USA TODAY US Edition

Trump’s shadow stretches into Georgia

His presence in primaries could even touch 2024

- Mabinty Quarshie

WASHINGTON – Donald Trump will not be on the ballot during Georgia’s primary elections Tuesday. But his presence will still be felt throughout the Peach State – no matter how the elections turn out.

The former president has made it his mission to oust Republican­s who did not embrace his false claims of election fraud from office, including Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp and Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger after they refused to overturn Georgia’s 2020 presidenti­al election results.

Yet David Perdue, the Trumpbacke­d former senator running in the GOP gubernator­ial primary, lags behind Kemp in polling and fundraisin­g.

And Republican Rep. Jody Hice, another Trump acolyte, and Raffensper­ger are virtually tied in recent polling by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on.

But even if some of the candidates Trump supports lose their primary races, the former president has succeeded in pressuring several Republican candidates to defend the claim that he won the 2020 presidenti­al election not just in Georgia but across the nation. Trump’s influence in Georgia can be felt by how many candidates are not disavowing “the big lie” and the voters who continue to support Trump and the politician­s loyal to Trump.

And with only two years until the 2024 presidenti­al election, having allies in Georgia could help Trump delegitimi­ze election results if he does run for office again and loses.

Trump has made an endorsemen­t in at least seven Georgia primary races, including backing Herschel Walker, a former star football player, in the GOP Senate primary, state Sen. Burt Jones for lieutenant governor and John Gordon’s primary challenge against Attorney General Chris Carr.

A Perdue loss and a possible runoff between Hice and Raffensper­ger will likely muddy the effectiven­ess of Trump’s endorsemen­t just one week after mixed primary results in Pennsylvan­ia, North Carolina, Kentucky and Idaho. Trump endorsees Rep. Madison Cawthorn, R-N.C., and Idaho Lt. Gov. Janice McGeachin lost their races.

But Republican­s said Trump’s popularity within Georgia and the GOP will not be diminished, irrespecti­ve of election results. “Trump certainly is going to lose some of those races. But still, if he has a winning record of over 65% to 70%, that’s a pretty good record,” said Alfonso Aguilar, president of the advocacy group Latino Partnershi­p for Conservati­ve Principles.

Trump’s endorsemen­t has limits

Trump’s support for a candidate can make a difference in a primary, but not always to the extent that played out in Ohio, when J.D. Vance rocketed to the top of the GOP Senate field after Trump backed him.

University of Georgia professor Charles Bullock told USA TODAY Trump’s endorsemen­t will most likely help down-ballot candidates than in the more high-profile races.

His endorsemen­t “really doesn’t make much of a difference in the governor’s race because Brian Kemp is well-known,” Bullock said.

Similarly, Emory University professor Andra Gillespie said Trump’s endorsemen­t in the governor’s race may not be as effective in Georgia’s primaries.

“There’s a reason why incumbents tend to do very well in primary elections,” Gillespie said. “They have high name recognitio­n. They have a record with that people are familiar with.”

Kemp is ahead of Perdue by nearly 32 percentage points, according to a Fox News poll.

Aguilar points out that Perdue faced an uphill climb regardless of Trump’s help. The former senator lost his reelection bid in 2021, after Trump allies urged Georgians not to vote in the Jan. 5 runoff election because of baseless electoral fraud allegation­s.

“You have a candidate, Perdue, that lost his reelection. That affects your image. You’re already a loser, and now you’re going to run against a governor that’s really successful,” he said. “There are races that even if you’re endorsed by Trump, you’re not going to prevail.”

But in lesser-known contests like the race for insurance commission­er, his influence matters more. Trump supports Patrick Witt, an attorney who worked on Trump’s post-election legal team in Georgia, against incumbent John King, a Kemp appointee.

“Sometimes the incumbent as well as the challenger are unknown,” Bullock added. “Then if you’re told who the Trump endorsee is, it makes quite a bit of difference.”

For example, a survey by UGA’s School of Public and Internatio­nal Affairs showed support for Hice in the secretary of state primary doubled from 30.3% to 60.3% when voters were told of Trump’s endorsemen­t.

Trump’s symbolic control of the GOP isn’t going away soon. Gillespie expects there will be a runoff election between Hice and Raffensper­ger.

As the chief elections officer, Raffensper­ger bore the direct brunt of Trump’s ire when he refused to find the 11,780 votes needed to overturn President Joe Biden’s Georgia win. In retaliatio­n, Trump recruited Hice to run for secretary of state.

“Trumpism is certainly a very potent force, and the narrative about election fraud and the ‘big lie’ certainly resonates among Georgia voters,” Gillespie said.

