The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Governor raises $110K ahead of legislativ­e session

Kemp’s campaign ends month with $717,000 banked.

- By James Salzer jsalzer@ajc.com

After surviving the most expensive governor’s race in Georgia history, Gov. Brian Kemp’s re-election campaign raised about $110,000 in the two weeks leading up to the start of this year’s General Assembly session.

State law prohibits Kemp and lawmakers from raising money during the General Assembly session. The aim is to reduce the appearance that lawmakers are influenced by money from lobbyists and business associatio­ns during the session.

Some lawmakers hold fundraiser­s to get checks from lobbyists just before the session, but governors, especially new ones, generally don’t have to work too hard to collect money for re-election from those eager to get on their good side.

The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on reported last month that Georgia’s nationally followed gubernator­ial race likely cost more than $100 million, including money spent by political parties and PACs.

Kemp beat Abrams by about 55,000 votes out of 3.94 million cast in the general election after ousting the onetime GOP front-runner — Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle — in July’s Republican primary runoff.

In her end-of-the-year reports filed in January, Abrams’ campaign said she spent $27.4 million, the most any candidate has ever spent to run for governor in Georgia. Kemp wasn’t far behind at $21.4 million.

Kemp’s contributi­ons during the first few weeks of 2019 leading up to the session — before he was inaugurate­d — almost all came from inside Georgia and mostly from individual­s without obvious ties to state legislatio­n or funding.

The day before the session began, his campaign did receive $6,600 from the political action committee for new-car dealers, who this session are expected to continue what has become an annual fight with usedcar dealers over taxing auto sales.

Other donors included the Georgia Restaurant Associatio­n ($2,500), the Georgia Mining Associatio­n ($1,000), veteran lobbyists Pete Robinson ($6,600) and Terry Hobbs ($250), mining associatio­n lobbyist Lee Lemke ($250) and Georgia Power lobbyist John D’Andrea ($500).

Kemp’s campaign ended the month with $717,000 banked for his likely 2022 re-election bid.

 ?? BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM ?? State law prohibits Gov. Brian Kemp and lawmakers from raising money during the General Assembly session.
BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM State law prohibits Gov. Brian Kemp and lawmakers from raising money during the General Assembly session.

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