The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

At rally, top Georgia Republican­s warn 2018 was blaring ‘wake-up call’

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

ROME — One after another, Republican leaders bashed left-leaning policies, boasted of President Donald Trump’s agenda and warned that last year’s razor-thin midterm could be an ominous sign for next year’s election.

What was largely missing: Much mention of the fraught gun rights debate rekindled a week ago by the mass shootings in Ohio and Texas.

The rally Saturday at the Tillman Hangar in Rome is one of the most popular Republican events of the year, frequently drawing the leading GOP figures in the state.

This year’s event was a warmup act for the 2020 elections, a plea to keep local activists energized through next year.

Plastic “freedom straws” adorned with Trump’s logo sat next to ice-cold lemonade, and a group of Bikers for Trump paraded through the airport grounds. Hundreds waved fans stamped with Trump’s face in a sweltering hangar as a trio sang catchy patriotic songs.

Trump was at the center of just about every speech at the rally. So were the narrow margins in last year’s midterm election — namely, the tight victory by Republican Gov. Brian Kemp.

“We had a wake-up call in 2018,” said U.S. Sen. David Perdue. “The most liberal billionair­es in America think they’re going to import their view on Georgia — their radical, socialist views. And this isn’t the first time they’ve tried it.”

Perdue, running for what he said is his second and final term next year, was followed by a string of local and state GOP officials eager to leave a good impression on northwest Georgia conservati­ves.

“My friends, we don’t get to do what we do, we can’t be successful, unless we win elections. The other side is desperate to win in Georgia,” said Attorney General Chris Carr. “They’ve got their targets set in Georgia, all the way down to city and local elections. We’ve got to get back to work.”

Carr, who won a close election last year, paused as he surveyed the crowd.

“We can acknowledg­e that this is happening and do something about it and win. Or not and lose,” he said. “And if you want to know the consequenc­es, watch the presidenti­al debates.”

Time and again, the speechifyi­ng turned back to what is already a dominant theme in the election: broad descriptio­ns of Democrats as extremist outsiders who don’t represent the values of Georgians. Many highlighte­d 2020 candidates pushing liberal policies such as Medicare for All.

Democrats stress that even the most liberal of their ranks don’t endorse the policies that define socialism, such as the state ownership of resources and collective control over the means of production.

Republican­s cast it as a battle for the soul of the nation. “2020 will be the most consequent­ial election in our lifetime,” said Georgia GOP chair David Shafer. “The far left in this country hates Donald Trump. They hate him irrational­ly and almost rabidly, and they’ve taken over so many institutio­ns in this country.”

The speeches were also laced with deep mistrust of journalist­s and the news media, with several GOP officials echoing Trump by sprinkling their speeches with attacks on “fake news.”

Republican National Committeem­an Jason Thompson urged the audience to embrace social media.

“We are the new media,” he said, after endorsing Twitter, Facebook and Instagram apps. “Let’s blow it up on social media.”

The lone politician to wade into the Second Amendment debate was U.S. Rep. Barry Loudermilk, who was on the scene in Alexandria, Virginia, in June 2017 when a shooter opened fire on a Republican baseball practice ahead of the annual congressio­nal baseball game.

He took issue with a tweet from Democratic state Sen. Jen Jordan criticizin­g Loudermilk and other Republican­s for hosting a “GOP marksmansh­ip event and BBQ” this week in Smyrna.

“Marksmansh­ip Event just two weeks after #ElPaso and #Dayton mass shootings? And GA Republican­s wonder why it has lost support of so many suburban women ...,” the Sandy Springs Democrat wrote.

Loudermilk said he was “offended that she’s actually politicizi­ng these horrific events” before recounting the baseball field shootings.

Loudermilk hid from the gunman behind a wooden shack and was a few feet from a gunshot victim. “Good intentions didn’t stop that shooting. A couple of police officers with ARs did,” he said, adding: “We have to be cautious about doing something for the sake of just doing something.”

Trump was at the center of just about every speech at the rally. So were the narrow margins in last year’s midterm election — namely, the tight victory by Republican Gov. Brian Kemp.

 ?? DAVID BARNES / DAVID.BARNES@AJC.COM 2016 ?? “My friends, we don’t get to do what we do, we can’t be successful, unless we win elections,” Attorney General Chris Carr said Saturday at a GOP rally at Tillman Hangar in Rome.
DAVID BARNES / DAVID.BARNES@AJC.COM 2016 “My friends, we don’t get to do what we do, we can’t be successful, unless we win elections,” Attorney General Chris Carr said Saturday at a GOP rally at Tillman Hangar in Rome.

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