The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Republican­s line up for chance to oust Bishop

2nd District graded now from ‘likely’ to ‘leans’ Democratic.

- By Tia Mitchell Tia.mitchell@ajc.com

Georgia’s 2nd Congressio­nal District is the state’s only true toss-up seat, and Republican­s are hoping to ride a conservati­ve wave in the midterms and throw out longtime Democratic incumbent Sanford Bishop.

But first, there is a six-way primary to determine who the GOP nominee will be in the southwest Georgia district race. The candidates include longtime party activists, a former Trump administra­tion official and a military veteran who quickly shot to the lead of the pack in fundraisin­g.

With new boundaries that the Republican-led General Assembly drew in November, the district leans slightly to the Democratic Party and is about 49% Black. That means it is far from certain that a Republican will win the general election.

Larry Sabato’s Crystal Ball, an election projection website produced by the University of Virginia Center for Politics, recently downgraded the 2nd District from “likely Democratic” to “leans Democratic.” The change was partially because Crystal Ball determined that credible GOP candidates are raising enough money to be competitiv­e in the fall.

“In a Republican wave scenario, these are the kinds of districts that could get swept up: places where ( Joe) Biden won between 53%-55% of the vote that are clearly more Democratic than the nation as a whole, but not so much more Democratic that Republican­s couldn’t win in a good environmen­t,” the report says.

A central part of the messaging from candidate Chris West is that he gives the GOP the best chance in November. He is a Thomasvill­e-based real estate developer and an officer with the Georgia Air National Guard.

“We looked and said, ‘OK, who’s the best Republican candidate to put forward to flip this seat?’ ” he said. “And I just became convinced that my resume stacks up best to be able to win, and that is evident in the kind of support that we’ve seen across the district.”

Other candidates are also laying claim to the title of most likely to beat the 15-term incumbent.

Wayne Johnson, who worked on the federal student loan program at the U.S. Department of Education during President Donald Trump’s administra­tion, ran unsuccessf­ully for the U.S. Senate in 2020. He said he decided to run for Congress after the 2nd District was drawn in a way that made the seat competitiv­e for Republican­s for the first time in decades.

“When you couple that desire for a substantiv­e change with the redistrict­ing thing, you have the ingredient­s for the first time in more than 100 years for it to actually go Republican,” said Johnson, who lives in Macon. ”But in order for

it to succeed, it’s going to have to be focused first and foremost on conservati­ve values.”

Also running in the GOP primary are party activist Vivian Childs, Rich Robertson and Paul Whitehead.

The sixth candidate is West Point graduate Jeremy Hunt. Hunt said his grandmothe­r lived in South Georgia, so he grew up visiting family in the area and trained as a paratroope­r at Fort Benning.

But Hunt’s entry into the race immediatel­y drew controvers­y because until recently he was based in metro Atlanta. He registered to vote in Columbus in February just weeks after launching his campaign; prior to that he voted using an Alpharetta address.

Hunt has raised more money and has more cash on hand than any other candidate in the race besides Bishop, but less than 20% of his cash comes from inside the district.

He is endorsed by two sitting U.S. senators, Arkansas’

Tom Cotton and Missouri’s Josh Hawley, former U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and SEAL PAC, a political committee that works to get veterans elected. He also was endorsed by former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich, who represente­d Georgia in Congress for nearly two decades and ran unsuccessf­ully for president in 2012.

Hunt said his focus is on making America better for young families such as his and people who believe Bishop is not serving their interests in Washington.

“The reason why we’re going to win this primary is because we stay on message,” he said. “We are about our three pillars: faith, family and community.”

Bishop also has a primary contender in Joe O’hara, whose platform is conservati­ve and appears unlikely to resonate with the party’s base.

Bishop, who is 75 and seeking a 16th term in office, knows the true test will be in November against whoever wins the GOP primary. The Democratic Party has added him to its list of “frontliner­s,” or vulnerable incumbents who will receive extra resources for their reelection campaigns.

The Albany Democrat said he has been here before, facing a more conservati­ve electorate after redistrict­ing, and he plans to win again. He said it all comes down to proving that he can continue to bring money, government programs and other resources to the district as the senior-most member of Georgia’s congressio­nal delegation and one who holds powerful positions such as chairman of the Agricultur­e appropriat­ions subcommitt­ee.

“I believe that I am well suited and well prepared and experience­d with the necessary tools, particular­ly legislativ­e tools, to use the political process here to work for the people of the 2nd District of Georgia,” he said. “I’ve tried to position myself to be able to have a seat at the table to deliver.”

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