The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Trump ‘ashamed’ to have endorsed Kemp

Relationsh­ip has deteriorat­ed since choice of Loeffler.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

Mounting political strain between Gov. Brian Kemp and Donald Trump reached a new phase Sunday when the president said he was “ashamed” that he endorsed the fellow Republican in a tight race for governor in 2018.

Trump’s remarks came during a Fox News interview on his unproven claims of rampant voter fraud in Georgia, which Joe Biden captured by less than 13,000 votes. Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger certified the vote on Nov. 20, refuting Trump’s claims, and hours later Kemp signed his approval.

“The governor has done nothing,” Trump said. “He’s done absolutely nothing. I’m ashamed that I endorsed him.”

The criticism marks the nadir of a relationsh­ip between Kemp and Trump that has steadily deteriorat­ed since the governor tapped Kelly Loeffler to an open U.S. Senate seat over the president’s favored pick of Doug Collins.

It further highlights the fractious Republican infighting in Georgia ahead of Jan. 5 runoffs that will decide control of the U.S. Senate.

And the swipe could haunt Kemp through the 2022 midterms, when he is gearing up to face Stacey Abrams in a likely rematch. It appears increasing­ly possible that he might first have to survive a primary challenge from a Trump-backed adversary — perhaps Collins, a four-term congressma­n now leading the president’s Georgia recount effort.

Trump has often taken credit for Kemp’s narrow 2018 defeat of Abrams. His surprise endorsemen­t of the Republican six days before a runoff contest against then-lt. Gov. Casey Cagle helped turn what was already likely to be a Kemp win into a runaway rout.

And he visited three days before the general election to energize Republican­s with claims that Abrams would make “neighborho­ods unsafe and make your jobs disappear like magic” if she won. A vote for Kemp, he told a crowd of thousands of GOP faithful, was the same as a vote for him.

But soon there were signs of fissures between the two Republican­s. Shortly after he took office, Kemp appealed to Trump to free up Hurricane Michael relief that stalled in Congress for months. And he went against Trump’s wishes by picking Loeffler for the seat held by retiring U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson.

The next major flashpoint came in April, when Trump opposed Kemp’s plan to start reopening Georgia’s economy during the pandemic. He said repeatedly he “totally disagreed” with Kemp’s decision before later falsely asserting he never criticized Kemp.

As the November election neared, Kemp encouraged Trump and national Republican­s to pay heed to polls showing a tight race in a state Republican­s held in every White House race since 1996, and openly talked of Georgia as a “battlegrou­nd.”

After his defeat in Georgia, Trump intensifie­d claims of widespread irregulari­ties at the polls — allegation­s that Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger and other GOP officials consistent­ly refuted.

While some Republican leaders echoed Trump’s broadsides against Raffensper­ger — Loeffler and U.S. Sen. David Perdue both called on him to resign — Kemp was more limited in his critique.

And he refused Trump’s overtures, on social media and in a phone call, to more loudly amplify the president’s unsubstant­iated claims of a “stolen” election. The governor, meanwhile, has stayed closer to Vice President Mike Pence, who has visited the state frequently throughout the year.

During his Fox News interview, Trump repeated allegation­s of widespread fraud in Georgia without citing any evidence and called Raffensper­ger a “disaster.” Those attacks, along with Trump’s insistence the election was “rigged,” have unnerved Republican­s worried they could dampen GOP turnout in the runoffs.

“I look at what’s going on — it’s so terrible. What happened in this election, Maria, I can’t imagine has ever happened before,” he said in his interview with Maria Bartiromo, claiming with no evidence that Democrats “stuffed the ballot boxes.”

Raffensper­ger has frequently fired back at Trump, poking fun at his tweets and accusing the president of authoring his own defeat by denigratin­g mail-in ballots. Kemp has taken a different tack. Though his office didn’t comment Sunday, the governor has refrained from swiping at the president.

“I understand why he’s frustrated. He’s a fighter,” Kemp told The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on shortly after he certified the state’s 16 Democratic electors. “But at the end of the day, I’ve got to follow the laws of the constituti­on of this state and that’s exactly what I’m doing.”

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? President Donald Trump (left) attends a rally for then-republican gubernator­ial candidate Brian Kemp on Nov. 4, 2018, at Middle Georgia Regional Airport in Macon.
HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM President Donald Trump (left) attends a rally for then-republican gubernator­ial candidate Brian Kemp on Nov. 4, 2018, at Middle Georgia Regional Airport in Macon.

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