two senators to go through the process and hear everything there is to hear, but I think people are fed up with it,” Kemp said. “Based on what we know now, he should be confirmed. But we have a new process with the FBI ... and I’ll support that.”

At a Kemp rally in Cartersvil­le, U.S. Rep. Barry Loudermilk took it a step further.

“If you want the drama in D.C. for the next four years — for what they did to Brett Kavanaugh — then stay home,” he told a crowd of more than 50 supporters outside a Cartersvil­le museum. “If not, talk about what we stand for.”

Kavanaugh could figure in more such drama. Democratic U.S. Rep. Hank Johnson of DeKalb County, who could head a House Judiciary subcommitt­ee that oversees federal courts if Democrats win control of the House in November, has said he might open an investigat­ion if Kava- naugh wins confirmati­on.

Republican U.S. Rep. Doug Collins of Gainesvill­e, who also serves on the Judiciary Committee, thinks “John- son’s opinion is going to help us keep the majority.”

“I just appreciate Hank Johnson putting into words what we’ve been telling the American people: that the Democrats have no plans for the future,” Collins said. “They simply want to tear down the president and con- tinue to use their platform to try to re-litigate the 2016 presidenti­al election.”

Johnson isn’t worried that his party’s outrage over Kavanaugh could rally the Repub- lican base.

“Republican­s are trying to do what they can to try to pump up and invigorate the sagging energy and enthu- siasm of their voters, and that’s why Trump said that maybe this investigat­ion, maybe it’s a good thing that this is happening,” Johnson said. “He’s trying to use it to pump up his base, and that’s what all Republican­s in the Trump Republican Party are trying to do at this point.”

Johnson said an investigat­ion into Kavanaugh “should be for the truth and to do what’s right.”

“This is more than just about partisansh­ip and trying to win an election,” he said. “This is for the future of this nation; the soul of this nation is under attack. When you put folks like Brett Kavanaugh into high places, it does not serve the future for this nation well at all.”

A mixed bag?

National Democrats already sense the beginnings of a Kavanaugh backlash. ActBlue, the online transactio­n service founded in 2004, said it raised a record $10 million to support Democrats on Friday — the day after the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing — from small-dollar donors.

Re p ub l icans s ee their own signs of blowback. Josh Holmes, a former aide to U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, predicted the hearings would alienate Democrats in red states and said it amounted to “dropping a grenade into the electorate.”

And Kemp’s supporters hope the hearings could give him an unexpected bounce as he aims to close an already-g a ping gender gap. An Atlanta Jour- nal-Constituti­on poll shows Kemp with a wide lead over Abrams among men, while Abrams has a double-digit edge among women.

Mark Rountree, a Republi- can pollster with Landmark Communicat­ions, released a poll Monday that showed a plurality of likely Georgia voters backing Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on.

He suspects that the “pub- licity and partisan display” surroundin­g Kavanaugh’s nomination have likely hurt Democrats. Since Georgia is a conservati­ve-leaning state, he said, “when news or events are perceived as partisan, it generally helps Republican­s.”

That was echoed by Barbra Fairbank, who arrived with a friend for a Kemp stop in Ellijay that filled to capacity so quickly that people were turned away an hour ahead of time.

“Right now, they’re trying to make it that you’re guilty until proven innocent,” said Fairbank, who added that she welcomes the FBI investigat­ion. “She needs to be investigat­ed. It’s only fair.”

And Williams, who owns a social marketing firm, called the Kavanaugh investigat­ion nothing short of a “perse- cution.”

“It makes me a lot more willing to knock on doors. We started up again this past week,” she said. “I was going to do it anyways — but it sure got me started earlier.”

Democrats are eager to talk about the nerve that Kavanaugh struck. Ricardo Newball, a retiree, panned the nominee’s “screaming” about his innocence and said he should have welcomed an FBI investigat­ion earlier. He cast his opposition to Kavanaugh as a way to send a message to Trump.

“He’s on record as protecting the president,” Newball said. “That’s one of the reasons Trump wants him.”

As for Levine, she traveled to Atlanta for a few days to make calls and reach out to voters on Abrams’ behalf. To her, Kavanaugh adds to a lengthy list of reasons she’s devoting her time to stump for a Democratic candidate hundreds of miles from her home in Washington.

“I’m seeing the energy among women, as candidates, as activists — that’s motivating me,” she said. “I live 1 mile from the Capitol, and I don’t feel like what’s coming out of that building represents my values.”

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