The Guardian (USA)

Stacey Abrams files lawsuit after being blocked from fundraisin­g for Georgia governor campaign

- Maya Yang and agencies

Stacey Abrams has filed a lawsuit seeking to immediatel­y begin fundraisin­g for her campaign for governor under a state law that prevents her gubernator­ial leadership committee from doing so.

Abrams is requesting to take advantage of a new kind of fundraisin­g committee created by Georgia lawmakers last year, which her opponent, the Republican governor, Brian Kemp, has already been able to make use of. Called a leadership committee, it allows certain people and groups to accept unlimited contributi­ons. Giving to direct candidate committees, on the other hand, is limited to $7,600 apiece for the primary and general elections and $4,500 for any runoff election.

Under the law, the committees can be formed by the governor and lieutenant governor, opposing major party nominees, and both party caucuses in the state house and senate. The committees can coordinate with candidate campaigns, unlike most other political action committees.

Although Georgia has not yet officially approved Abrams as the Democratic party nominee, Abrams argues that because no one filed to run against her in the 24 May Democratic primary and because write-in votes are not allowed, she became the nominee when qualifying closed.

“Ms Abrams – the sole qualified and declared Democratic candidate for Governor of Georgia – and her campaign committee will be unable to operate, control, chair, or otherwise use One Georgia, a leadership committee … to support her campaign without credible and justified threat and fear of legal proceeding­s being instituted against Plaintiffs,” the lawsuit said.

“As a direct consequenc­e, Plaintiffs will suffer ongoing and irreparabl­e injury to their ability to use political speech to advocate for Ms Abrams’s campaign, especially compared to her chief opponent, sitting Governor Brian P Kemp.”

Georgia has not yet approved Abrams’s leadership due to disputes over whether she qualified as a nominee before the primary, even though the state’s Democratic party chair, representa­tive Nikema Williams, has recognized her candidacy and recognized Abrams as the sole nominee.

In an affidavit, Williams wrote, “The only candidate who qualified with DPG [Democratic Party of Georgia] to run for the office of Governor of the State of Georgia prior to the end of the 2022 can

didate qualifying period on March 11, 2022 is Stacey Y Abrams.”

Abrams said in court pleadings that when a lawyer for her contacted the state ethics commission to confirm that her leadership committee could begin raising and spending money before 24 May, a commission lawyer said Adams’s legal team first needed to seek legal advice from Georgia’s attorney general, Chris Carr, and secretary of state, Brad Raffensper­ger, as to whether state law considers Abrams the nominee. In the absence of any further clarificat­ion since, Abrams’s team filed the lawsuit seeking a temporary order to be allowed to raise money right away.

Meanwhile, Kemp created the Georgians First leadership committee after signing the law and had raised $2.3m through January.

Lauren Groh-Wargo, Abrams’s campaign manager, said that Kemp’s early fundraisin­g advantage causes “severe harm” to the fairness of the election.

“Early fundraisin­g supports later fundraisin­g by demonstrat­ing a candidate’s political viability and widespread appeal, particular­ly in a highdollar statewide election in a swing state like Governor of Georgia,” she wrote.

 ?? Photograph: Robin Rayne/Zuma Press Wire/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? Stacey Abrams is running against the incumbent governor, Brian Kemp.
Photograph: Robin Rayne/Zuma Press Wire/Rex/Shuttersto­ck Stacey Abrams is running against the incumbent governor, Brian Kemp.

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