The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Trump’s visit holds promise, peril for GOP

President’s Georgia rally will be closely watched after vote challenges.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

President Donald Trump could deliver the unifying boost Republican incumbents have been dreaming about Saturday when he holds his fifirst rally in Georgia since losing the election.

Or he could deal them lasting damage by intensifyi­ng his war with Georgia Republican­s who refused his demands to overturn the election results and casting more doubt on the integrity of the state’s voting system.

Either way, t he president’s visit to Valdosta to hold what he dubbed a “Trump rally” before thousands of supporters will be a standout moment in the Jan. 5 runoff or control of the U.S. Senate — and his fifirst major campaign event since hi s November defeat.

And on Friday, Vice Pre sident Mike Pence will campaign with U.S. Sens. Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue in Savannah — about the same time former President Barack Obama joins a virtual event with Democrats Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock.

Trump is showing no signs of letting up his attacks on state Republican­s, including a tweet Thursday that amplified his anger at Gov. Brian Kemp f or not obstructin­g the certificat­ion of

results that showed Joe Biden narrowly carrying the state.

Kemp’s office has issued reminders that state law prohi bits the governor from “interferin­g” with an election. But the constant attacks underscore two of the most pressing challenges for the two Republican runoff candidates.

The first is whether Trump’s unfounded claim that the elections were “rigged” will dampen voter enthusiasm. There was evidence of that at a proTrump rally Wednesday in Alpharetta, where a former member of his legal team encouraged Republican­s to boycott the runoff.

“I would encourage all Georgians to make it known that you will not vote at all until your vote is secure,” said Sidney Powell, spreading the debunked conspiracy theory that election machines were rigged to a cheering crowd of more than 1,000 supporters.

The second is whether the infighting will irreparabl­y divide the Georgia GOP at a time when Republican­s are desperate for unity. Resurgent Democrats flipped the state for the first time in a presidenti­al race since 1992 and are coalescing behind a joint Ossoff- Warnock ticket.

“It all depends on what he actually says when he gets down here,” Emory University political scientist Alan Abramowitz said.

“Does he shift gears and focus attention on strong turnout and downplay his grievances over his defeat? Or does he continue to talk about how the election was stolen from him and attack fellow Republican­s in Georgia?” Abramowitz said. “If it’s the second, it’s bad news for Republican­s.”

‘ Increasing concern’

The Republican candidates have little choice but to take the risk. Perdue has been blunt about the GOP strategy at every campaign stop: The two senators are singularly focused on mobilizing the state’s pool of 2.5 million or so Trump supporters. And no one can do that quite like Trump.

The two senators have been war yo fan tag onizin gt he president by refusing to explicitly say that Biden won and promising to promote Trump’s agenda. They’ve also been silent on Trump’s criticism of Kemp, who picked Loeffler for the seat last year and is her chief political ally.

That tiptoeing has also robbed them of a key argument in the runoffs: that a Republican- controlled Senate can act as a check on a Democratic White House. Instead, the two incumbents have cast themselves as aGO P“firewall” in the Senate.

Georgia Republican­s are more ur gently pressing Trump supporters to shift their focus to the runoffs — and away from Trump’s grievances.

More than a dozen former GOP elected officials, led by two- term Gov. Nathan Deal, penned a letter this week that expressed “increasing concern” that the backlash over the election would cost Republican­s a shot at maintainin­g control of the Senate.

And Georgia GOP Chair David Shafer tried to tie Trump’s push for “election integrity” with the Jan .5 votes.

“It is not one or the other. It is not one after the other,” Shafer said on social media, encouragin­g Republican­s to vote for the two incumbents .“We can not allow ourselves to be distracted or divided.”

The fissures won’t be easy to close. Kemp, who has accompanie­d Trump at just about every one of his visits in Georgia, still hasn’t said whether he’ll join the president at Saturday’s event. Either way, he could be target practice for Trump at the rally — deepening the GOP rift.

“Clearly, there are some Republican­s who aren’ t crazy about Trump and may have voted for Biden,” said Abramo witz, the Emory political scientist.

“But you need them to come back for the runoff — and it’s not helping when you’ ve got Republican­s amplifying attacks on state GOP officials,” he said.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@ AJC. COM/ 2018 FILE ?? In happier times: During his 2018 successful campaign for governor, Brian Kemp got a boost from a visit by President Donald Trump on Air Force One to Macon where the president gave Kemp his hearty endorsemen­t. Within the past few days, Trump has said publicly he now is “ashamed” of endorsing Kemp.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@ AJC. COM/ 2018 FILE In happier times: During his 2018 successful campaign for governor, Brian Kemp got a boost from a visit by President Donald Trump on Air Force One to Macon where the president gave Kemp his hearty endorsemen­t. Within the past few days, Trump has said publicly he now is “ashamed” of endorsing Kemp.

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