The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ga. GOP’s strategy for ’20 centers on Trump

At party convention, speakers laud president for his agenda, style.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

SAVANNAH — Donald Trump wasn’t at the Georgia GOP convention this weekend. But he may as well have been.

Cardboard cutouts of the Republican greeted the more than 1,000 delegates who crowded a vast meeting space. His merchandis­e lined stalls in the hallways. Party organizers raffled off Trump 2020 memorabili­a. His name was plastered on campaign buttons for candidates seeking party posts.

And his approach to politics crept into just about every speech from party leaders plotting the GOP’s course for next year’s election.

Gov. Brian Kemp echoed Trump’s attack on “agenda-driven” media. U.S. Sen. David Perdue spoke more about Trump than his own election campaign, warning that the president is the only one who can prevent a “100-year slide toward the socialist agenda.” And other GOP officials praised his style, his agenda,

even his machismo.

“The left has changed how people talk, how people speak, and there’s been an emasculati­on of boys and men,” said Jason Thompson, a Republican National Committeem­an.

“And that’s why the left is so absolutely fixated on our president: He’s a real man. And they don’t like that. He says what he means, and they don’t like it.”

As Georgia Republican­s ready for what could be their most challengin­g election cycle since winning control of state government, leaders are betting that the same insurgent tide that swept Trump to office in 2016 will float Republican­s to victory next year.

Contrast that with the last Republican convention in 2017, when Trump took a back seat to the evolving race for governor and a feverish contest to lead the cashstrapp­ed party. Even his most ardent supporters at that convention rarely mentioned his name, focusing instead on state and local matters.

‘No negotiatin­g’

Two years later, virtually no trace of the Never Trump movement in Georgia Republican politics remains. Trump’s loyalists fill key positions in the party, and the critics who assailed him in the run-up to the 2016 election are now enthusiast­ically supporters or are holding their tongues.

Banking on Trump’s appeal holds risks. He won the state by five percentage points in 2016 but lost Republican stronghold­s in metro Atlanta. The GOP’s suburban swoon deepened last year, when Stacey Abrams nearly led Democrats to a string of statewide upsets across the state.

Now Democrats feel they’re on the cusp of a comeback after the third consecutiv­e GOP sweep of statewide offices. And they, too, are undergoing a shift from the more moderate approach of past decades toward more liberal policies to energize voters who oppose Trump and Perdue.

The party wants to build on the string of legislativ­e victories that put Republican­s on the defensive in the suburbs last year with a message focused on voting rights, Medicaid expansion and opposition to socially conservati­ve legislatio­n such as the anti-abortion “heartbeat” law.

“To stop the inhumane conservati­ve policies that are sweeping the nation, we have to vote out Republican­s,” said Adrienne White, the state Democratic party’s vice chair of recruitmen­t. “There is no rationaliz­ing with them. No negotiatin­g.”

‘Consequenc­es’

Kemp and Perdue headlined the GOP message, with strong backing from the party’s newly elected chairman: former state Sen. David Shafer.

Once one of the most powerful Republican­s in the Senate, Shafer narrowly lost last year’s GOP lieutenant governor runoff to Geoff Duncan before planning a comeback. He won over delegates by promising to beef up a “neglected” grassroots network in dozens of counties that have no local party organizati­ons.

His victory over three rivals puts Shafer in charge of the state GOP apparatus that will coordinate how the party will spend millions of dollars and chart out campaign strategy in the 2020 presidenti­al race. And he pledged to take a more muscular approach to taking on Democrats.

“I believe our Republican Party is in trouble. In the last election, we found ourselves on the defensive for the first time in a decade,” he said. “We need to go back on the offensive.”

His stance echoes a wider Republican shift toward appealing to the conservati­ve base rather than reaching out to the political center.

While then-Gov. Nathan Deal angered activists by vetoing the “religious liberty” measure and blocking gun expansions, Kemp won office with the help of Trump supporters energized by socially conservati­ve promises.

He capped his first legislativ­e session by signing a “heartbeat” law that would outlaw abortions as early as six weeks, a measure that supporters traced directly to Trump’s influence on Republican policy.

“In 2016, we elected Donald Trump as president. The consequenc­es have been great. And in 2018, we elected a new governor, Brian Kemp, and a new lieutenant governor, Geoff Duncan,” said state Sen. Marty Harbin, a Tyrone Republican who sponsored the legislatio­n.

“They not only campaigned like Republican­s, but they governed like Republican­s.”

‘C-list celebritie­s’

Kemp would not disagree. He took office with a promise to work across party lines and “put people ahead of divisive politics,” but he’s insisted he will not abandon campaign promises to expand gun rights, crack down on illegal immigratio­n and tackle other partisan issues.

He repeated that pledge Saturday with a fiery speech, as a convention hall full of delegates interrupte­d him with ovations.

He blamed “out of control” Democrats for threatenin­g Georgia’sprogressa­ndmocked the growing fallout from Hollywood celebritie­s and some production firms who have called for boycotts of the state’s film industry because of the anti-abortion law.

“I understand that some folks don’t like this new law. I’m fine with that,” said Kemp, adding: “We are the party of freedom and opportunit­y. We value and protect innocent life — even though that makes C-list celebritie­s squawk.”

He urged the same volunteers who flocked to his campaign to redouble their efforts next year against an energized political left that is “angry, they’re radical and they’re ridiculous.”

“Trump, like us, is just getting started. Let’s stand with the president. In a lot of people’s eyes, he’s already made America great again. He’s just got to keep it great.”

Perdue took the same tack. He reminded the crowd of his close ties to Trump, saying the president calls him late at night, early in the morning and recently invited him to the White House for a lunch date that stretched into a sixhour meeting.

“We had a wake-up call last year. In 2018, the governor’s race and lieutenant governor’s race got a lot closer than it should have,” he said.

“The battle for the White House is right here in Georgia in 2020,” Perdue added. “If President Trump doesn’t win Georgia, he won’t win the presidency.”

 ??  ?? Dawn Marr, delegate from Cherokee County, shows support for the president Saturday at the GAGOP State Convention at Savannah Internatio­nal Trade and Convention Center.
Dawn Marr, delegate from Cherokee County, shows support for the president Saturday at the GAGOP State Convention at Savannah Internatio­nal Trade and Convention Center.
 ?? PHOTOS BY HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? Speaking Saturday at the GAGOP State Convention in Savannah, Gov. Brian Kemp said Democrats imperil Georgia’s progress.
PHOTOS BY HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM Speaking Saturday at the GAGOP State Convention in Savannah, Gov. Brian Kemp said Democrats imperil Georgia’s progress.

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