The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Biden plans Atlanta visit

Georgia Senate races prove key to Dems’ ability to get $1.9 trillion bill passed.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris will visit Atlanta next week, part of a series of stops around the country to discuss the benefits of the $1.9 trillion coronaviru­s relief package that the president signed into law Thursday.

President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris will visit Georgia next week as part of a nationwide victory lap to celebrate the passage of the $1.9 trillion coronaviru­s relief package that Democrats couldn’t have muscled through Congress without victories in the state’s January U.S. Senate runoffs.

Biden and Harris will visit Atlanta on March 19, the White House said, though additional details were not immediatel­y available. It’s part of a tour next week that will also bring Biden to Pennsylvan­ia, another battlegrou­nd state key to his victory. Harris is traveling Monday to Nevada, another state Democrats won in a tight race in 2020.

The unpreceden­ted package, which was unanimousl­y opposed by Republican­s in Congress, includes $1,400 relief checks for many Americans, new tax credits for parents, health insurance incentives and an infusion of cash to help reopen schools and bolster vaccine distributi­on. It also finances about $8.2 billion for state and local government­s in Georgia.

Biden, who signed the measure into law Thursday, carried Georgia by fewer than 12,000 votes in November, becoming the first Democratic presidenti­al candidate to win the state since 1992. The victory was upheld repeatedly by state and federal elections officials, who balked at then-president Donald Trump’s repeated attempts to overturn the election outcome.

Biden last visited Georgia on Jan. 4 to stump for Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock, two Democratic U.S. Senate candidates

who put their promise to vote for his robust economic relief plan at the center of their campaigns.

Their narrow victories in January flipped control of the Senate and allowed a Democratic-controlled Congress to push a far more expansive plan than Democrats could have in a divided Washington.

Ossoff and Warnock have highlighte­d Georgia’s singular role in the successful passage of the legislatio­n, reminding voters at every turn of the consequenc­e of their upset victories.

“I just want to say thank God for Georgia,” Warnock said this week at a celebrator­y news conference with other Democratic members of the state’s congressio­nal delegation.

State Republican­s have rallied against the measure, which they say is too wasteful and too broad. Many have echoed Gov. Brian Kemp’s criticism that Georgia didn’t get its fair share of stimulus dollars and seconded his frustratio­n

that the money can’t be used to enact tax breaks.

“You heard that right: Democrats in Washington are now telling states they can’t cut taxes, create new incentives that attract investment, or expand and incentiviz­e school choice,” Kemp said.

Democrats, meanwhile, have focused on the surge of cash that aims to help middle-class and lower-income Georgians, which includes $7 billion in new funding for the Paycheck Protection Program and $2 billion to encourage state GOP leaders to expand the Medicaid program.

“Elections matter. Leadership matters,” said U.S. Rep. Nikema Williams, who chairs the state Democratic Party.

“Thanks to Georgia voters who showed up and elected Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock,” Williams said, “the American people are getting real relief to recover from this economic crisis and stop COVID19 for good.”

 ?? OLIVER CONTRERAS/NEW YORK TIMES ??
OLIVER CONTRERAS/NEW YORK TIMES
 ?? ANDREW HARNIK/ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
ANDREW HARNIK/ASSOCIATED PRESS

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