The Columbus Dispatch

Perdue, Ossoff head to Georgia US Senate runoff

- Ben Nadler

ATLANTA – Republican U.S. Sen. David Perdue and Democrat Jon Ossoff will face off in a Jan. 5 runoff in Georgia for Perdue’s Senate seat, one of two high-profile contests in the state that could determine which party controls the upper chamber.

Libertaria­n candidate Shane Hazel was able to get enough votes so that neither Perdue nor Ossoff cleared the 50% threshold needed for an outright win.

Thousands of absentee ballots and in-person votes cast early needed to be counted after Election Night passed, forcing a long and tense wait before the race could be called.

Democrat Raphael Warnock and Sen. Kelly Loeffler, the Republican appointed last year after Sen. Johnny Isakson retired, will also compete in a runoff on the same day. The twin races in Georgia are likely to settle which party controls the Senate.

Nationally, the Senate stands split at 48-48. But Republican­s lead uncalled races in Alaska and North Carolina, so the ultimate balance is likely to come down to what happens in the Georgia runoffs.

Both sides promised unlimited funds would flow to the campaigns and onto the airwaves, and they predicted an allstar cast of campaigner­s for a state that in recent weeks drew visits from Demo

cratic president-elect Joe Biden, President Donald Trump, Vice President Mike Pence, Democratic vice presidente­lect Kamala Harris and former President Barack Obama.

The race between Ossoff and Perdue, a close ally of Trump, has been characteri­zed by sharp attack ads but relatively moderate political positions. Both candidates steered toward the middle,

vying for a state Trump won handily four years ago, but where swaths of suburbia have shown signs of disillusio­nment with the president.

Perdue has often focused his message on the economy, touting pre-pandemic job growth and his business experience before taking office. He has sought to cast Ossoff as backing a “radical socialist agenda.”

Ossoff, meanwhile, has hammered Perdue’s response to the coronaviru­s pandemic and decried Republican efforts to overturn the Affordable Care Act in the middle of the public health crisis.

Democrats haven’t won a U.S. Senate race in Georgia in two decades, but Republican dominance has been slipping. Democrat Stacey Abrams narrowly lost the race for governor in 2018, and Biden held a slim lead over Trump on Friday night in this year’s race for the White House, though The Associated Press has not yet called the race.

Perdue’s campaign is already portraying the runoff election as a last stand for Republican­s to hold the Senate majority.

“The stakes in this election could not be higher: A vote for Jon Ossoff is a vote to hand power to Chuck Schumer and the radical Democrats in Washington,” Perdue campaign manager Ben Fry said in a statement Friday. “Georgians won’t let that happen.”

Ossoff spoke at a news conference in Atlanta on Friday morning, surrounded by supporters waving signs that read, “Vote your Ossoff.”

“We have all the momentum. We have all the energy. We’re on the right side of history,” Ossoff said.

Paa Coss, a 39-year-old who said she moved to Atlanta 10 years ago, came to support Ossoff wearing a shirt covered in a collage of pictures of Biden.

 ?? JOHN AMIS/AP ?? Georgia Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate Jon Ossoff rallies supporters in Atlanta on Friday for a runoff against Republican Sen. David Perdue.
JOHN AMIS/AP Georgia Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate Jon Ossoff rallies supporters in Atlanta on Friday for a runoff against Republican Sen. David Perdue.

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