The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Biden needs a miracle in Georgia

As the only white Democratic congressio­nal rep. in the Deep South, I watched the party lose a constituen­cy that could deliver wins.

- Carolyn Bourdeaux

As President Joe Biden plans to visit Georgia on Saturday to shore up his coalition, people ask me if Democrats can win in Georgia this year. I shrug: Unlikely, but maybe with Donald Trump on the ballot, Democrats will be recipients of a miracle. Trump is a uniquely unqualifie­d and polarizing candidate. But I can say with great certainty that Democrats will not win on their own merits.

The Democratic Party of 2018 and 2020, the infrastruc­ture of campaigns and advocacy groups, the passion that flipped Georgia’s 6th and 7th congressio­nal districts, two Senate seats and the state for Biden have evaporated. Aided and abetted by Republican­s, the Democrats’ multiethni­c and multiracia­l coalition has fallen apart. We saw the results in the Democratic statewide losses in 2022, and the situation is much worse in 2024.

The problem is that Georgia Democrats have to hold together a coalition across a racial fault line. Republican­s exploit this, and Democrats, deeply invested in the project of social justice, play into their hands.

Georgia Democrats managed to hold onto power up to 2004, longer than many other Democratic parties in the South that “recentered” politicall­y around the Republican Party after the passage of the 1965 Voting Rights Act. A Democratic Party of rural whites, the Black community and a progressiv­e business community passed legislatio­n in the 1990s for which Georgia is justly proud, including lottery-funded pre-K, teacher pay raises and the HOPE Scholarshi­p.

This coalition started to fall apart in the 1990s for many reasons but among the most bitter was that Republican­s realized they could offer Black Democrats a Faustian bargain: They could have more Black minority opportunit­y districts, but the cost would be white Democratic legislativ­e seats. The collusion was not a secret.

During the 1990s redistrict­ing, the Republican Party offered selected Black Democrats assistance with drawing maps and bringing redistrict­ing plans before the U.S. Department of Justice. Under orders from the DO J to draw more minority opportunit­y districts, the Georgia congressio­nal delegation went from eight white Democrats, one Black Democrat and one white Republican, to three Black Democrats and eight white Republican­s. Many Black leaders recognized the danger and struggled to hold the coalition together. But by 2004, the Georgia General Assembly had flipped, and Republican­s took power, largely at the expense of white Democrats.

The problem for the Democratic Party then and now is that, as they pursue strategies to elevate Black representa­tion and Black power, it comes at the expense of their own coalition. And Georgia Republican­s leverage this to devastatin­g effect.

As a member of Congress in 2021, I recall a meeting with the staff from former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder’s group “All on the Line.” They were spearheadi­ng Democratic legal efforts around redistrict­ing. The attorneys on his staff were explicit about their goals in Georgia: “Our job is to maximize Black voting power.”

As the only white Democratic congressio­nal representa­tive in the Deep South, I knew this was a trap, but I couldn’t find a way out. Democrats would maximize Black voting power, most likely by litigating to form more minority opportunit­y districts. Republican­s would maximize Republican voting power.

My district was then drawn to increase the Black population as a “minority coalition district,” and Lucy McBath, a popular Black woman, left her district to run against me when her district was drawn to be more Republican. Perhaps foolishly, I felt compelled to try to stop her because I knew that the diverse, but moderate suburban voter that I had worked so hard to bring into the Democratic fold held the keys to the coalition that could achieve political and policy goals. But the appeal of a sympatheti­c Black woman who might lose a congressio­nal seat in the South was impossible for Democrats locally and nationally to resist. I understand. But once again, Democrats maximized Black representa­tion, not by defeating Republican­s, but by taking out one of their own.

Earlier this year, Georgia finished another round of redistrict­ing after Democratic-backed organizati­ons brought litigation on the claim that Republican­s had improperly diluted Black voting power. The Republican­s complied with a wink. They conceded more Black opportunit­y districts but erased the minority coalition district of the 7th in favor of a black opportunit­y district, combined six white-majority Democratic state House districts into three and made two other majority-white Democratic Senate districts into majority-Black districts.

Maybe Democrats will pick up a district or two in the General Assembly, but now that the paired incumbents have sorted things out, most likely next year there will be only three white male Democrats in the state Legislatur­e. I’d like to think it doesn’t matter, but it does, because it’s part of a series of ongoing signals from the Democratic Party that the diverse, but plurality white, moderate suburban voters are not important to their coalition. Stacey Abrams’ nearly successful strategy in 2018 focused heavily on turning out minority voters, but she also capitalize­d on the moderate suburban voters disillusio­ned by Trump. In 2020, Democrats were able to realize the potential of this fragile coalition to flip the state, and I was the only Democrat in the country to flip a Republican-held congressio­nal seat.

But then, the Democratic leadership never acknowledg­ed or realized the importance of these swing voters and made no investment in either listening to their concerns or political outreach. In 2018, the doors in my suburban neighborho­od bristled with Democratic door hangers. By 2022, my neighborho­od was only canvassed once — by Republican­s.

Democrats are now even losing Black voters who are furious the Democratic Party has failed to deliver on important issues like police reform, Medicaid expansion and voting rights. Yet, Black representa­tion is at a historic high, and progressiv­e groups have poured millions into organizati­ons devoted to minority registrati­on and turnout. I understand the history. This is very important.

But Democrats also need to recognize they have turned their backs on a critical constituen­cy that could deliver real political and policy victory. And to win again in Georgia, they are going to have to find a way to win them back.

 ?? AJC 2020 ?? If the Biden-Harris ticket hopes to win in 2024 in Georgia, Democrats need to somehow re-create the winning coalition of minorities and moderate suburbanit­es.
AJC 2020 If the Biden-Harris ticket hopes to win in 2024 in Georgia, Democrats need to somehow re-create the winning coalition of minorities and moderate suburbanit­es.
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