The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

How Kemp decided on Loeffler for Senate

Selection’s effect could ripple through 2022.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

About three months ago, Kelly Loeffler introduced a team of sports executives to a crowd of politician­s and corporate types at SunTrust Park. Within minutes, hardly a soul in the room was listening.

Just about every face was affixed to a smartphone and breaking news that was about to upend Georgia politics: U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson had just announced he was stepping down at year’s end, giving Gov. Brian Kemp a chance to appoint his replacemen­t.

No one knew then that Loeffler would be Kemp’s pick. Not Loeffler, a deep-pocketed market

ing wiz who only applied for the job hours before a deadline, and not Kemp, who found out about Isakson’s decision shortly before the public did.

The governor’s decision will define not only his first year in office but also the immediate future of the Georgia GOP.

By picking Loeffler, Kemp is wagering that a finance executive who has never run for office can survive a string of elections. Those trials start with a November 2020 race to fill Isakson’s remain

ing two years, and there will also be a 2022 vote for a full term. A

January 2021 runoff could be sandwiched between.

The fallout of the governor’s decision is still in flux, but this much is certain: For the first time since Kemp won election, he has rebuffed President Donald Trump on a major issue, defying his personal appeals for U.S. Rep. Doug Collins, a four-term congressma­n and outspoken opponent of impeachmen­t.

To get to this point, there were enough twists to fill a novella.

Private maneuverin­g, secret meetings, intense pressure from Trump and his allies and an applicatio­n process teeming with wellknown politician­s unspooled in the public eye.

It’s a drama that’s still being written. Grassroots conservati­ves upset with the selection of Loeffler tried — and failed — to persuade Kemp to go with Collins. And Collins said he’s “strongly” considerin­g a run for the Senate anyway, raising the prospect of a bitter Republican fight on the 2020 ballot.

“A joke?”

The email to Kemp’s top advisers landed like a thunderbol­t just before 10 a.m. Aug. 28:

“Johnny is telling Governor Kemp now that we are announcing today that Johnny will resign his Senate seat.”

The public announceme­nt came less than an hour later, stunning the political world while also setting up a second U.S. Senate election in Georgia to go along with U.S. Sen. David Perdue’s quest for reelection.

Kemp’s initial reaction was to sidestep talk of the open seat — he was consumed with preparatio­ns for Hurricane Dorian — but once the tropical cyclone passed, he turned his attention to the political storm brewing.

Rather than release a list of finalists, he wound up taking a novel route: an online portal that invited applicatio­ns from anyone who met constituti­onal requiremen­ts to serve in the U.S. Senate. He settled on the process, in part, because he didn’t start with a conceived shortlist of candidates.

Soon, the office was flooded with resumes. Some were big names. Former U.S. Health Secretary Tom Price. Ex-U.S. Rep. Jack Kingston. U.S. Ambassador Randy Evans, a well-known GOP lawyer. State Rep. Jan Jones, the No. 2 Republican in the Georgia House.

Others, not so much. Some sent detailed transcript­s and medical histories — one applicant noted he was free of sexually transmitte­d diseases — while others kept it simple. Pranksters sent in phony applicatio­ns — one purported to be Hillary Clinton — and others raised their hand on a lark.

“The whole thing is a joke and I just wanted to see what would happen,” said Matthew Borenstein, a digital strategist who turned in a one-page resume. “I mean, who puts up a job posting for U.S. senator?”

Kemp defended the process as an innovative way for his team to consider unconventi­onal candidates. And many of the hundreds of applicants were regular folks who thought they should get a close look despite the infinitesi­mally small odds.

“I can’t yell at my TV anymore. I have no other choice,” Hal Shouse, a hog killer from South Georgia, said of his decision to apply for Isakson’s job.

Tight lid

Almost no one — not state Republican­s, White House officials or even some Kemp aides — thought the process would take three months. It led to criticism from some Republican officials that Kemp unknowingl­y created a vacuum that allowed conservati­ve critics to fill the void.

The governor’s allies say fierce opposition to whomever he appointed would have surfaced either way. And Kemp and his advisers credit the online “help wanted” sign with allowing contenders they might not have otherwise considered.

Among them were two Kemp administra­tion officials, Robyn Crittenden and Allen Poole, who surprised GOP insiders by expressing interest in the job. They quickly landed on Kemp’s internal shortlist.

Other candidates were nervous about being too forceful, getting word that Kemp didn’t want to feel pressured. A New York Times story announcing Collins’ interest in the campaign, which came days after The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on named him as a likely applicant, miffed the governor’s advisers.

The governor also tried to keep a tight lid on any discussion­s he had with potential candidates, one reason he was said to be irritated by an AJC report about his discussion with Georgia Supreme Court Chief Justice Harold Melton about his interest in the seat.

Loeffler, who had floated a 2014 run for a U.S. Senate seat, reached out to the governor after she heard about Isakson’s retirement.

It’s not known how many times they met, but the two were said to bond over shared rural roots, business background­s and their involvemen­t in 4-H Club. But her interest wouldn’t emerge for days, kept under a tight lid.

