Walker County Messenger

Senate race in Georgia gaining steam past the 100-day point

- By Beau Evans

cal campaign, has cast herself as an outsider candidate compared to the four- term Congressma­n Collins – though both have grounded their campaigns in supporting gun ownership, opposing abortion and backing President Donald Trump.

“With significan­t advantages in resources, infrastruc­ture and grassroots support, our campaign is continuing to build momentum toward a big win,” said Loeffler’s communicat­ions director, Stephen Lawson.

Collins, a U.S. Air Force Reserve chaplain who served in the Georgia House before joining Congress, has embraced his legislativ­e experience while lobbing criticism at Loeffler’s use of her wealth in the campaign and fending off attacks on his record as a former criminal defense attorney.

“I’ve stood for the Constituti­on as a military officer,” Collins said Thursday, July 30. “I’ve stood for the Constituti­on as an attorney representi­ng the values of this community and representi­ng the values of this state.”

Warnock, the senior pastor of Atlanta’s Ebenezer Baptist Church, quickly drew endorsemen­ts from a slate of top Democratic state and national lawmakers and party favorites like former Georgia gubernator­ial candidate Stacey Abrams.

He has sought to emphasize popular Democratic stances on expanding health-care coverage and voting-rights protection­s in recent weeks as COVID-19 continues battering Georgia and months of protests over police brutality and racial injustice carry on.

“It’s not about the personalit­ies who are running,” Warnock said recently. “We’re seeing a moment unlike anything we’ve ever seen in our lifetime that whoever you decide to vote for can literally decide who lives and who dies.”

As the race steams ahead, difference­s have emerged between the candidates on how to best tackle the health and economic burdens of the COVID- 19 pandemic.

Among the most pressing issues amid the pandemic is what to do about the $600 weekly federal unemployme­nt benefit millions of out-of-work Americans have received since March, which is set to expire at the end of July.

Loeffler and Collins have echoed congressio­nal Republican leaders who oppose keeping the $600 benefit as is, arguing many businesses have struggled to bring employees back to work amid unemployme­nt benefits that may be higher than their regular paychecks.

And both candidates have said they would prioritize sending more federal aid to schools, hospitals and businesses struggling to rebound and purchase protective equipment.

But while Loeffler has not said whether she would support a reduced weekly benefit, Collins has been unequivoca­l.

“If the unemployme­nt insurance is something that is still there, make it as small as possible and make it end as quickly as possible,” Collins said at a recent campaign stop.

For her part, Loeffler has said she wants to weigh proposals on benefit amounts before taking a position and emphasized the need to bolster state unemployme­nt trust funds.

“That’s the first thing, how do we help states make sure that they can meet the need at that level,” Loeffler said on Monday, July 27. “And then I think we’d have to look at what that additional federal level of funding would be needed.”

Warnock has urged extending the $ 600 benefit going forward and called for helping prop up unemployed workers via expanded health-care coverage, particular­ly for Medicaid in Georgia.

He has also tied the issue to bids by Republican lawmakers to trim federal spending and shrink taxes, framing those moves as “an effort to renegotiat­e the social contract to starve the government to death” that he argues has hamstrung the long-term pandemic response.

“This idea that you wouldn’t have resources, a social safety network, to respond in a crisis like this is the logical outcome of that kind of move,” Warnock said recently. “And so I will absolutely stand up as United States senator and argue that working people, middle-class people, deserve their fair shake.”

The race looks to intensify in the coming weeks as the candidates begin pouring campaign funds into television ads and social-media spots.

Loeffler will have the largest bank by far to pay for ads and other marketing, having already loaned her campaign $15 million from her own personal money. Warnock raised around $4.4 million through June, while Collins reeled in roughly $3.8 million.

In mid-July, Loeffler unloaded a campaign ad criticizin­g Collins’ stint as a defense attorney in Gainesvill­e, noting his firm took on several clients facing gang, drug traffickin­g and assault charges.

Collins dismissed the ad, stressing his firm was appointed by the courts to defend the indigent clients shown in the ad.

A week later, Collins released his own ad highlighti­ng controvers­ial stock transactio­ns Loeffler made following a closeddoor briefing on the coronaviru­s in January.

Loeffler has said those trades were done by a third-party advisor without her input and noted the U.S. Justice Department did not produce evidence of insider trading before closing an investigat­ion into her transactio­ns.

And Warnock, who has held off so far on in- person campaignin­g due to the virus, has leaned on social media to air his views on voting rights and health care.

In recent videos, Warnock has pressed both Loeffler and Collins to state their positions on restoring certain election oversight rules to the Voting Rights Act taken away by the U.S. Supreme Court in a 2013 ruling, and on proposals to repeal a key coverage requiremen­t in the Affordable Care Act.

The weeks ahead may also settle whether any of the 17 other candidates in the race drop out to help boost chances for Loeffler, Collins or Warnock to nab more than 50% of votes in the Nov. 3 election.

Among prominent Democratic candidates still in the race are Ed Tarver, a former U.S. attorney and state senator from Augusta, and Matt Lieberman, son of former U.S. senator and 2000 Democratic vice presidenti­al nominee Joe Lieberman.

Lieberman turned heads by polling higher than Warnock by 5 percentage points in a poll released Wednesday, July 29, by Monmouth University.

If no candidate wins more than 50% of the vote in November, a runoff will be held in January between the top two vote-getters.

 ??  ?? Doug Collins
Doug Collins
 ??  ?? Raphael Warnock
Raphael Warnock
 ??  ?? Kelly Loeffler
Kelly Loeffler

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