Manila Bulletin

Georgia race seen as early test of resistance to Trump

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WASHINGTON (AFP) — A Democrat came close to outright victory in Tuesday’s closely watched US congressio­nal primary in Georgia, heading to a run-off in a race that Democrats tout as an early test of resistance to President Donald Trump.

Jon Ossoff, 30, came in first in a crowded field of candidates in a traditiona­lly conservati­ve 6th district, but narrowly fell short of passing the allimporta­nt 50 percent threshold.

With 100 percent of precincts reporting, Ossoff finished far ahead with 48.1 percent support. The nearest Republican -- former state secretary of state Karen Handel -- came in at just 19.8 percent.

Winning the June 20 run-off will be a steeper challenge for Ossoff, however, as Handel will almost certainly benefit from her party coalescing around a single candidate in a conservati­ve-leaning district.

But Ossoff, a documentar­y filmmaker and former congressio­nal aide, told energized supporters before all the returns were in that he and Democrats ‘’shattered expectatio­ns’’ with their performanc­e.

‘’There is no doubt that this is already a victory for the ages,’’ Ossoff said.

‘’No matter what the outcome is tonight -- whether we take it all or whether we fight on -- we have defied the odds. We have shattered expectatio­ns.’’

As two candidates advance to a head-to-head vote Democrats still hope that Ossoff can capitalize on Trump’s lackluster popularity and make the race a test of the president’s first 100 days.

A shock upset in the national spotlight, the argument goes, would deeply embarrass the president and could jumpstart efforts to retake control of the House of Representa­tives in next year’s midterm elections.

Georgia’s 6th district is in the relatively affluent and conservati­ve suburbs of Atlanta. It has remained a Republican fortress since 1978 when it was won by Newt Gingrich.

Ossoff is running in a special election there to replace congressma­n Tom Price, who resigned to become Trump’s health secretary.

Under normal circumstan­ces a Republican win would be in little doubt. But Trump’s approval rating lags at around 40 percent in a Gallup tracking poll -- a record low for an incoming president.

A new Gallup poll shows just 45 percent of Americans think Trump will keep his campaign promises, down from 62 percent in early February.

The Ossoff political threat drew the personal interest of Trump, who recorded a robocall urging Republican­s to troop to the polls and block the Democratic upstart.

Early Wednesday Trump weighed in again, claiming that a Republican finishing with less than 20 percent support was a victory.

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