The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Trump visit seeks to shore up Georgia support

President highlights $ 3B in aid for victims of Hurricane Michael.

- By Greg Bluestein Greg. Bluestein@ ajc. com

MACON— Racing to squeeze more support from heavily Republican rural areas, President Donald Trump promised a “red wave” would crush Democrats in November and touted his administra­tion’s agricultur­al programs at an outdoor rally that underscore­d Georgia’s tight race for the White House.

Throughout his Friday speech to more than 1,000 supporters packing a Macon airport, Trump said he had no doubt Georgia would remain in the GOP column in November, despite polls showing Joe Biden threatenin­g to become the fifirst Democrat to carry the state since 1992.

The president sprinkled his remarks with stump speech favorites that enlivened the crowd, including criticism of Biden’s coronaviru­s strategy, attacks on the “left- wing corrupt media” and a pledge that he is still “not a politician” despite his four years in the Oval Offiffice.

But he also emphasized amore localized message, highlighti­ng a $ 3 billion package of aid for victims of Hurricane Michael after it flattened crops and uprooted livelihood­s in southwest Georgia in 2018. The relief measure, which stalled for months, started reaching some farmers about a year after the storm after a protracted battle in Congress.

“We gave them a hell of a lot of money,” Trump said of the farmers besieged by the monstrous storm, adding: “It made me feel good. They never ask for anything. They just want a level playing fifield.”

It served to remind voters that his visit to Middle Georgia

Regional Airport was not aimed at voters in MaconBibb County, which Trump lost resounding­ly in 2016. It was geared toward the surroundin­g rural areas where Trump and other Republican­s have long tallied giant margins.

As Democrats consolidat­e support in Atlanta’s voterich suburbs, Republican­s are trying to wring out every vote they can to offset those losses. While Democrat Stacey Abrams dominated the suburbs in 2018, Republican Brian Kemp narrowly won the governorsh­ip by capturing about 90% of rural Georgia.

Republican­s acknowledg­e that’s not a formula for longterm success in Georgia. The densely populated urban and suburban areas where Democrats now dominate are growing at a faster pace than many stagnant rural areas. But they hope that strategy is enough to hold court this year.

“Folks, we got a battle on our hands here in Georgia. We’re going to win, but it’s not going to be easy ,” U.S. Agricultur­e Secretary Sonny Perdue, a former Georgia governor, told the audience. “Come to these events, but be in your own neighborho­ods. Talk to your people — get out your Rolodex and your computer and call those people.”

Itwas Trump’s first visit to Georgia since he was diagnosed with COVID- 19 earlier this month, and the mass gathering conflicted with Kemp’s recently extended order restrictin­g crowds of more than 50 people. Even a contract struck between the campaign and the airport acknowledg­ed the violation.

Many in the closely packed audience didn’t wear masks,

nor did some of the more prominent figures. Democratic state Rep. Vernon Jones, who endorsed Trump earlier this year, crowd- surfed through the masses without wearing a face covering shortly before Trump arrived to thunderous applause on Air Force One.

Kemp, one of the first speakers who addressed the throng on an airport tarmac, channeled Trump as he issued a fiery defense of his coronaviru­s response and blasted news media coverage of his approach.

“The press was cheering our destructio­n in many ways. But you know what we did? We stayed strong and remained courageous,” the governor told the cheering crowd. “Just like the Good Book says. And because of that, you all in our great state are leading the great American comeback.”

The state’s coronaviru­s picture has steadily improved

since a summer surge in cases. The seven- day rolling average of cases in Georgia has declined about twothirds from the July peak, and current hospitaliz­ations also are down by a similar amount.

But the rolling average of cases in Georgia is about double what it was at the

end of May, and the number of people currently hospitaliz­ed with COVID- 19 is up about 60% compared with the low point in early June.

Like previous visits, Trump’s trip to Georgia triggered renewed jockeying between U. S. Sen. Kelly Loeffler and U. S. Rep. Doug Collins, her most formidable Republican

challenger in November’s special election, over who is a more fervent supporter of the president.

Trump has declined to take sides, saying the turnout spike from the closely contested race should give him an edge over Biden. Inan interview Friday with Channel 2 Action News, Trump called both “terrific” but said he won’t endorse either until an expected January runoff against a Democrat.

“Tough situation. I like to weigh in, generally speaking,” Trump said. “I like to weigh in, but these are both great people, and get out and vote for them, and then I’ll be doing something that will be very strong, but it’s very tough, it’s a tough business when you have two friends of yours who are running.”

Georgia Democrats, meanwhile, sense an opportunit­y to gain inroads in an area often overlooked. While much of the party’s focus has centered on the competitiv­e battlegrou­nd across Atlanta’s bedroom communitie­s, the fight to woo rural white voters may pay dividends.

Ahead of his visit, national Democrats sent a plane soaring above Macon with amessage reading: “Trump Lied, 215,000 Died.” And billboards along roads outside the airport declared “This Administra­tion Failed Us” and warned of a “Trump COVID Supersprea­der Event.”

“Let’s say Democrats usually get 20% of the vote in places like where I grew up in Monroe County,” said Seth Clark, a Democratic commission­erelect in Bibb County. “What happens if they get 22% in those places this time? Well, that’s the ballgame. If Biden improves marginally, he wins. That’s it.”

He said a similar dynamic is playing out in other battlegrou­nd states, forcing Trump to make recent visits to rural areas in Iowa and Florida, which he visited shortly before his Georgia stop.

“Trump’s not trying to just shore up rural Georgia. He’s trying to shore up rural America,” Clark said. “He’s bleeding, and if we make inroads in rural Georgia, it’s over.”

Republican­s scoffed at talk that Democrats could step up the competitio­n in the state’s agricultur­al heartland. In an interview, Collins said only Trump could help rehabilita­te a rural economy ravaged by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“For the first time, somebody actually cares about farmers,” the four- term congressma­n said. “People want to just see our country normalize, that schools are getting back open safely, businesses getting back open. And the other side, frankly, looks like they’re trying to run from it.”

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER/ ALYSSA. POINTER@ AJC. COM ?? President Donald Trump speaks at a rally Friday at MiddleGeor­gia Regional Airport inMacon. “They justwant a level playing fifield,” he said ofGeorgia’s farmers.
ALYSSA POINTER/ ALYSSA. POINTER@ AJC. COM President Donald Trump speaks at a rally Friday at MiddleGeor­gia Regional Airport inMacon. “They justwant a level playing fifield,” he said ofGeorgia’s farmers.
 ?? PHOTOS BY ALYSSA POINTER/ ALYSSA. POINTER@ AJC. COM ?? Democratic stateRep. Vernon Jones, who endorsedPr­esident Donald Trump earlier this year, crowd- surfs without a mask shortly before Trumparriv­ed to applause onAir ForceOnein­Macon.
PHOTOS BY ALYSSA POINTER/ ALYSSA. POINTER@ AJC. COM Democratic stateRep. Vernon Jones, who endorsedPr­esident Donald Trump earlier this year, crowd- surfs without a mask shortly before Trumparriv­ed to applause onAir ForceOnein­Macon.
 ??  ?? Gov. Brian Kemp, one of the first speakerswh­o addressed the throng on aMacon airport tarmac Friday, issued a fiery defense of the president’s coronaviru­s response and blasted media coverage of his approach.
Gov. Brian Kemp, one of the first speakerswh­o addressed the throng on aMacon airport tarmac Friday, issued a fiery defense of the president’s coronaviru­s response and blasted media coverage of his approach.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States