The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Partisan shifts put Gwinnett and Brooks counties in the election spotlight

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com and Tyler Estep tyler.estep@ajc.com

The two Georgia counties with the biggest partisan shifts over the past decade could hardly be more distinct from each other.

No county has experience­d a greater jump in Democratic voter participat­ion between the 2010 and 2018 primaries than Gwinnett, a fast-diversifyi­ng suburb teeming with neighborho­ods and strip malls.

And no county experience­d a GOP awakening as much as Brooks, a sparsely populated, rural territory laden with mossy oaks and peach groves perched atop the state border with Florida.

Yet both also are uniquely central to November’s race for Georgia governor. Gwinnett has fast become a virtual must-win for Democrat Stacey Abrams as the county has morphed from a Republican stronghold to a pitched battlegrou­nd.

And Republican Brian Kemp needs to win huge margins in counties such as Brooks, where Yellow Dog Democrats have given way to staunch conservati­ve politics, to overcome his likely struggles in densely populated parts of the state.

The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on took a closer look at the

dynamic politics of these two counties, home to residents who are closely watching this election — and hopeful the next governor can fulfill bold promises.

Brooks County

The last time there was a wide-open race for Georgia governor, Republican­s were outnumbere­d in Brooks roughly 3-to-1 in the primary contests. Eight years later, GOP voters had the overwhelmi­ng advantage — more than doubling their primary vote total — and few here are surprised.

After all, in the 2010 governor’s race, Nathan Deal lost Brooks by a few hundred votes. Four years later, he won it by about 8 percentage points. Donald Trump carried Brooks by an even vaster margin, winning nearly 60 percent of the vote here.

But residents here are also scarred from a saga that ripped the county apart eight years ago, when four black candidates won a majority of seats on a local school board that had always been controlled by whites – leading to a state investigat­ion into election law violations that later collapsed.

Nancy Dennard is a veteran of that fight. As the president of the school board, she was charged with 11 counts of voter fraud and later exonerated after a lengthy battle. Now she’s the mayor of Quitman, the tree-lined county seat of Brooks, and she’s an Abrams supporter who’s thankful the Democrat hasn’t written off red territory.

“Her message is starting to resonate. The state is finally realizing the capabiliti­es of Brian Kemp,” she said during a recent Abrams visit to South Georgia. “We are now looking to the future.”

Her office in City Hall sits in a tidy downtown off the straight-as-an-arrow road linking to Valdosta 17 miles away. A few blocks away, Ernie Owens runs the Owens Propane Co., a low-slung building with a steady stream of visitors on a recent weekday.

A red-and-black Kemp sign standing vigil outside the store made clear his views on the governor’s race, but he was eager to reinforce them as he leaned back in a chair near the front door.

“I like Kemp’s beliefs, his background, his family, his upbringing, his support for the Second Amendment,” Owens said, ticking through an internal list. Most of all, he added, he liked that Kemp was endorsed by Trump.

“I’ve always been a Republican, but now more people are realizing the problems we’ve had are related to the Democrats,” he said. “I’m talking about the partisan divide.”

The county’s population hovers around 15,500 people, hardly budging since 1960, and nearly 1 in 4 people live below the poverty line. Many people here feel they may as well be standins for the “forgotten man” that Trump spoke about so effectivel­y during the 2016 campaign, and they point excitedly to recent economic gains.

There’s the chicken hatchery on the outskirts of town bringing in about 100 new jobs, and there’s buzz about a big project brewing with the local developmen­t authority. Some credit Trump’s policies, and Republican­s by extension, for the economic boost.

“We had to have some change, and we are getting it. The school system is getting better, building has started up again, the constructi­on market is taking off,” Owens said. “And that’s all about the economy.”

A bit farther out of town, across from the high school football stadium, sits R.L. Cunningham & Sons Peanut Co. A few weeks from now, the plant will be bustling with activity from the latest peanut harvests. But for now, owner Larry Cunningham is enjoying a moment of downtime.

People around town see him as the county’s unofficial historian, and he’s quick to share his insights on local personalit­ies, like the time he met Jimmy Carter at a peanut conference when he was 10. In his view, Brooks isn’t getting any “redder” — but the lines between Democrats and Republican­s here are hardening.

“It’s like Methodists and Baptists who used to go to services together but now have fallen out over denominati­onal disagreeme­nts,” he said.