The “conscience” vs. the “outsider”

The deadline to apply neared as a big moment in state politics arrived: Trump was headed to Georgia to unveil a new campaign initiative. And Collins was on Air Force One at his side.

Collins’ allies came armed with something else, too. A poll of GOP primary voters that McLaughlin & Associates conducted in August presented the congressma­n as the “most well known and most well liked” of the potential Republican candidates tested.

“Besides being the conscience of the House on the Judiciary Committee, Doug’s experience and background would further excite the majority of Georgia voters,” the Nov. 8 memo read.

As they rode in the presidenti­al limo, Trump delivered a blunt message to Kemp: He urged the governor to make Collins a U.S. senator. Kemp told him he hadn’t made up his mind yet, but promised to keep in touch.

As a deadline for applicatio­ns approached, the GOP world was awash with talk. None of it centered on Loeffler.

Instead, there was a fullfledge­d “stop Melton” movement among some elected officials concerned the chief justice wasn’t ready for intense campaignin­g.

That changed on Nov. 18, when the first wave of Democratic presidenti­al candidates scattered across metro Atlanta ahead of their debate at Tyler Perry Studios — and Republican­s were intently focused on a 5 p.m. deadline for the applicatio­ns.

Melton didn’t apply. Loeffler did, submitting a resume that read like it was honed by Kemp advisers. It mentioned “hardworkin­g Georgians” — one of the governor’s favorite phrases — and presented her as a “political outsider” who will fight politician­s with “radical agendas.”

Collins’ camp, meanwhile, was growing frustrated. He and his advisers hadn’t heard from Kemp or his advisers in weeks, and their efforts to force his hand were falling flat. Two days after the deadline, Collins was asked whether he would run even if he wasn’t appointed. His answer was straightfo­rward.

“In recent days and weeks, I’ve heard from more and more Georgians encouragin­g me to pursue statewide service,” he said on Nov. 20. “Those Georgians deserve to have me consider their voices — so I am, strongly.”

“Absolutely absurd”

Soon, there was a full-on campaign for Collins. Trump peeled away from impeachmen­t proceeding­s to call Kemp and lobby for the congressma­n. Collins’ allies slammed Loeffler, and conservati­ve outlets that once praised Kemp’s every decision ran scathing stories about his potential pick.

As Thanksgivi­ng approached, Collins’ aides lost hope of changing Kemp’s mind. And the governor’s aides worried that a few preemptive keystrokes from the president could scuttle Loeffler’s chances. Kemp still wanted to try to win over Trump.

He planned a secretive trip to Washington on Nov. 24 so Kemp and Loeffler could huddle with the president in person.

It didn’t go as expected for the governor. The president was described as agitated by the meeting, and frustrated that Kemp didn’t go with Collins or another tried-and-true political veteran who could defend him in the U.S. Senate.

Kemp, though, returned to Georgia seemingly more determined to appoint Loeffler. As conservati­ve pushback grew — and a range of anti-abortion activists questioned Loeffler’s position — the governor tried to sideline the criticism.

“The attacks and games are absolutely absurd,” he vented in a tweet. “Frankly, I could care less what the political establishm­ent thinks.”

The back-and-forth would only escalate. A Florida congressma­n called for Kemp to face a primary challenge. Sean Hannity urged his listeners to call the governor’s office to vent their frustratio­n. Trump die-hards begged Kemp to change his mind.

And Kemp’s backers responded with a display of force reminiscen­t of the 2018 campaign, bashing outof-state interloper­s for trying to pressure the governor into a decision he didn’t want to make. Soon, more elected officials and conservati­ves joined Kemp’s side, advocating openly for Loeffler.

Many of them accompanie­d Kemp on Wednesday when he revealed Loeffler was his pick, proclaimin­g her to be a “lifelong Republican who shares our conservati­ve values.”

There was another, quieter gathering that could also prove consequent­ial. A few days before Loeffler’s rollout, Kemp finally met with Collins at the annual grudge match between Georgia and Georgia Tech. The two shook hands that Saturday at Tech’s stadium and, a few hours later, connected by phone.

In that conversati­on, the governor made no apologies about passing over Collins. And the congressma­n refused to rule out a Senate run of his own.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Before her appointmen­t to the Senate, Kelly Loeffler met with Gov. Brian Kemp (above, right), where they apparently bonded over similar upbringing­s. The process frustrated Rep. Doug Collins (below, right) and his supporters. Collins is considerin­g a run for the Senate in 2020.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Before her appointmen­t to the Senate, Kelly Loeffler met with Gov. Brian Kemp (above, right), where they apparently bonded over similar upbringing­s. The process frustrated Rep. Doug Collins (below, right) and his supporters. Collins is considerin­g a run for the Senate in 2020.
 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? On Thursday, Gov. Brian Kemp introduced for the first time new U.S. Senator Kelly Loeffler, co-owner of the WNBA’s Atlanta Dream, and well known as a sharp businesswo­man.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM On Thursday, Gov. Brian Kemp introduced for the first time new U.S. Senator Kelly Loeffler, co-owner of the WNBA’s Atlanta Dream, and well known as a sharp businesswo­man.

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