Trump looms over Republican nominating
contest for Georgia governor
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[July 24, 2018]
By Joseph Ax
(Reuters) - Republican voters in Georgia on
Tuesday will choose their party's nominee for governor in a two-man
faceoff that has become a proxy battle between U.S. President Donald
Trump and the state's popular Republican governor, Nathan Deal.
In May, Lieutenant Governor Casey Cagle, who has Deal's endorsement,
finished ahead of Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp. But Kemp, whose
hardline campaigning approach dovetails with Trump's, earned the
president's backing last week, a surprise endorsement that should give
him a major boost among Republican voters in the run-off election.
"I would think it does give the edge to Kemp," said Charles Bullock, a
political science professor at the University of Georgia.
Recent polls show a close race. The winner of Tuesday's contest will
face Democrat Stacey Abrams, who is vying to become the first black
woman to serve as a U.S. state governor, in what is expected to be one
of the most hotly contested races in November's midterm elections. Trump
carried Georgia by five percentage points in 2016.
The Republican nominating race has been marked by fiercely negative
campaigning.
Cagle, 52, bested Kemp, 55, by 13 points in the springtime primary to
set up the top-two showdown. But he came under fire in recent weeks
after Kemp and another candidate who finished fourth released secret
recordings in which Cagle acknowledged supporting a bad policy for
political reasons and said the primary appeared to be a contest to see
who could be "craziest."
That last comment likely referred to Kemp's political advertisements, in
which he jokingly threatened a teenage boy who wanted to date his
daughter with a shotgun and promised to "round up" illegal immigrants in
his truck.
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Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp speaks with visitors to the
state capitol about the "SEC primary" involving a group of southern
states voting next month, in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. February 24,
2016. REUTERS/Letitia Stein/File Photo
Deal, who cannot run again due to term limits, endorsed Cagle last
week, a move countered two days later when Trump posted his support
for Kemp on Twitter.
"Brian is very strong on Crime and Borders, LOVES our Military, Vets
and the 2nd Amendment. He will be a GREAT Governor!" Trump said in
another tweet backing Kemp on Saturday, ahead of Vice President Mike
Pence's appearance with the candidate at a campaign event.
Both candidates have embraced Trump and have similar policy
positions, including support for gun rights, lower taxes and tough
anti-illegal immigration measures.
Cagle would likely be a stronger general election candidate than
Kemp, whose heated rhetoric could alienate women voters in a race
against Abrams, according to Bullock.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; editing by Colleen Jenkins and Tom Brown)
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