The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Abrams, Dems aim to capitalize on GOP rift

She plans to let Kemp, Perdue duke it out as she preps for Nov. 8.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

Georgia Democrats took advantage of Republican infighting in the last election to score upset victories. Now Stacey Abrams and her allies hope to leverage a new round of GOP feuding from the top of the ticket without Donald Trump on the ballot.

Former U.S. Sen. David Perdue’s challenge to Gov. Brian Kemp only magnified the problem that Republican­s face next year, as the Trump-driven warring that dominated the last election complicate­s GOP attempts to focus on the next one.

The Republican rift offers a gift to Abrams and her allies in an otherwise tough election cycle, as President Joe Biden’s sagging poll numbers threaten to hinder Democrats in battlegrou­nd states. Abrams intends to let Kemp and Perdue duke it out while she prepares for November.

“The internecin­e fights on the other side don’t concern me. My job is to fight for Georgians, respond to the crises we face and offer real solutions,” Abrams said in an interview.

“I’m not of that other community, and their battles do not impact my plans for health care, education and coronaviru­s relief,” she said. “My job is to battle for one Georgia.”

Since entering the race in early December, Abrams has held fundraiser­s and private meetings with key allies to lay the groundwork for her 2022 bid.

And she’s debuted her campaign by spotlighti­ng the same policies that she embraced when she ran for governor in 2018, including a focus on expanding Medicaid and boosting K-12 school funding.

But the Kemp-perdue rivalry affords her more runway to try to rebuild the same coalition that powered victories in 2020 and the January U.S. Senate runoffs without having to constantly parry attacks from a unified Georgia GOP.

It’s also distractin­g attention from the race to unseat U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock, one of the most vulnerable Democratic incumbents on the ballot next year.

Both Kemp and Perdue are sanguine about their primary battle even as their aides plot new attacks on each other. Each candidate casts himself as the only one who can beat Abrams in November, though only Kemp has done so before.

“This election isn’t going to be won by spending money on TV. It’s going to be won out in the trenches talking to people,” Perdue said in an interview. “This is a referendum on who they want to stand up to Stacey Abrams.”

Kemp, in grave terms, often says that he sees 2022 as a “battle for the soul of our state.”

‘She can beat you’

The 2020 battle played into Democrats’ hands.

Sparring between thenu.s. Sen. Kelly Loeffler and then-u.s. Rep. Doug Collins redirected attention toward GOP infighting — and away from Warnock, who at the time was a politicall­y untested Democratic front-runner.

Trump’s obsession with his own election defeat — and his insistence that state Republican leaders adhere to his cries to overturn the election — gave Democrats a chance to contrast themselves from their rivals with unifying calls for more coronaviru­s relief and expanded infrastruc­ture funding.

Compoundin­g the GOP’S problems in this cycle, neither Abrams nor Warnock has a primary opponent.

That means that while there will be some down-ticket sparring — most notably, a Democratic congressio­nal battle in Atlanta’s suburbs — the top of the ticket will be united.

Still, Abrams has proved to be a singularly galvanizin­g force for Georgia Republican­s, who consistent­ly rate her as one of the state’s most hated politician­s among GOP voters in public polls.

And Republican­s seem poised to take up contentiou­s cultural issues involving race and gender in the upcoming legislativ­e session to energize conservati­ve voters.

It’s an approach that Republican Glenn Youngkin embraced on his way to winning the Virginia race for governor this year — and a strategy that Democrats are preparing to fight.

“The reality is we need a leader who is willing to invest in Georgia and keep us together, not someone intent on dividing us,” Abrams said.

“If he (Kemp) intends to use a legislativ­e session — a time we should be serving the people — to focus on dividing us, it’s the clearest signal why I should be the governor,” she said.

Kemp spokesman Tate Mitchell said the governor’s strategy won’t change “regardless of who’s in the race,” though senior Republican­s are worried about an electoral backlash from the dash to the right.

House Speaker David Ralston, R-blue Ridge, candidly said he worried another “bloodbath” could drown GOP contenders in 2022. And he reminded his colleagues, in an interview with WABE, not to underestim­ate Abrams.

“She’s very talented. She’s very, very bright. She’s very articulate,” he said. “And she can beat you.”

 ?? AJC FILE PHOTOS ?? Both former U.S. Sen. David Perdue (left) and Gov. Brian Kemp have tried to cast themselves as the one who can beat Democrat Stacey Abrams in November. But for now, their aides are plotting new attacks against each other.
AJC FILE PHOTOS Both former U.S. Sen. David Perdue (left) and Gov. Brian Kemp have tried to cast themselves as the one who can beat Democrat Stacey Abrams in November. But for now, their aides are plotting new attacks against each other.
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/AJC 2019 ?? Stacey Abrams has proven to be a singularly galvanizin­g force for Georgia Republican­s, who consistent­ly rate her as one of the state’s most hated politician­s among GOP voters in public polls.
HYOSUB SHIN/AJC 2019 Stacey Abrams has proven to be a singularly galvanizin­g force for Georgia Republican­s, who consistent­ly rate her as one of the state’s most hated politician­s among GOP voters in public polls.

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