Chattanooga Times Free Press

› Jon Ossoff wins Georgia Democratic Senate primary,

- BY BEN NADLER

ATLANTA — Jon Ossoff, a young Georgia media executive known for breaking fundraisin­g records during a 2017 special election loss for a U.S. House seat, beat back a field of Democratic primary opponents to win a spot taking on Republican

Sen. David Perdue in November.

Ossoff received about 50.5% of the votes, according to votes tallied as of Wednesday night.

He had maintained a steady lead in public polling and fundraisin­g despite some significan­t competitio­n from former Columbus Mayor Teresa Tomlinson and 2018 candidate for lieutenant governor Sarah Riggs Amico.

Ossoff’s victory allows him to avoid a potentiall­y bruising primary runoff that had been seen as likely and sets up a showdown with Perdue as Republican­s look to hold the White House and Senate majority.

The election on Tuesday was plagued by problems that, combined with a massive influx of mailin paper ballots because of the coronaviru­s, delayed final results.

A lack of poll workers, trouble with new voting equipment, coronaviru­s restrictio­ns and high turnout contribute­d to long lines, with 20 of Georgia’s 159 counties having to extend voting hours for at least one precinct.

Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger sent absentee ballot applicatio­ns to 6.9 million active registered voters in Georgia, and more than 1 million ballots had been received as of Monday, Raffensper­ger spokesman Walter Jones said Wednesday. That’s a huge increase in the number of paper ballots that counties have traditiona­lly had to process in past elections.

Ossoff, 33, entered the race in September with the endorsemen­t of civil rights icon Rep. John Lewis, as well as some built-in name recognitio­n from his highly publicized special election loss to Republican Karen Handel for an Atlanta-area U.S. House seat in 2017. He has made fighting inequality and corruption a core part of his message.

Ossoff’s opponents often took aim at his lack of experience

in elected office, with Tomlinson proclaimin­g that she was “the only one in this race who has ever won an election and governed.” But those attacks seemed to have little effect.

Meanwhile, changes to campaignin­g necessitat­ed by the coronaviru­s pandemic, including a move away from in-person events in favor of online engagement, seemed to play toward the strengths of Ossoff’s media-savvy campaign.

Tomlinson congratula­ted Ossoff in a statement Wednesday night and called for her supporters to unite behind him.

The election had been postponed and campaigns forced online because of the coronaviru­s. The final days of the race also saw widespread protests over the death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s.

Criticism of President Donald Trump’s response on both fronts has added fuel to Democrats’ ambitions of winning in Georgia, where the party is increasing­ly making gains even though Republican­s dominate in statewide elections.

Perdue, a close Trump ally seeking a second term in November, drew no GOP primary opposition. Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler of Georgia is also defending the seat she was recently appointed to in a separate race that won’t be filtered by primaries.

Ossoff’s campaign often looked past his primary opponents in favor of going directly after Perdue, who he bashed as one of Trump’s “most loyal servants in the Senate.” In a preview of the race to come, Perdue campaign manager Ben Fry took aim at Ossoff in a statement Wednesday night, saying his “only notable achievemen­t is spending millions of dollars on his failed Congressio­nal bid.”

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO/DAVID GOLDMAN ?? Jon Ossoff won the Georgia Democratic primary to challenge Republican Sen. David Perdue in November.
AP FILE PHOTO/DAVID GOLDMAN Jon Ossoff won the Georgia Democratic primary to challenge Republican Sen. David Perdue in November.

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