The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Kemp-Abrams feud highlights new landscape in divided Georgia

- By Bill Barrow

ATLANTA >> His election still undecided, Republican Brian Kemp is proceeding as a victorious candidate and promising to be a governor for all Georgians. That might not be so easy.

Should his narrow lead hold over Democrat Stacey Abrams and ultimately send him to the governor’s mansion, Kemp would face lingering questions about how and why he oversaw his own election as secretary of state. His victory would be fueled by an even starker than usual urban-rural divide, with Abrams drawing most of her votes in metro Atlanta and smaller cities, and Kemp running up massive margins in rural and small-town Georgia, eclipsing 85 percent in some counties.

Then there’s his embrace of President Donald Trump’s coarse rhetoric, from Kemp warning about “illegal votes” to his promise to “round up criminal illegals” in his own pickup truck.

That all plays into what civil rights leaders and observers from both parties describe as a bitter, race-laden contest that pitted Abrams’ bid to become the nation’s first black woman governor against Kemp’s fierce effort to preserve his overwhelmi­ngly white party’s hold on a growing, diversifyi­ng Deep South state.

The after-effects, they say, won’t dissipate automatica­lly.

“In the hypothetic­al scenario that Brian Kemp becomes governor,” said NAACP activist and former congressio­nal candidate Francys Johnson, “then he and Donald Trump will have both won because they were able to stoke the deepest darkest fears among their base.”

Some Republican­s acknowledg­e the atmosphere even as they defend Kemp from charges he ran a racially and culturally divisive campaign. “Some of this is beyond Brian Kemp’s control,” said Brian Robinson, a former adviser for outgoing Gov. Nathan Deal and for Kemp’s vanquished GOP primary rival. “Brian Kemp cannot extricate himself from the national political environmen­t that now drives every election down to the county level. You run for coroner, you have to say whether you want to ‘make America great again.’”

For his part, Kemp notes “a very polarizing climate that we’ve been in.” But he defends his pledge to “put Georgians first” — a rhetorical cousin to Trump’s “America First” — and he rejects any notion that he could take office under a cloud that would make his job harder.

“It was a tough election,” Kemp said as he stood in the governor’s office two days after the Nov. 6 election, resigning as secretary of state to focus on a January transfer of power. He cited a “clear and convincing” result — returns showed him with 50.3 percent at the time — and he pointed back to his multiple terms as a state senator who represente­d what was then a swing district: “I’m going to serve this whole state and move forward with the plans we have.”

Undeterred, Abrams’ campaign filed a federal lawsuit Sunday asking a judge to delay the vote certificat­ion deadline by one day and make officials count any votes that were wrongly rejected. If successful, the suit would prevent officials from certifying county vote totals until Wednesday and could restore at least 1,095 votes that weren’t counted. The campaign said thousands more ballots could be affected.

A campaign spokesman for Kemp said in a statement Monday the lawsuit shows Abrams has “moved from desperatio­n to delusion.”

“Stacey Abrams lost,” Kemp spokesman Ryan Mahoney said, “and her concession is long overdue.”

Meanwhile, two Democratic senators — Cory Booker of New Jersey and Brian Schatz of Hawaii — sent a letter asking the Justice Department to investigat­e whether Georgia violated the Voting Rights Act with its election and voter registrati­on policies.

The senators’ letter requested “a thorough investigat­ion into the potential voting rights abuses that have been reported before, during, and after the election” in Georgia.

Leading up to the election, Abrams called Kemp “an architect of suppressio­n.” Kemp says he’s faithfully enforced state and federal elections laws, though that’s not convinced some voters.

Nina Durham, a 50-yearold Powder Springs resident was among a small a group of protesters outside Deal’s office last week as Kemp spoke. She said she didn’t have confidence in the results. Asked whether she could see Kemp as her governor, Durham, who is African-American, replied, “No. He hasn’t represente­d me as secretary of state.”

Unofficial returns show Kemp leading by about 60,000 votes out of more than 3.9 million votes cast. That’s enough for a narrow majority, but Abrams asserts that enough uncounted absentee, early and provisiona­l ballots remain to bring Kemp below a majority threshold. That would trigger a Dec. 4 runoff.

The Associated Press has not called the race. The AP will revisit its decision after Tuesday’s deadline for Georgia’s 159 counties to send certified results to the state.

Robinson, the former Deal adviser, noted razor-thin general elections are mostly new to Georgia. Eight years ago, Deal ran 10 percentage points ahead of his Democratic opponent; the margin was 7 percentage points, but Deal has managed to draw job approval ratings higher than his vote percentage­s. Trump won Georgia by 5 points in 2016, but barely cleared a majority. Now Kemp stands about at Trump’s vote percentage with Abrams on his heels.

“Brian did what he had to do to win,” Robinson said. But, “In two years, we will be at parity or a slight Democratic advantage . ... His reelection in a purple state already has to be under way” and “he has to be seen in minority communitie­s, and not just African-American.”

Robinson noted Deal’s work with black lawmakers — including Abrams — on a criminal justice overhaul that is reducing mass incarcerat­ion, particular­ly among young black men. He said Kemp could find ways to relax his opposition to expanding Medicaid insurance, perhaps “allowing legislator­s from both parties to take the lead” on some compromise that could draw more federal money to Georgia’s health care system. Expanding Medicaid is Abrams’ top policy priority.

Ben Williams, a Southern Christian Leadership Conference leader in suburban Atlanta’s Cobb County, said Kemp must acknowledg­e— if not apologize — for some elements of the campaign. Williams pointed to a photo of Kemp standing with a supporter later identified as a white supremacis­t. Kemp’s campaign distanced itself at the time, noting Kemp agreed to snapshots with anyone who asked at his public rallies.

 ?? BOB ANDRES — ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA AP ?? Republican Brian Kemp, right, speaks during a news conference as Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal listens in the Governor’s ceremonial office at the Capitol on Thursday in Atlanta, Ga.
BOB ANDRES — ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA AP Republican Brian Kemp, right, speaks during a news conference as Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal listens in the Governor’s ceremonial office at the Capitol on Thursday in Atlanta, Ga.

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