The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Apartment dwellers prove a true force in northern arc

- Jim Galloway

Since the drubbing that Republican­s suffered in metro Atlanta’s northern suburbs last month, something that Fran Millar said had nagged at me.

A state senator from Dunwoody, Millar was one of several GOP state lawmakers who saw their seats washed away by a blue wave on Election Day.

Twenty-four hours after his loss, Millar was quick to acknowledg­e the backlash to President Donald Trump as the primary driving force. And he credited his Democratic oppo- nent, Sally Harrell, with running an effective campaign.

But Millar identified yet another factor in his defeat: The Democratic ability to draw a new force into the suburban politics of the northern arc — the power of apartment complex voters, and condo owners, too. I called him last week to see if he still felt the same. He did.

“Ten years ago, Dunwoody was a single-family bedroom community — that was the force behind the creation of the city of Dunwoody,” Millar said. “Today, more than half of Dunwoody residents no longer live in single-family dwellings. That’s not where these people are going. They’re going to be in high rises. They’re going to be above store fronts”

One problem with wave elections is that they tend to

obscure other, subtle but important shifts in voting patterns. “What [Democrats] did in the apartments that was very effective,” admitted Sandy Springs Mayor Rusty Paul, a Republican. “They identified voters in the apartments, and then ran the best ground game that I’ve ever seen.”

But what impressed Paul more last Wednesday, the day after Republican­s emerged victorious in two statewide runoffs, was that even the richest areas of Sandy Springs, neighborho­ods with homes worth $3 million and more, stuck with the Democratic candidates.

“In these affluent areas, it actually got bluer,” Paul said. “That was the surprise for me. I thought it was a mobilizati­on issue, and to a large degree it was — at a certain level. But you’ve had a philosophi­cal shift among affluent, educated voters in the state of Georgia that I don’t think anybody anticipate­d.”

Yet a decline in the political clout of homeowners in Atlanta’s northern suburbs would be its own earthquake.

The targeting of apartment clusters is a causal feature of urban electionee­ring, and within the city of Atlanta, it is nearly an art form. But outside the Perimeter, in the arc that stretches from Cobb County through to Gwinnett County, R-100 zon- ing – single homes of a cer- tain square footage, sitting on a lot of a certain size — has served as the foundation of local politics for decades.

Those houses are filled with voters who remain in place year after year, voting the same way today as they did 10 years ago. Apartment dwellers are a younger and more diverse lot. Their needs and concerns are different — when it comes to schools, transporta­tion, recreation and property taxes.

And there are more and more of them. A Fannie Mae study published this fall reported that nearly 44,000 apartment units have come online in metro Atlanta since 2012. Another 17,000 are expected to be completed by 2019.

Curiously, when I approached the campaigns of Stacey Abrams and Lucy McBath, which drove much of the Democratic success in Cobb, Gwinnett and north Fulton on Nov. 6, I was told that apartment complexes weren’t a specific target of either campaign, but a byproduct of voter-contact operations based on social media, texting and the internet.

Any search for younger, diverse voters, or those who don’t normally par- ticipate in mid-year elections, will naturally lead campaigns to blocks of apartments along metro Atlanta’s busiest thoroughfa­res.

My Abrams contact said their campaign was wellversed enough in apartment campaignin­g to know that, with many complexes gated, an inside contact was essential for canvassing. A McBath contact noted that the techniques often used to contact the owners of single-family homes — he specifical­ly cited direct mail — don’t work with apartment dwellers.

They don’t check their mailboxes that often, he said – because they pay their bills online.

One downside raised by both: Apartment dwellers move. A lot. Which can raise boatloads of voter registrati­on issues.

Finally, I was able to con- tact one pioneering foot soldier. Josh McLaurin is a Sandy Springs attorney who in January will be sworn in as a state House member. A Democrat, McLaurin will replace the retiring Wendell Willard, a Republican.

“I probably visited at least 2,000 doors in Sandy Springs apartment complexes that weren’t actually on a campaign ‘knock’ list. You never really know

 ??  ??
 ?? AJC STAFF 2014 ?? “I think Republican­s are going to have to develop an apartment ministry,” said state Sen. Fran Millar, a Republican from Dunwoody who lost Nov. 6. “You better broaden your mission. The Republican party in the metro area can no longer be a single-family homeowner institutio­n.”
AJC STAFF 2014 “I think Republican­s are going to have to develop an apartment ministry,” said state Sen. Fran Millar, a Republican from Dunwoody who lost Nov. 6. “You better broaden your mission. The Republican party in the metro area can no longer be a single-family homeowner institutio­n.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States