The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ga. congressio­nal races referendum on Trump

How the candidates feel about president could be deciding factor.

- By Jeremy Redmon and Tamar Hallerman jredmon@ajc.com tamar.hallerman@ajc.com

When U.S. Rep. Rob Woodall was asked during a recent debate about Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion, the Lawrencevi­lle Republican said he was offended by the way President Donald Trump “has been maligned for what folks have shown absolutely no proof of whatsoever.”

Moments later, Woodall applauded Trump’s internatio­nal negotiatin­g tactics, the same ones that have prompted anxiety across swaths of rural America as farmers sweat the prospect of a trade war with China.

Trump’s divisivene­ss, paired with Democrats’ aggressive efforts to flip GOP seats in suburbs such as Atlanta’s, has caused some Republican­s in increasing­ly competitiv­e congressio­nal districts to think twice about so closely embracing the president.

But Woodall is fully and unapologet­ically backing the commander in chief as he runs for a fifth term in Georgia’s 7th Congressio­nal District, which includes a large chunk of Gwinnett County, a majori-

ty-minority immigrant hub that narrowly voted for Hillary Clinton in 2016.

Meanwhile, several of Woodall’s six Democratic challenger­s are running on explicitly anti-Trump platforms ahead of their May 22 primary.

That comes even as the head of House Democrats’ campaign arm is insisting the party should focus more on local issues and less on Trump in order to win independen­ts in this year’s midterm elections.

House Democrats have listed Georgia’s 7th as one of 104 House districts they are working hardest to flip this year. Republican­s have controlled the seat for more than 20 years.

Trump may have record low approval ratings among all voters compared with his predecesso­rs, but his support remains high among Republican­s and particular­ly GOP primary voters. An Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on/Channel 2 Action News poll of likely voters in the GOP primary that was released Friday shows the president with an approval rating of 80 percent. In addition, 53 percent said support for Trump was “very important” in determinin­g who will get their vote.

So it would be risky for Woodall to oppose the president during their party’s nominating contest, said Alan Abramowitz, a political scientist at Emory University.

But Democratic congressio­nal candidates, he said, should zero in on Republican voters who dislike Trump.

“If you are a Republican, you are probably not going to have that much success in reaching out to Democrats right now anyway,” Abramowitz said. “For a Democrat to win in that district, you would have to be able to appeal to some of these Republican­s who are turned off by Trump.”

‘He is who he said he was going to be’

Woodall speaks about Trump and his agenda in emphatic, enthusiast­ic terms.

The four-term incumbent has an agenda he wants to pursue in Washington, including paying down the national debt and replacing federal incomes taxes with a national consumptio­n tax, and he said having an ally in the White House willing to sign his legislatio­n is invaluable. Of his own relationsh­ip with Trump, Woodall describes things as “transactio­nal.”

“There’s not a single idea that the district and I can put together that I couldn’t, if moved to the president’s

desk, get him to sign,” Woodall said. “He’s on board with where we are in terms of problem-solving.”

Woodall also says the news media has not given Trump enough credit for his work on the economy, cutting regulatory red tape and restarting North Korean nuclear disarmamen­t talks. America would be a far less divided place, the congressma­n said, if there were more focus on the president’s successes rather than on his scandals.

“I’m pretty sure when the president ran he ran as a coarse candidate, he ran as a candid candidate,” Woodall said. “You might be surprised America voted for him, but he is who he said he was going to be.

“So to continue to litigate that as if that is news ... hasn’t that happened once a month since he entered the national stage and hasn’t he still been getting things done that put more money in working families’ pockets, that are helping kids get to college, that are making a difference for entreprene­urs who want to start jobs? When are we going to have that conversati­on?”

While all 12 of the state’s Republican lawmakers on Capitol Hill endorsed Trump ahead of the 2016 elections, Woodall has been one of the president’s more vocal defenders in the delegation.

Next door in the 6th District, U.S. Rep. Karen Handel kept her distance from Trump when she first entered the special election to replace Tom Price last year. But she later embraced the president, sharing a stage with him and accepting his fundraisin­g help after securing the GOP nomination.

Both Woodall and Handel have voted with the White House and its legislativ­e

priorities roughly 97 percent of the time, according to the political analysis blog FiveThirty­Eight. That’s slightly higher than average for the state’s GOP lawmakers, even though all have backed his priorities at least 89 percent of the time, according to the blog.

‘A tweet away’

Democratic Party leaders, meanwhile, are urging their candidates to focus on local issues rather than Trump. Many remember all too well how poorly the anti-Trump message played on the campaign trail in 2016.

“People out there are tired about talking about the president,” U.S. Rep. Ben Ray Luján, the head of the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee, recently told regional newspaper reporters. “And the president is going to talk about himself more than anyone else will, so we don’t need to do it as Democrats.”

“Republican­s,” he added, “are going to have to be out there having to explain for him, and we’re going to be talking about the real issues that families

are facing every day.”

The party has taken a similar approach to calls in some liberal circles to seriously consider impeaching the president. Most local Democratic candidates have steered clear of that impeachmen­t debate, which recently made a stop in Atlanta, but that hasn’t stopped many 7th District challenger­s to take shots at Trump on the campaign trail.

