Los Angeles Times

Georgia runoff to close election season

Polling waits, turnout, crossover voters are key to the outcome in Senate race between Warnock and Walker.

- By Jenny Jarvie

ATLANTA — It’s election day, once again, in Georgia.

Soon residents of this battlegrou­nd state can breathe a sigh of relief that another election season is over — and with it a bombardmen­t of negative campaign ads featuring candidates’ ex-wives and bizarre stump speeches delving into the relative merits of vampires and werewolves or the plotline of “Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby.”

But first Georgians must determine the victor of the last U.S. Senate battle of the 2022 election cycle: a runoff between Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock and Republican Herschel Walker.

Warnock, the senior pastor of the Rev. Martin Luther King’s Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, narrowly defeated Sen. Kelly Loeffler in a Jan. 5, 2021, special election that helped Democrats claim control of the Senate. Now he’s seeking a full sixyear term.

Neither Warnock nor Walker — who played football for the University of Georgia before going pro and is backed by former President Trump — reached the 50%-plus-one threshold needed to win outright in last month’s general election.

For Democrats, the runoff will determine whether the current 50-50 split in the Senate, with Vice President Kamala Harris casting tiebreakin­g votes, will hold or whether they win an absolute majority. In a 51-49 Senate, the party would no longer have to share power for committee assignment­s and would be less reliant on more conservati­ve Democrats, such as Joe Manchin III of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, as it pushes its legislativ­e agenda.

A Warnock victory would also be a major boon for Georgia progressiv­es, signaling that Democrats’ narrow 2020 and 2021 Senate victories were more than just a reaction to Trump and the beginning of an enduring effort to flip the state blue.

Here are some key issues as Georgians head out to cast their ballots.

Will voters have long waits at polling stations?

Georgia developed a national reputation for chaos on election day after the 2018 midterm election.

Some voters in many predominan­tly Black urban neighborho­ods waited in line for hours or arrived at polling stations that had faulty voting machines or had run out of paper ballots. Others did not receive ballots or had their voter registrati­on applicatio­ns rejected.

The dysfunctio­n continued in the 2020 primaries, when Georgia election workers were overwhelme­d by the COVID-19 pandemic and a cascade of failures with the state’s new hightech voting system.

Since then, the 2020 general election and 2022 midterms ran relatively smoothly, without major waits at polling stations.

“Georgia’s voting system is working well,” Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger said last week, toward the end of the early voting period.

But a sweeping Georgia law pushed through last year by Republican­s made it harder to vote by absentee ballot and means that this year’s runoff has had a compressed schedule, with just one week of early voting.

Last week, many Georgians waited more than an hour at some metropolit­an Atlanta polling stations. Lines snaked around libraries and government buildings into the night on Friday, the last day of early voting.

After early voting ended, about 1.8 million people had cast ballots, compared with 2.5 million in the general election and 3 million in the 2021 Senate runoffs.

If Georgia sees long lines on Tuesday, expect activists to ramp up their criticism of the state’s new law and accuse Republican­s of voter suppressio­n.

Will early turnout push Warnock over the line?

Walker, who has been scrutinize­d over false claims and outlandish comments and beset by scandal, has tested Republican­s and motivated many Democrats to vote because they consider him unfit for office.

According to state election data, after a week of early voting, more people had cast ballots in predominan­tly urban and suburban counties that supported Warnock in the general election than in the rural and exurban counties that backed Walker.

Black voters, who form the backbone of the state’s Democratic Party, represent 32% of the early voting tally so far — more than in early voting for last month’s general election.

“The votes, at least when we look at them demographi­cally, more than likely favor Warnock, which fits with what we saw in Georgia the first time around and other states: Democrats built up a lead in early voting,” said Jessica Taylor, the Senate and governors editor for the nonpartisa­n Cook Political Report. “That is why I continue to think that Republican­s ignore at their peril how important early and absentee voting is.”

Still, Taylor said, Democrats need a strong showing on election day to make sure that the Republican turnout doesn’t overtake their head start.

Will the GOP base pack the polls on election day?

Older, white Georgians — the bedrock of the Republican Party — typically show up in higher numbers on election day.

But will Republican­s in small towns and rural and exurban areas flock to the polls in support of Walker? It is unclear if the GOP will lure them out in huge numbers without Gov. Brian Kemp and other more popular candidates on the ballot.

In November, Walker lagged behind Warnock by 38,000 votes as Republican­s won every other statewide seat by comfortabl­e margins. He received 200,000 fewer votes than Kemp.

Another factor that could put a damper on turnout and potentiall­y leave the Republican­s at a disadvanta­ge: Rain is forecast throughout much of Georgia on election day.

Will Trump’s influence make a difference?

Trump, who endorsed Walker early on and boosted him ahead of the May primary, remains a motivator for some in the Republican base.

But the former president’s lies about election fraud depressed GOP turnout and turned off swing voters in Georgia’s 2021 runoff.

Trump’s 2020 loss in the state — followed by the failure of many of his endorsed candidates in the midterms — have caused a growing number of Republican­s to view him as a liability.

Going into the runoffs, Democrats used Walker’s Trump connection against him.

A Warnock TV ad shows Trump gushing that Walker is “a fabulous human being,” only for a message to flash across the screen: “Stop Donald Trump. Stop Herschel Walker.”

Over the last month, Georgia Republican­s pleaded with Trump not to come to the state to hold a rally for Walker, fearing the associatio­n could damage Walker’s standing with swing voters.

Will swing voters show up for Warnock?

In the general election, many voters split their tickets, voting for Kemp and Warnock. About 80,000 Georgians supported libertaria­n candidate Chase Oliver.

After the race went to a runoff, Kemp loaned his get-out-the-vote apparatus to Walker, joined the candidate on the campaign trail and promised in a TV ad that his struggling fellow Republican would “not be another rubber stamp for Joe Biden.”

“Almost all of the campaign ads that are being seen from both Walker’s campaign and the PACs supporting him are not featuring Walker, they’re featuring Gov. Brian Kemp,” said Amy Steigerwal­t, a political science professor at Georgia State University. “What they’re trying to do is bring those voters back, saying, ‘Nope, it’s OK; I can assuage your concerns. You were willing to vote for me. Now I need you to vote for him.’ ”

But after appearing at one rally before Thanksgivi­ng, Kemp has not been seen with Walker in the final two weeks of the runoff.

“I would think that a sitting governor could do a lot more,” said Erick Allen, a Democratic state representa­tive. “He could be on the campaign trail with him every day right now. It’s not like he’s prohibited. I think he’s giving a wink and a nod, but he’s doing the bare minimum.”

Democrats have also made an explicit pitch to Kemp supporters, with a Warnock TV ad showcasing a Republican who voted in the general election for Kemp and Warnock.

Even though Republican­s historical­ly do better on turnout during runoff elections, Democrats could have an advantage if Warnock’s campaign convinces those split-ticket voters to come out again, Steigerwal­t said.

“They are already a set of voters who, in many ways, made a very conscious decision to vote based on policy,” she said.

 ?? Ben Gray Associated Press ?? SEN. Raphael Warnock, center, is expected to be helped by early voting, led by urban counties that supported him in the general election.
Ben Gray Associated Press SEN. Raphael Warnock, center, is expected to be helped by early voting, led by urban counties that supported him in the general election.

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