The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ossoff leads but runoff still possible in Dems’ Senate primary

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

Jon Ossoff built an early lead in the Democratic primary for the U.S. Senate on Tuesday as polls began to close after a day of voting marred by long lines and faulty equipment, but it was not yet clear whether he would face a runoff.

The former congressio­nal candidate had a double-digit edge in the jumbled race to challenge Republican U.S. Sen. David Perdue, though he’s facing well-financed challenges from executive Sarah Riggs Amico and former Columbus Mayor Teresa Tomlinson.

Early results showed him hovering around the majority-vote mark he needs to avoid an August runoff, though most precincts from densely populated metro Atlanta had yet to report.

Results trickled in more slowly than usual Tuesday, with many precincts struggling with missing or

malfunctio­ning voting machines, part of a $104 million system the state purchased after a 2018 gubernator­ial election framed by charges of voter suppressio­n.

Some voters insisted on exercising their right to cast ballots, but others couldn’t wait in hourslong lines and left before they could vote. Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms was among many Democrats to raise concerns that the problems disenfranc­hised voters in majority-black areas of the metro region.

“Let’s all work, hope and pray that this not be a preview of November,” she said.

Though the Democratic race for the U.S. Senate is the marquee contest on the ballot, candidates have wrestled for attention with a pandemic that’s dominated public attention and another U.S. Senate race — the 21-candidate contest for Republican Kelly Loeffler’s seat — that won’t be held until November.

The virus outbreak has also reshaped the electorate. More than 1.2 million voters cast early ballots, mostly by mail. That far eclipses early voting totals during the 2016 primary and adds more unpredicta­bility to a volatile election cycle.

The Democratic U.S. Senate race began with a sputter early last year, when Stacey Abrams publicly wrestled over whether to run for the seat before passing on the chance. Within hours, Tomlinson entered the contest, followed shortly by Amico and then Ossoff.

He became the de facto front-runner, thanks to soaring name recognitio­n from his 2017 run for Georgia’s 6th Congressio­nal District, a special election that drew national attention as a litmus test for President Donald Trump’s support and a measure of Democrats’ strength in longheld Republican territory.

He narrowly lost that race, the most expensive U.S. House contest in history, after raising roughly $30 million during the campaign. But he amassed a lengthy voter list, a battle-tested campaign strategy and a profile as a rising Democratic star.

His opponents have questioned whether he can defeat Perdue, a former Fortune 500 chief executive with a $9 million campaign account, but none so loud as Tomlinson. She has criticized his level of experience and questioned whether he could go toeto-toe with the incumbent.

The race seemed long fated to end in an August runoff because of the glut of contenders.

But several recent polls showed Ossoff within range of the majority vote needed to win outright. And he recently pumped $450,000 of his own money into his campaign to finance a new round of TV ads and expand his outreach efforts.

The pandemic has added another wrinkle, too, by forcing the three Democrats to resort to virtual campaignin­g as restrictio­ns took hold in March. Analysts say that could give candidates with high profiles and deep pockets an edge since old-fashioned retail politickin­g was largely off-limits.

Amico, Ossoff and Tomlinson largely embrace the same liberal policies, including calls to raise the minimum wage, pass stricter gun control legislatio­n, more aggressive­ly combat climate change and expand voting rights measures to increase ballot access.

They’ve each also intensifie­d calls to overhaul the criminal justice system as demonstrat­ions demanding racial equality and an end to police brutality sweep the nation in the wake of George Floyd’s death while in police custody in Minneapoli­s.

But they differ more sharply in campaign strategy and experience. Amico, the party’s nominee for lieutenant governor in 2018, has leaned on her background running a company — and its pension-related financial struggles — to connect with voters.

The only candidate with elected experience in the race, Tomlinson has put her two terms as Columbus mayor at the center of her campaign. And Ossoff has focused on an anti-corruption message.

Although most precincts reported no issues, the voting problems in metro Atlanta marred the day. The pandemic led local officials to close many precincts and hire fewer poll workers, contributi­ng to long lines. And lack of training of staffers and equipment flaws forced many voters to cast provisiona­l ballots.

“This is voter suppressio­n — I’m shaking just talking about this,” Aerialle Klein said as she waited to vote at Cross Keys High School in DeKalb County. “But I’m staying. This is my civic duty. Something has to change.”

The Fair Fight Action voting rights group founded by Abrams compiled a list of 21 precincts in eight counties that didn’t open on time.

State Rep. William Boddie, D-East Point, said Fulton County was in a “complete meltdown” almost as soon as polls opened Tuesday.

“My phone hasn’t stopped ringing. We’re having issues throughout the county,” he said. “Did they not know this was going to be a voting day for months? Fulton County’s Board of Elections can’t be let off the hook this time. It’s inexcusabl­e.”

Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger pinned the blame on local officials in DeKalb and Fulton counties, and he said he would launch an investigat­ion into the primary process. State Democrats, as well as local officials, said the state was ill-prepared to conduct the election even after it was postponed from May.

The Senate contest is far from the only closely watched race on the ballot.

Voters sorted through crowded contests for three open U.S. House seats: a race to represent a Gwinnett County-based district that’s one of the nation’s most competitiv­e, as well as packed fields seeking the right to compete in two deeply conservati­ve North Georgia territorie­s.

Dozens of down-ticket races are also on the ballot, including contests that could be key to Democratic hopes to retake control of the Georgia House. So were elections for local posts, such as sheriff and district attorney, which are receiving fresh looks from many voters amid protests demanding civil justice throughout the state.

And Georgians got to render verdicts in presidenti­al primary contests, though those votes are largely an afterthoug­ht: Trump long ago cemented the Republican nomination, and former Vice President Joe Biden formally clinched the Democratic nod last week.

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