Still, a recent AJC/Channel 2 poll of likely voters in the upcoming Democratic primary shows the president with an approval rating of 7 percent. In the same poll, 60 percent said opposition to Trump would be a “very important” factor in determinin­g which candidate they would back.

Outrage over Trump’s election is what drove many firsttime candidates into politics, and it energized many potential political supporters. That includes Carolyn Bourdeaux, a Georgia State University professor who outraised Woodall in campaign contributi­ons during the first quarter of this year.

“I am running for office

because I woke up on Nov. 9 of 2016 and found out that Donald Trump had been elected president,” the Suwanee resident said at a recent Forsyth County Democratic Party forum. “And I recognized that I needed to step up for my values and what I believe this country is about.

“I believe this country is about being inclusive, it is about diversity, it is about being global, it is about being cosmopolit­an. It is not about being sexist, about being racist or being isolationi­st.”

In an interview at her campaign office, Bourdeaux criticized Trump for questionin­g President Barack Obama’s U.S. citizenshi­p and for presiding over campaign rallies where his supporters vented their anger over Clinton by chanting “Lock her up!”

Bourdeaux also took aim at Trump’s repeated efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act and for his decision to pull out of the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p trade agreement.

“Our country is on the wrong path,” she said. “He has hijacked the Republican Party. And someone like Rob Woodall is going right along with that.”

Bourdeaux is not the only Democratic candidate in the 7th to frequently slam Trump.

Ethan Pham, a lawyer from Duluth who is sharply critical of Trump’s immigratio­n policies, has called the president a “wannabe dictator.” David Kim, an entreprene­ur who also lives in Duluth, addressed Trump’s cutting Twitter feed during a campaign luncheon in March, saying, “We are quite frankly a tweet away from a catastroph­e every minute.”

But there are other Democrats who are intentiona­lly steering clear of Trump.

Kathleen Allen, a Norcross resident who is aiming for Woodall’s congressio­nal seat, is among them. She is campaignin­g on overhaulin­g the nation’s health care system, cutting the unemployme­nt rate and raising the minimum wage.

“I don’t want the Democratic Party to be the ‘no’ of the left, whereas the tea partyers were the ‘no’ of the right,” said Allen, who works for a nonprofit health care provider. “We have got to go back to being the progressiv­e Democrats that did great things for this country and not be the neoliberal­s who were what I understood Republican­s to be when I grew up and studied government.”

Though Allen doesn’t dwell on Trump, her position on the president is clear: “My values start with honesty and empathy, and I don’t see those values coming from him. And that’s about all I’ll say.”

The Mueller probe

Democrats may see Gwinnett as fertile political territory, but the 7th also includes a swath of deeply conservati­ve Forsyth County, which voted for Trump by more than 47 percentage points in 2016.

Woodall’s approach to Trump was on full display there in March, when he clashed with primary challenger Shane Hazel at a packed debate in the Forsyth County Administra­tion Building.

The two were asked about Mueller’s investigat­ion of Russian meddling in the 2016 presidenti­al election. Woodall said he supports “getting to the bottom so that folks don’t have any questions at all about who did what to whom and when did they do it.” He then turned to the allegation­s swirling around Trump’s presidenti­al campaign.

“It offends me the way the president has been maligned for what folks have shown absolutely no proof of whatsoever,” he said. “We have had the best lawyers in the business trying to catch him on it. And they failed. We finished our investigat­ion in the House — terminated it with no finding of wrongdoing. And it is coming time for Mr. Mueller to do the same.”

Hazel, a Marine Corps veteran who is campaignin­g to the right of Woodall on many issues, went a step further in Trump’s direction.

“Collusion like they have talked about is not a crime in the first place, and so it should be dismissed and Mueller should probably be terminated at the president’s discretion,” Hazel said. “He is the boss indeed.”

 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER / SPECIAL TO THE AJC ?? GOP primary challenger Shane Hazel (left) shakes hands with U.S. Rep. Rob Woodall before their recent debate at the Forsyth County Administra­tion Building in Cumming.
STEVE SCHAEFER / SPECIAL TO THE AJC GOP primary challenger Shane Hazel (left) shakes hands with U.S. Rep. Rob Woodall before their recent debate at the Forsyth County Administra­tion Building in Cumming.
 ??  ?? Steve Reilly (second from left) and Ethan Pham (far right) were among the 7th District Democratic candidates greeting voters during a forum at the United Peachtree Corners Civic Associatio­n on April 23. Pham, a lawyer from Duluth who is sharply...
Steve Reilly (second from left) and Ethan Pham (far right) were among the 7th District Democratic candidates greeting voters during a forum at the United Peachtree Corners Civic Associatio­n on April 23. Pham, a lawyer from Duluth who is sharply...
 ?? PHOTOS BY CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Seventh District Democratic candidate Kathleen Allen is campaignin­g on overhaulin­g the health care system, cutting the unemployme­nt rate and raising the minimum wage.
PHOTOS BY CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Seventh District Democratic candidate Kathleen Allen is campaignin­g on overhaulin­g the health care system, cutting the unemployme­nt rate and raising the minimum wage.

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