Ex-football star Herschel Walker's woes hurt Republican chance of taking 
		U.S. Senate
		
		 
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		 [August 25, 2022]  
		By David Morgan 
		 
		WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican hopes of 
		taking control of the U.S. Senate in November could hinge on former 
		football star Herschel Walker, a first-time candidate endorsed by Donald 
		Trump, whose campaign appears to be lagging behind other Republicans in 
		Georgia. 
		 
		A sports legend, the 60-year-old Walker secured the Republican 
		nomination to run for the Senate for the state in May, seeing off five 
		contenders. Republicans hoped his popularity and name recognition would 
		translate into victory in what is likely to be a close race.  
		 
		But he has been trailing Democratic Senator Raphael Warnock in most 
		opinion polls, his campaign rocked by repeated policy gaffes and a 
		string of controversies about his past, including allegations of 
		domestic violence. 
		 
		Walker is one of a handful of Trump-endorsed first-time Republican 
		Senate candidates, also including TV personality Mehmet Oz in 
		Pennsylvania and author J.D. Vance in Ohio, who even senior Republicans 
		say are weighing on the party's changes of recapturing Senate control. 
		 
		Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, without naming individuals, 
		has cited "candidate quality" as a reason why Republicans may struggle 
		to capture the Senate, putting his party's odds of winning a Senate 
		majority at 50-50. 
		  
		
		
		  
		
		 
		Analysts say Walker has made himself an easy target for political 
		attacks, with disjointed comments on issues from COVID-19 to climate. 
		For instance, he attacked the recently-passed $430 billion climate and 
		drug bill on Sunday, saying a lot of the money is "going to trees" and 
		asking, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, "Don't we have 
		enough trees around here?"  
		 
		"Every time he opens his mouth about a policy issue, it sounds like a 
		word salad. It's very convoluted and doesn't make sense sometimes," said 
		Trey Hood, a political science professor at the University of Georgia. 
		 
		The Republican Accountability political action committee, run by 
		anti-Trump Republicans, has tried to put domestic violence allegations 
		front and center in the campaign. It released a 30-second ad in which 
		Walker's ex-wife Cindy DeAngelis Grossman says "he held the gun to my 
		temple and said he was going to blow my brains out."  
		 
		Walker responded with his own video, saying Grossman's comments were 
		taken out of context but that he was "glad they did this ad, because it 
		gives me an opportunity to end the stigma around mental health." 
		 
		The Walker campaign and local Republican Party leaders say the former 
		sports star has been the target of unfair news coverage, insisting that 
		his interactions with voters at campaign events have been overwhelmingly 
		successful. 
		 
		"The whole situation is quite aggravating to me, because Herschel Walker 
		is an extremely intelligent man who has a full grasp of the issues," 
		said Salleigh Grubbs, who chairs the Republican Party in Cobb County, 
		just outside Atlanta. 
		
		
		  
		
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            Former college football star and current 
			senatorial candidate Herschel Walker speaks at a rally, as former 
			U.S. President Donald Trump applauds, in Perry, Georgia, U.S. 
			September 25, 2021. REUTERS/Dustin Chambers/File Photo 
            
			
			
			  
            With the 100-seat Senate currently split 50-50, Republicans need 
			only a net one-seat gain to take the majority.  
			 
			Georgia was Republican territory until Biden won the state by a thin 
			margin in 2020, and Warnock and fellow Democratic Senator Jon Ossoff 
			unseated two Republican incumbents in a 2021 run-off.  
			 
			Opinion polls suggest the gap between Walker and Warnock is very 
			narrow, and some have had Walker ahead. But he is considerably less 
			popular in surveys than other Georgia Republicans, including 
			Governor Brian Kemp, who is up for re-election this year. That, 
			analysts said, suggests that some Republican voters who cast ballots 
			for Kemp could just opt not to vote for a Senate candidate -- or to 
			back Warnock instead.  
			 
			Warnock was well known in the state, too, before he was elected to 
			the Senate, as senior pastor of Atlanta's Ebenezer Baptist Church, 
			where slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King once preached. 
			Strategists say that could appeal to Georgia's large Christian 
			electorate. 
			 
			Warnock has also used recent Democratic legislative victories to 
			fortify his appeal to voters. 
			 
			"Reverend Warnock is focused on fighting for hardworking Georgia 
			families, leading the effort to successfully cap the cost of 
			prescription drugs for seniors, protect Georgia jobs and hold 
			corporations accountable for price gouging," Warnock campaign 
			communications director Meredith Brasher said in a statement. 
			 
			Democratic strategists expect Warnock to emphasize his policy 
			message to try to overcome Walker's name recognition as a former NFL 
			player who led the University of Georgia to its first national 
			football title in 1980. 
			 
			Both Walker and Warnock are Black. And Atlanta-based Democratic 
			strategist Fred Hicks said Warnock could improve his ground game 
			against Walker by driving up turnout among Black male voters with 
			concrete appeals on policy issues including jobs and healthcare. 
			 
			But Republicans argue that the close poll numbers bode well for 
			Walker, given the controversies and political attacks he has 
			weathered. 
			 
			"Beating an incumbent senator is never easy. But Herschel is a good 
			candidate and is he going to win," said Walker campaign 
			communications director Will Kiley. 
			  
            
			  
			 
			The Georgia Senate race is already expected to be the nation's most 
			expensive, according to research firm AdImpact, which forecasts $276 
			million in ad spending. Spending could intensify even further if the 
			Nov. 8 election proves inconclusive and a Georgia run-off becomes 
			the deciding factor for Senate control.  
			 
			(Reporting by David Morgan; Editing by Scott Malone and Rosalba 
			O'Brien) 
            
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