The Oklahoman

Trump back in Ga. in test of GOP grip

Ex-president supports primary challenger­s to Republican incumbents

- Will Weissert and Jeff Amy

COMMERCE, Ga. – In Donald Trump’s push to fundamenta­lly reshape the Republican Party, few places are a higher priority than Georgia.

The former president has issued highly coveted endorsemen­ts in races ranging from governor to state insurance commission­er. His backing of football great Herschel Walker essentiall­y cleared a path to the party’s nomination for a crucial U.S. Senate seat.

Trump has taken a particular­ly active role in shaping the governor’s race, recruiting former Sen. David Perdue to challenge incumbent Brian Kemp as retributio­n for Kemp not going along with claims about the 2020 election being stolen. And to clear a path for Perdue, Trump pressed another Republican in the race – Vernon Jones – to run for Congress instead.

Trump returned to Georgia on Saturday night for a rally ahead of the state’s May 24 primary to try to boost Perdue in a campaign that is emerging as an early crucial test of whether the former president can live up to his professed role as a kingmaker in the GOP.

“Before we can defeat the Democrat socialists and communists … we first have to defeat the RINO sellouts and the losers in the primaries this spring,” Trump told the crowd, lacing into Kemp again and again as he accused him of betraying Republican voters with the acronym, “Republican in name only.”

“Brian Kemp is a turncoat. He’s a coward and he’s a complete and total disaster,” said Trump, calling Perdue the only Republican who can defeat Stacey Abrams, a Democrat who is running for governor a second time.

“Governor Kemp is focused on making sure Stacey Abrams is never our governor or the next president,” Cody Hall, Kemp’s director of communicat­ions, said in response.

But there are warning signs for Trump. Although Walker is marching to the primary with minimal opposition, other races are more complicate­d. Jones, for instance, is now competing in a crowded congressio­nal primary in which no one might clear the 50% threshold needed to avoid a runoff.

Perdue, meanwhile, might pose an even higher-profile challenge for the former president. He has struggled to raise money and, in a Fox News poll released this month, trailed Kemp 50% to 39%. If that dynamic holds, Kemp would be within striking distance of winning the primary outright, averting a runoff.

“I think it could be the start of, I don’t want to use the word downfall, but it could be the start of his influence waning,” said Eric Tanenblatt, former chief of staff to former Georgia Republican Gov. Sonny Perdue and a former fundraiser for David Perdue who is backing Kemp in the primary.

In remarks before Trump’s arrival at the rally in Commerce in northeast Georgia, Perdue unveiled a series of sharper attacks on Kemp as he parroted Trump’s election claims, declaring that “our elections in 2020 were absolutely stolen.” He accused Kemp of having “sold out” Georgia voters through a series of actions, including refusing to call a special state legislativ­e session before Jan. 6 to investigat­e or overturn the election.

Kemp was required by state law to certify the results and has repeatedly said any other course would have invited endless litigation. No credible evidence has emerged to support Trump’s claims of mass voter fraud. Federal and state election officials and Trump’s own attorney general have said the election was fair, and the former president’s allegation­s were also roundly rejected by courts, including by judges Trump appointed.

“By the way, where’s Brian Kemp? Where’s Brian?” Perdue ssaidd. “He’s not here. You know why? Because he kicked sand in the face of the president the last two years and said ‘no’ every time the president asked for anything.”

Perdue promised, if elected, to “make sure that those people responsibl­e for that fraud in 2020 go to jail” as he escalated his rhetoric to mimic Trump’s.

Trump has been obsessed with this once Republican stronghold since the aftermath of the 2020 campaign, when he became the first GOP presidenti­al candidate to lose the state in 28 years. It could again be central to his political future if he decides to run for the White House in 2024.

Meanwhile, some top national Trump antagonist­s, including Republican Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming and Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, have not backed away from seeking reelection despite Trump promising for more than a year that he would make sure they were defeated.

Kemp, who held his own Saturday meeting with the Columbia County Republican Party in suburban Augusta, reported having $12.7 million in his main campaign account as of Jan. 31. That far outpaced Perdue, who had less than $1 million in cash on hand through January.

The incumbent governor has vowed to provide an initial investment of at least $4.2 million on TV ads ahead of Georgia’s primary. Other Trump detractors are stepping up spending, including GOP 2.0, a super PAC founded by Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan, who isn’t seeking reelection but has been staunchly criticized by the former president for his defense of Georgia’s 2020 election results.

Duncan, a Republican, said Trump’s endorsemen­t isn’t the “golden ticket” it once was, and his group is launching its first 30-second television spot timed to coincide with the former president’s rally. In it, Duncan decries politician­s “who would rather talk about conspiracy theories and past losses, letting liberal extremists take us in the wrong direction.”

“You almost feel bad for David Perdue. That (he’s) walking off the plank that Donald Trump has put out there for him here in Georgia,” Duncan said in an interview. “We’re going to see a rally show up that’s once again going to confuse Georgians and who knows what Donald Trump’s gonna say,” Duncan said.

Despite such concerns, Trump isn’t backing down. Last week, he threw his support behind the virtually unknown John Gordon to challenge state Attorney General Chris Carr. He also has endorsed Patrick Witt to go up against Insurance Commission­er John King.

The Republican incumbents are the statewide officials most closely aligned with Kemp, the leading target of Trump’s ire.

 ?? MEGAN VARNER/GETTY IMAGES ?? A supporter of former President Donald Trump waits for a rally, Saturday at the Banks County Dragway in Commerce, Ga.
MEGAN VARNER/GETTY IMAGES A supporter of former President Donald Trump waits for a rally, Saturday at the Banks County Dragway in Commerce, Ga.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States