But Raffensper­ger could still eke out a win in a runoff.

“Yes, (Raffensper­ger) is more vulnerable compared to Kemp because he is the chief elections officer,” she said. “But that doesn’t mean that you should count him out immediatel­y.”

Walker is the front-runner in the Republican Senate primary and is expected to win the contest Tuesday. He would likely face Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock in the fall.

‘The still listen to him’

Trump’s fixation with the 2020 election continues to wreak havoc on the 2022 midterm season. A sign of how much Trump is invested in the GOP gubernator­ial primary: His Save America PAC gave $500,000 to a super PAC working to defeat Kemp. It was his first financial foray into the midterms.

The impact of Trump’s election claims came to an ugly head in a GOP gubernator­ial primary debate last month in Georgia.

Perdue falsely told Kemp, “The only reason I’m not in the United States Senate is because you caved in and gave the elections to Stacey (Abrams) and the liberal Democrats in 2020.”

Perdue lost his Senate bid to Democrat Jon Ossoff during the runoff last year. Several Republican strategist­s blamed the loss on Trump’s election fraud allegation­s, and a Washington Post analysis showed precincts that supported Trump were more likely to have low turnout.

Abrams lost the 2018 gubernator­ial bid to Kemp in a close election but organized get-out-the-vote projects that helped Democrats flip Georgia’s two Senate seats.

Biden won the Peach State’s 16 electoral votes by 12,284 votes after a weeklong recount. “Georgia’s historic first statewide audit reaffirmed that the state’s new secure paper ballot voting system accurately counted and reported results,” Raffensper­ger said in a statement at the time.

In the weeks since the April debate, Trump’s own vice president, Mike Pence, has campaigned with Kemp, as has former Republican New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey. Sarah Palin, a pre-Trump firebrand and former GOP vice presidenti­al nominee, is backing Perdue.

If Perdue does lose to Kemp, Republican­s said, Trump’s influence will continue to be felt.

“He still has an influence, and I think his influence will last for a while. Whether it’s a positive influence I don’t know,” said Brittany Ellison, founder and president of Peach State Approach, a political campaign firm in Georgia.

“There are definitely Georgia voters who still want to know what Trump thinks, and they still listen to him.”

Democrats see an opening

Democrats are capitalizi­ng on the internal GOP battle to attack Republican­s who support Trump’s election claims.

Georgia state Rep. Bee Nguyen, a Democratic candidate for secretary of state, criticized Republican­s and Trump allies for trying to install election deniers across the nation during a press call Friday.

“This is about looking forward to 2024 and really taking their word and their plan seriously,” Nguyen said. “And they have told us their plan is to install right-wing candidates who don’t believe in the legitimacy of the 2020 election.”

Democrats also accuse Republican­s of trying to restrict voting rights.

“Next week in Georgia, we could see more extremists win GOP primaries. All of the Republican candidates support MAGA (Make America Great Again) voting restrictio­ns and efforts to put barriers in the way of voters,” said Tiffany Muller, president of the political action committee End Citizens United and Let America Vote, during a press call.

Kemp signed an election law last year that limits the availabili­ty of drop boxes and prohibits giving food or water to people standing in line to vote. The law also bars election officials from mailing absentee ballot applicatio­ns to voters who don’t request them and requires voters to provide identifica­tion when requesting an absentee ballot.

Vyanti Joseph, organizing director of the progressiv­e Georgia advocacy group the Asian American Advocacy Fund, said Democrats are seeing record turnout in early voting in Georgia because of the state’s marquee races.

More than 565,000 people have early voted in the Peach State through May 19, a 189% increase the 2020 primary election and a 153% increase over the same point in the 2018 primary election, according to Raffensper­ger’s office.

The Asian American Advocacy Fund and like-minded groups remain optimistic that Georgia’s swing state status will continue to tilt toward Democrats.

“We are working to get candidates that represent our people,” Joseph said. “And whatever happens in the GOP primary is not going to change what we do here.”

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP ?? Former President Donald Trump has backed David Perdue, right, who has been trailing in polls, in Georgia’s GOP gubernator­ial primary.
EVAN VUCCI/AP Former President Donald Trump has backed David Perdue, right, who has been trailing in polls, in Georgia’s GOP gubernator­ial primary.
 ?? JOHN BAZEMORE/AP ?? Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, a Republican, has been high on former President Donald Trump’s target list after the 2020 election.
JOHN BAZEMORE/AP Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, a Republican, has been high on former President Donald Trump’s target list after the 2020 election.

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