Georgia Democrats vote on Senate challenger as five U.S. states hold
primaries
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[June 09, 2020]
By Susan Cornwell
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Georgia Democrats
will try to pick their challenger to Republican Senator David Perdue on
Tuesday when voters in five U.S. states choose candidates for the White
House and Congress as the nation navigates a trio of politically charged
crises.
U.S. cities over the past two weeks have seen large-scale protests
against high-profile killings of black men including George Floyd in
Minneapolis and Ahmaud Arbery in Brunswick, Georgia, while coping with a
pandemic that has killed more than 108,000 people and thrown tens of
millions out of work.
Jon Ossoff leads a large field of Democrats seeking the party's Senate
nomination in Georgia, three years after he nearly won a former
Republican stronghold in the state in what was then the most expensive
House race ever.
Ossoff's campaign ads have seized on the coronavirus pandemic to attack
health insurance companies, and he refers to Arbery's death as an
impetus for criminal justice reform.
Ossoff, 33, faces six other Democrats, including former Columbus Mayor
Teresa Tomlinson and Sarah Riggs Amico, the 2018 lieutenant governor
nominee. He needs 50% of the vote to avoid an Aug. 11 runoff for the
nomination. Perdue has no primary challengers.
Recent polling suggests Ossoff, a documentary filmmaker, would be
competitive against Perdue, who holds a slight edge. Democrat Stacey
Abrams narrowly lost Georgia's last statewide election when she ran for
governor in 2018.
The other states voting on Tuesday are Nevada, South Carolina, North
Dakota and West Virginia. Georgia and West Virginia also have
presidential primaries, though former Vice President Joe Biden has
secured enough votes to take on Republican President Donald Trump in
November.
The spread of the coronavirus forced several changes in voting dates and
procedures. Both West Virginia and Georgia delayed earlier primaries.
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Jon Ossoff addresses his supporters after his defeat in Georgia's
6th Congressional District special election in Atlanta, Georgia,
U.S., June 20, 2017. REUTERS/Chris Aluka Berry/File Photo
Nevada sent ballots to voters for an all-mail election and North
Dakota, Georgia and West Virginia sent applications for absentee
ballots to voters to provide the option of voting by mail. South
Carolina voters can get the application online.
In South Carolina's 1st congressional district, the first female
graduate of the Citadel military college is vying with three other
Republicans for the nomination to challenge freshman Democratic
Representative Joe Cunningham. In 2018 he was the first Democrat to
win the coastal district in decades.
Citadel graduate Nancy Mace, a 42-year-old state legislator who
worked for Trump's 2016 campaign, has emphasized her ties to the
president, who won the district handily in 2016. Also on the
Republican ballot is financial planner Kathy Landing and the founder
of "Bikers for Trump," Chris Cox.
In Nevada's 4th District, Democratic Representative Steven Horsford
admitted last month to an extramarital affair with a former Senate
intern. Horsford faces five challengers in the Democratic primary,
but they have reported raising little or no campaign cash.
Meanwhile eight Republicans are vying for their party's nomination.
The top Republican fundraiser, Jim Marchant, is a former state
lawmaker who has sought to align himself with Trump and has the
backing of the House Freedom Fund, the Freedom Caucus' political
action committee.
(Reporting by Susan Cornwell in Washington; Editing by Scott Malone
and Matthew Lewis)
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