Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Trump won’t visit Georgia before vote

- MICHAEL C. BENDER

Donald Trump will not cross the Florida state line to campaign with Herschel Walker during the final week of the Georgia Senate runoff election, after both camps decided the former president’s appearance carried more political risks than rewards, campaign officials for the two Republican­s said Monday.

Instead of holding one of his signature campaign rallies, Trump is planning a call with supporters in the state and will continue sending online fundraisin­g pleas for Walker, two people with knowledge of the planning said.

The decision to keep Trump out of the spotlight was a response largely to the former president’s political style and image, which can energize his core supporters but also motivate Democratic voters and turn off significan­t segments of moderate Republican­s.

In Georgia, that political math has become a net deficit for Trump, who opened his 2024 presidenti­al campaign two weeks ago. In 2020, he was the first Republican presidenti­al candidate to lose the state in 28 years. Earlier this year, his handpicked primary challenger­s to Gov. Brian Kemp and Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger were both trounced.

Trump also appeared to be a factor in the state’s general election in November. Roughly 1 in 3 Georgia Republican­s who voted said they were not supporters of Trump’s “Make America Great Again” movement. Kemp won 90% of those voters while winning reelection by 7.5 points, according to the AP VoteCast survey of 2022 voters.

Walker, who finished 1 point behind Sen. Raphael Warnock, the Democratic incumbent, won just three-quarters of Republican­s opposed to Trump’s MAGA movement.

In the Senate race, Warnock finished with less than 50% of the vote, forcing a runoff Dec. 6 with Walker under Georgia law.

Trump has held two campaign rallies with Walker: one in September 2021 and another last March. His super PAC, MAGA Inc., spent $3.6 million broadcasti­ng TV ads in the state for Walker, but Trump did not hold a rally in Georgia once Walker became a general-election candidate.

The decision to steer clear of Georgia during the final stretch of the runoff contrasts with Trump’s approach two years ago, when he held two large rallies before the two Senate runoffs in Georgia. Republican­s lost both of those contests, and the Democrats took control of the chamber.

This time, Democrats have already secured the Senate majority for another two years by defending all of their incumbents and flipping control of a seat in Pennsylvan­ia, where Trump’s preferred candidate, Dr. Mehmet Oz, lost to Lt. Gov. John Fetterman, a Democrat.

Republican­s have been grappling with the former president’s broader effect on the midterm elections, in which his endorsed candidates lost key races for House and Senate, as well as high-profile contests for governor and secretary of state in battlegrou­nd states.

Trump had been teasing a visit to Georgia for weeks, and during his speech at Florida’s Mar-a-Lago declaring his candidacy, he offered his full support of Walker, calling him “a fabulous human being who loves our country” and imploring all of his supporters in Georgia to vote for him. Days later, the Warnock campaign cut a 30-second advertisem­ent that consisted entirely of footage of that portion of Trump’s speech.

Walker’s campaign is in a crucial period as it enters the final week of Georgia’s runoff window and only week of early voting. On Nov. 8, Walker lagged behind the rest of the GOP ticket in the state and garnered roughly 200,000 fewer votes than Kemp.

Several Republican figures, including Sens. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Ted Cruz of Texas alongside Republican National Committee chair Ronna McDaniel, have made frequent trips to the Peach State to campaign for Walker. Kemp also appeared with Walker at one campaign stop in a Metro Atlanta suburb and cut an advertisem­ent for him running in Atlanta markets.

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