That didn’t used to be the case. Generation­al fallout from Reconstruc­tion put Brooks and most other rural Georgia counties solidly in the Democratic camp, and for decades the county’s top offices were filled with Yellow Dog Democrats — die-hard Southerner­s who voted for whatever name had a “D” next to it.

That began to change in 2010. A heated primary race for a U.S. House seat and contested school board elections divided conservati­ve voters who were used to pulling Democratic ballots.

“Eight years ago, we still had conservati­ves running as Democrats. We knew who everyone was. But 2010 woke us up,” Cunningham said. “It became obvious that you couldn’t sit down and be a Republican but then vote in a Democratic primary.”

His best guess is that the governor’s race has only solidified that divide. Most people here, he said, have retreated to their ideologica­l corners.

“The race factor is there for both sides, and some people are going to vote strictly on race,” Cunningham added, glancing over to a “Peanut Life” license plate hanging on the wall. “I don’t think there’s enough undecideds here in Brooks to fill a phone booth.”

Gwinnett County

Just as Gwinnett has transforme­d from a rural backwater to a sprawling suburb, another metamorpho­sis is underway: from Republican bastion to a place that, if not reliably blue, is suddenly reliably competitiv­e.

Case in point: Eight years ago, only 17,500 Democratic primary ballots were cast, accounting for less than one-quarter of the overall votes. This year, that number eclipsed 40,500 — rocketing to 53 percent of the total, the largest Democratic increase in Georgia.

The primary reason is a swirl of changing demographi­cs. More than 60 percent of Gwinnett’s 900,000 residents are black, Latino or Asian — a tidal shift for a county that was almost exclusivel­y white in the 1990s. Transplant­s from major cities in the Northeast and Midwest are also changing the county’s mix.

And though county-level positions are primarily held by Republican­s, Democrats are taking aim at offices that once seemed far out of reach — including five seats in the state Legislatur­e left vacant by departing GOP incumbents.

That’s good news for Democrats hungry to lock down Georgia’s second-largest county, which flipped blue in 2016 for the first time since Jimmy Carter’s presidency.

That newfound energy was mesmerizin­g to Janice and Elhadj Allie of Lawrencevi­lle, who were enjoying a meal near the entrance of the Gwinnett County Fair, where strains of politics competed with loud music, fried food and raucous rides.

“Definitely because she’s an African-American,” Janice Allie said when asked to elaborate on her support for Abrams.

“It would be the first time we had an African-American woman governor. And I think she’s family-oriented, she cares about the family,” she added. “That’s what we need — people who actually care.”

Just a short walk away, Roberta and Gary Dodson of Snellville sat on a hay bale eating a fried onion blossom and an ear of corn, and they quickly provided an example of how polarizing this race is.

Both said, flatly, they’re voting for “not Stacey” — for very different reasons.

For Roberta Dodson, it was Abrams’ 2017 call to remove the Confederat­e faces from Stone Mountain that cinched her opposition. Her husband had a broader set of complaints about her campaign.

“Because she’s a liberal. And anyone that Hillary (Clinton) supports? That kind of sums it up right there,” Gary Dodson said. “It’s all the liberal things that she supports.”

The Dodsons’ comments point to an important caveat: While Gwinnett has been a majority-minority county since at least 2010, the actual voting population transition­ed much more recently.

It was only October 2016 when an AJC analysis found that, for the first time, more than half of Gwinnett’s registered voters had identified themselves as something other than white.

Democratic hopes in Gwinnett, then, will likely swing on the level of turnout. The local party is confident, with Party Chairman Gabe Okoye describing this election season as a “full onslaught.”

“We want the state to go where we’re going,” Okoye said. “And we’re going blue.”

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 ??  ?? T-shirts for state house candidate Scott Hilton at a candidate forum Tuesday at Berkeley Lake Elementary School. Gwinnett County has seen a huge jump in Democratic participat­ion in recent years.
T-shirts for state house candidate Scott Hilton at a candidate forum Tuesday at Berkeley Lake Elementary School. Gwinnett County has seen a huge jump in Democratic participat­ion in recent years.
 ?? CASEY SYKES PHOTOS / SPECIAL TO THE AJC ?? Ben Ku, candidate for county commission­er, speaks with constituen­ts at a candidate forum Tuesday at Berkeley Lake Elementary School.
CASEY SYKES PHOTOS / SPECIAL TO THE AJC Ben Ku, candidate for county commission­er, speaks with constituen­ts at a candidate forum Tuesday at Berkeley Lake Elementary School.

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