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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Politics
Melanie Mason

Georgia Gov. Kemp beats Trump’s hand-picked challenger in GOP primary — will face Stacey Abrams

Tuesday’s primary elections featured the inaugural stop in former President Donald Trump’s 2020 revenge tour — the first opportunities he’s had to unseat Republicans whom he considers disloyal for refusing to acquiesce in his baseless fraud claims.

But it was clear early on that his hopes of retribution had fallen flat, at least when it came to incumbent Republican Gov. Brian Kemp of Georgia. The former president personally recruited Kemp’s challenger, former Sen. David Perdue, and donated millions to prop up his pick. But Kemp won a convincing victory that was called just 90 minutes after the polls closed.

Trump may have more luck in ousting Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, who is locked in a tight race with Rep. Jody Hice, a vocal proponent of 2020 election lies.

Those contests, along with the political rise of football legend Herschel Walker and a pair of battles for the direction of the Democratic Party, make up a busy night of midterm primary action.

Here’s what you need to know:

Winning over Trump voters despite Trump

For most of last year, Trump confidently predicted that Kemp’s political future was finished, promising at one point “the MAGA base — which is enormous — will never vote for him.”

Instead, Kemp has proved it’s possible to win over Trump loyalists without Trump. The power of being an incumbent governor has been key. Kemp signed a number of bills reflecting conservative priorities, including new voting restrictions, enabling residents to carry handguns without a background check or license and limiting discussion about race in classrooms.

An April Morning Consult poll found that half of all Georgia voters, including 76% of the state’s Republicans, thought Kemp was doing a good job. That kind of job approval explains how Kemp secured the backing of many in Georgia’s political establishment, as well as national Republicans increasingly willing to defy Trump, including former Vice President Mike Pence.

Perdue, meanwhile, has found little momentum in his main election issue: asserting falsely that Trump won the 2020 presidential race. He spent the closing days not claiming he would win, but only that he was not losing as badly as polls suggest.

An election grudge down-ballot

The advantages of incumbency don’t go as far for Raffensperger in his reelection bid for secretary of state. There were fewer opportunities for him to mend fences with conservatives, who remain angry over his refusal to overturn the presidential election, which Trump has cast as a betrayal.

Hice voted last year against certifying the results of the 2020 presidential race and was involved in discussions designed to pressure Pence to throw out disputed electoral votes, according to testimony collected by the congressional investigation into the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. Should he win, he would oversee the election administration in a pivotal 2024 battleground.

A poll last month by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution found Raffensperger and Hice nearly tied; a substantial portion of the voters remained undecided. Raffensperger, like other statewide candidates, must win more than 50% of the vote to avoid a runoff.

Setting the stage for November

How’s this for an attention-getting trifecta: Stacey Abrams, Herschel Walker, Sen. Raphael Warnock. Tuesday’s election sets up a blockbuster general election in Georgia featuring these national figures.

Abrams, who easily clinched the Democratic nomination for governor, is facing a rematch of her 2018 campaign against Kemp. Abrams’ profile has only grown since her narrow loss four years ago, especially as the fruits of her years of organizing helped turn Georgia blue in 2020. But the headwinds are far stiffer for Democrats this year; early polls have shown Kemp with an advantage, although their head-to-head matchup has not yet begun in earnest.

The race for U.S. Senate will pit a Georgia football legend against the state’s political trailblazer. Both Warnock and Walker easily clinched their respective parties’ nominations on Tuesday.

Walker, best known for his Heisman Trophy-winning days at the University of Georgia and subsequent NFL career, got an early nod from Trump, his former “Celebrity Apprentice” mentor. He also won over Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell, who was impressed enough by Walker’s fundraising ability to put aside concerns about his electability.

But Warnock is unlikely to let Walker off the hook for various troubles in his past, including allegations of domestic violence and threatening behavior against women, as well as turbulent business dealings. The first Black senator elected from Georgia, Warnock is the top fundraiser in Congress as he strives to win his first full term. Republicans, meanwhile, have raised scrutiny of Warnock’s custody battle with his ex-wife, a sign that both sides are girding for a bruising election.

Battle in the ’burbs

Georgia would have not become a hotly contested swing state if not for the suburbs. The counties surrounding Atlanta have been diversifying and increasingly electing Democrats, including Rep. Lucy McBath in 2018 and Rep. Carolyn Bourdeaux two years later.

But Republicans controlled the redistricting process last year, and they redrew one suburban district to ensure it would tilt more solidly red. That left the two incumbent Democrats vying for the other, bluer seat.

Bourdeaux’s current seat more closely aligns with the new district lines, while McBath has a more national profile because of her gun safety activism after her son Jordan was killed. A third Democrat, state Rep. Donna McLeod, was also in contention.

The battle reflects the new redistricting reality: In starkly partisan districts, the real contest is between members of the same party, not the general election. Whoever emerges as the winner will be the heavy favorite in November.

An unusual ‘un-endorsement’

If a Trump endorsement can breathe new life into a campaign, a Trump “un-endorsement” was widely expected to be a death knell for Rep. Mo Brooks’ campaign to be Alabama’s next senator.

Brooks, an ardent 2020 election denier, won Trump’s backing nearly a year before Alabamians went to the polls. But Trump rescinded his support in March, complaining the congressman had “gone woke” because he acknowledged there was no pathway to immediately reinstate Trump as president.

Most political observers thought the unspoken reason for Trump’s about-face was Brooks’ sluggish campaign, which was being outpaced by Katie Britt, a former chief of staff to retiring Sen. Richard Shelby, and Mike Durant, a businessman and former military helicopter pilot who was shot down nearly 30 years ago in the “Black Hawk Down” incident in Somalia.

But recent polls have shown that Brooks’ campaign may still have life in it — at least enough to make it into a runoff.

Democratic showdown on the border

Texas politics were quickly overshadowed Tuesday afternoon by the grim news of a mass shooting at an elementary school in Uvalde.

The whiplash was summed up by state Atty. Gen. Ken Paxton’s Twitter feed: a slew of peppy election-related messages for his reelection followed by a somber call for prayers for the affected Texans. Paxton is facing George P. Bush, the state’s Land Commissioner and a scion of the Bush political dynasty, in a runoff.

Paxton, who was indicted seven years ago for securities fraud but has yet to stand trial, had Trump’s backing; Bush also sought that endorsement, despite Trump’s public feuding with Jeb Bush, his father.

On the Democratic side, progressive candidate Jessica Cisneros is trying for a second time to oust centrist incumbent Rep. Henry Cuellar.

Cuellar narrowly outpaced Cisneros in their March matchup, but neither candidate got enough votes to avoid Tuesday’s runoff.

The race had long been seen as a face-off between the poles of the Democratic Party. But the contrasts sharpened even further after the leak of a draft Supreme Court decision that would overturn Roe vs. Wade. Cuellar, one of the few antiabortion members left in the party, was soon blasted by Cisneros for his position.

While Cisneros has campaigned with the left’s most prominent stars, including Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, Cuellar has denounced her as too far left for this majority-Latino district. With Democrats openly fretting about how to appeal to moderates, as well as about their slipping numbers among Latinos, they’re closely watching the outcome in Texas.

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