Georgia Republican Senator Loeffler dodges questions on Trump during
debate with challenger Warnock
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[December 07, 2020]
By Susan Cornwell
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican Senator
Kelly Loeffler danced around questions about whether President Donald
Trump lost the Nov. 3 election in a debate with her Democratic
challenger on Sunday before two Georgia runoffs that will decide control
of the U.S. Senate.
Facing off with the Rev. Raphael Warnock on a debate stage in Atlanta,
Loeffler repeatedly called the political newcomer a "radical liberal,"
while Warnock criticized Loeffler's stock trades after the wealthy
businesswoman was appointed senator a year ago. Each criticized the
other's interpretation of the Christian faith.
As the debate began, Loeffler sidestepped a question about whether she
agreed with Trump's baseless claims that last month's election was
"rigged." Trump has not conceded to Democratic President-elect Joe
Biden, instead insisting without evidence that the result was due to
widespread fraud, claims that state and federal officials have
repeatedly rejected.
"It's vitally important that Georgians trust our election process and
the president has every right to every legal recourse," Loeffler said.
Warnock countered by asking why Loeffler "continues to cast doubt on an
American democratic election. It's time to put this behind us."
Georgia has not elected a Democratic U.S. senator in 20 years, but
Biden's narrow victory there over Trump has given Democrats hope. They
face an uphill battle, however, and need to win both races to deny
Republicans a Senate majority that could be used to block much of
Biden's legislative agenda.
Republicans are training much of their fire on Warnock, the Black senior
pastor of the Atlanta church where civil rights champion the Rev. Martin
Luther King Jr. once preached.
"My opponent, radical liberal Raphael Warnock, is a socialist," Loeffler
said, an attack she voiced repeatedly through the debate. She went
through a litany of attacks she has made in her campaign ads, which seek
to portray Warnock as anti-police, anti-Israel, "Marxist" and tied to
the Rev. Jeremiah Wright and a sermon in which the Black Chicago pastor
declared: "God damn America!"
Warnock said Loeffler was trying to misrepresent him.
"I believe in the free enterprise system," he said.
He accused Loeffler of improperly profiting by "dumping millions of
dollars of stock" just after becoming senator and early in the
coronavirus outbreak, before the stock market turned down.
"I'm OK with the fact that she wants to make money, I just think you
shouldn't use the people's seat to enrich yourself. You ought to use the
people's seat to represent the people," Warnock said.
The Justice Department closed a probe into stock trades made by Loeffler,
along with Senators Dianne Feinstein and Jim Inhofe, earlier this year,
shortly before market turmoil tied to the coronavirus, media have
reported. All three have denied wrongdoing.
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Senator Kelly Loeffler (R-GA) speaks during a debate with Raphael
Warnock (not pictured), Democratic challenger for a U.S. Senate seat
representing Georgia, in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. December 6, 2020.
Ben Gray/Pool via REUTERS
Loeffler was appointed to her seat a year ago after its former
occupant retired. She trailed Warnock in her complicated
20-candidate Nov. 3 contest, when Warnock got 32.9% and Loeffler
took 25.9%.
RUNOFFS, RECRIMINATIONS
Senator David Perdue, the other Georgia Republican fighting to hold
his seat on Jan. 5, opted out of debating Democratic challenger Jon
Ossoff again, leaving his rival alone on stage on Sunday.
Ossoff said Perdue may not want to talk about his frequent stock
trades while a senator. Last summer, the Justice Department shut an
inquiry into Perdue's trades in shares of a financial firm without
charges, the New York Times reported last month.
"Senator Perdue, I suppose, doesn't feel that he can handle himself
in a debate, or perhaps is concerned that he may incriminate himself
in a debate, both of which in my opinion are disqualifying for a
U.S. senator seeking re-election," Ossoff said.
Perdue's campaign has said he does not manage his stock portfolio
day to day.
The road to the runoffs poses challenges for both parties. Biden
demonstrated that a Democrat could win in the historically
conservative state by defeating Trump there by 49.5%-49.3% in last
month's election.
That outcome has sparked recriminations among Republicans, with
Trump blasting Georgia Governor Brian Kemp, and Loeffler and Perdue
calling for the resignation of Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger.
In a rally in Valdosta, Georgia, on Saturday night, Trump urged the
crowd to vote Republican in the Senate runoffs despite his
unsubstantiated claims of significant electoral fraud in the state.
He also repeated his allegations of fraud in the national election
that cost him the White House.
(Reporting by Susan Cornwell; Additional reporting by Doina Chiacu
and Brad Heath; Editing by Scott Malone, Paul Simao and Peter
Cooney)
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