The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

» President Donald Trump is planning multiple stops during his trip today to Atlanta,

Fundraiser for Perdue, black voter outreach on president’s agenda.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

President Donald Trump is headed to Atlanta today for a oneday trip that includes a roundtable discussion with donors who signed six-figure checks, a fundraiser to boost U.S. Sen. David Perdue’s reelection bid and the rollout of a campaign initiative targeting black voters.

Trump is set to touch down at Dobbins Air Reserve Base around 11 a.m., head to the roundtable and fundraiser in Buckhead for lunch and then go downtown to the Georgia World Congress

Center for his midafterno­on speech before returning to Dobbins. Expect major traffic snarls throughout the city.

Here’s what to know about the day:

‘Black Voices for Trump’

The headline-grabbing event of the day will be the unveiling of the “Black Voices for Trump” coalition in downtown Atlanta. The

president is set to speak after 2 p.m. at the invitation-only event, along with Vice Pres- ident Mike Pence and Housing and Urban Developmen­t Secretary Ben Carson.

Trump is expected to high- light recent statistics that show low unemployme­nt rates for black workers as well as an opportunit­y zone program that Republican­s tucked into their 2017 taxcut legislatio­n to encourage investors to pump money into struggling areas.

But Republican­s face a daunting challenge wooing black voters in Georgia, where Stacey Abrams and other Democrats won the African American electorate by a huge margin in 2018. Exit polls showed 94% of black voters backed Abrams over Republican Brian Kemp in last year’s race for governor.

The natio n al data for Trump is grim, too. In 2016, only 8% of black voters cast ballots for Trump and, according to a 2018 Pew Research Center poll, only 8% of black voters identify in some way with the Repub- lican Party.

There’s much buzz about how many black Republican­s will show up at Trump’s kick- off at the downtown convention center and which Geor- gians will be tapped to lead the new group.

He has several prominent African American conserva- tives to choose from, includ- ing Alveda King, a niece of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., Bruce Levell, a Dunwoody jeweler who was a leader in Trump’s black outreach group in 2016, and Ashley Bell, a White House policy adviser.

Senate speculatio­n

Word that Trump will arrive in Atlanta on Air Force One with U.S. Rep. Doug Collins in tow has sparked a frenzy of rumors in Geor- gia political circles that the

Gainesvill­e Republican will be Gov. Brian Kemp’s pick for the U.S. Senate.

Collins remains one of the best-known contend- ers for the office, but unless there’s a drastic change of plans, Kemp is not expected to announce his appointmen­t for the soon-to-be vacated U.S. Senate seat in time for Trump’s visit.

More than 500 people have submitted resumes since the governor posted his online “help wanted” sign for the seat held by U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson, who is stepping down at year’s end for health reasons.

The list is studded with well-known names — includ- ing current and former office- holders, business executives, a U.S. ambassador, deco- rated military veterans and radio commentato­rs. A sitting Democratic state senator even raised his hand for the job.

Still, the president might use the event to drop a hint about whom he favors — increasing the pressure on Kemp. As the ranking Repub- lican on the House Judiciary Committee, Collins has been one of Trump’s top defend- ers in Congress.

And last month, the president’s son, Donald Trump Jr., headlined a fundraiser that raised about $300,000 for Collins and called him “the kind of fighter we need in the Senate.”

Trump’s Atlanta events will be filled, too, with other potential Senate appointees who may try to quietly make their case for the position.

Promoting Perdue

Trump is preparing to host a high-dollar fundraiser in Atlanta to help defend Perdue, one of the staunchest critics of the Democratic-led impeachmen­t effort.

The president recently set up a joint fundraisin­g committee with the Republican in time for Friday’s event at an undisclose­d Atlanta locale that will run attendees $2,800 to get in the door and a six-figure check to attend a roundtable.

The money-in-politics tracker OpenSecret­s.org reports that Perdue is the first congressio­nal candidate to directly receive support from a Trump-backed fundraisin­g committee.

Perdue is one of Trump’s most ardent defenders in the U.S. Senate and was standing by him at Game 5 of the World Series last week when baseball fans at Nationals Park in Wash- ington greeted the president with boos and chants of “Lock him up!”

Four Democrats running for Perdue’s seat have tried to paint him as a Trump stooge too blinded by his loyalty to do what’s best for his constituen­ts. At a campaign event on Saturday, Democrat Teresa Tomlinson labeled Perdue “the enabler, the influencer, the co-pilot of this president.”

Attendees will have to dig deep into their wallets: A place at the roundtable will cost supporters a $100,000 check. It follows with a lun- cheon that will run attendees $2,800 for a seat at the table — and at least $35,000 for a photo with the president.

Protests and counterpro­gramming

The president’s critics plan to make his one-day trip to Atlanta as uncomforta­ble as possible. One group is planning his “biggest UN-welcome yet” to start at Centennial Park at 2 p.m., just before Trump is set to speak at the Georgia World Congress Center.

Democratic Senate candi- date Jon Ossoff is spoofing Trump’s invite to announce his own counterpro­gramming event: a happy hour Friday evening at Manuel’s Tavern, a hangout for cops, journalist­s and politicos.

And state Democrats will hold a news conference at 8:30 a.m. at the Georgia Capitol to highlight how Trump’s agenda “hurts Georgia’s black community.”

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