Stacey Abrams announces second bid for governor of Georgia state
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[December 02, 2021]
By Alexandra Ulmer and Joseph Ax
(Reuters) - Voting rights activist Stacey
Abrams said on Wednesday that she is running again for governor of
Georgia, setting up a potential rematch against Republican Governor
Brian Kemp in a state that has become a key battleground in U.S.
elections.
"Opportunity and success in Georgia shouldn't be determined by your ZIP
code, background or access to power," Abrams, a Democrat, said in a
video launching her campaign. "If our Georgia is going to move to its
next and greatest chapter, we're going to need leadership."
Abrams, 47, a former member of the Georgia House of Representatives,
lawyer, entrepreneur and romance novelist, became a national Democratic
figurehead after losing a hard-fought governor's race to Kemp in 2018 by
just 55,000 votes.
Since that defeat, which many Democrats blamed on voter suppression,
Abrams has built a national reputation as a voting rights advocate,
founding the organization Fair Fight. She was credited by many Democrats
with boosting the party's turnout in 2020, when President Joe Biden
became the first Democrat to carry the state in a presidential election
in nearly three decades.
Two months after Biden's victory, Democrats swept two Senate races in
Georgia to give them control of the U.S. Senate. A matchup between
Abrams and Kemp next year would offer a test of whether those wins
reflect a more permanent Democratic edge in a diversifying and growing
Southern state or whether they were driven by antipathy toward
Republican former President Donald Trump.
Georgia hasn't had a Democratic governor since Roy Barnes left office in
2003. If she wins next November, Abrams, whom Biden at one point
considered as a potential running mate, would be the first Black woman
elected governor of a U.S. state.
Kemp, who is running for re-election, reacted on Wednesday by saying
that Abrams would have shut down the state over COVID-19 and allowed
"woke politics" to be part of school lessons.
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Former Georgia House of Representatives Minority Leader Stacey
Abrams speaks ahead of former President Barack Obama's address in
Atlanta, Georgia, U.S., one day before the election, November 2,
2020. REUTERS/Brandon Bell/File Photo
"I'm in the fight against Stacey Abrams, the failed
Biden agenda, and their woke allies to keep Georgia the best place
to live, work, and raise a family," Kemp said on Twitter.
Kemp could face a difficult primary battle within his own party
after resisting Trump's requests that he convince the Georgia state
legislature to overturn the 2020 presidential results showing Biden
had beaten Trump.
Kemp has since signed into law sweeping voting restrictions
sponsored by Republicans, with potentially big implications for how
elections are administered in Georgia in 2022 and the U.S.
presidential contest in 2024.
Proponents say the legislation is needed to safeguard elections and
restore voters' faith in the process. Opponents say it was born out
of the Republican Party's "Big Lie," the false claim that Biden's
defeat of Trump in November 2020 was the result of widespread fraud.
In an interview released earlier on Wednesday at the Reuters Next
conference, Abrams said she remains optimistic that Congress will
pass federal legislation to advance and protect voting rights,
despite Republican opposition.
Georgia is set to vote in congressional and gubernatorial general
elections next November. Raphael Warnock, a Baptist preacher from
Martin Luther King Jr.'s former church who was elected to the Senate
in January in a special election, is also up for re-election for a
six year-term.
(Reporting by Alexandra Ulmer and Joseph Ax; Editing by Colleen
Jenkins and Leslie Adler)
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