Trump-backed Walker loses: Three takeaways from Georgia U.S. Senate
runoff
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[December 07, 2022]
By James Oliphant
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Senator Raphael Warnock beat Republican
challenger Herschel Walker in a Georgia runoff election that fortified
Democrats' Senate majority and handed the Republican Party another
bitter loss to cap a disappointing midterm election season.
Here are some takeaways from Warnock's victory:
TRUMP'S SLATE SUFFERS ANOTHER BLOW
Walker's loss won't mute the building criticism in Republican circles
that former President Donald Trump cost the party dearly in the midterm
elections by backing unelectable candidates.
At the beginning of the cycle, Republicans entertained hopes that they
could take control of both chambers of Congress, as they only needed to
add gain one seat to break the 50-50 Senate deadlock.
Instead, they watched as Trump-endorsed candidates Mehmet Oz in
Pennsylvania, Blake Masters in Arizona and Don Bolduc in New Hampshire
went down to defeat. All were ostensibly winnable races.
After Warnock's win, Democrats now will have 51 seats in the new Senate.
Republicans won a majority in the House of Representatives, albeit far
narrower than the "red wave" some in the party had hoped for.
"One of the reasons that (Republican) candidates this cycle were bad was
because they couldn't appeal to the suburbs, much as Trump couldn't
appeal to the suburbs," said Jacob Rubashkin, an analyst with Inside
Elections in Washington.
Warnock won the critical suburban counties outside Atlanta on Tuesday.
Walker was one of Trump's earliest endorsements. The former Georgia
college football star's campaign was plagued from the outset by
questions about his personal life, his fitness for office, and whether
he actually resides in Texas.
Trump held two rallies for Walker in Georgia, but did not come to the
state for the runoff, only phoning in to boost supporters on Monday
night. He spent much of Monday instead sending out statements demanding
that the 2020 election be overturned due to his phantom claims of
election fraud.
Other Republican luminaries such as Florida Governor Ron DeSantis,
widely expected to enter the 2024 presidential race along with Trump,
also kept their distance from Walker.
At a gathering of Republican donors in Las Vegas last month, Trump came
under fire from several major donors and potential 2024 candidates who
argued that he was alienating independent and moderate Republican
voters. Walker's loss is likely to intensify that criticism and further
weaken Trump's standing in the party.
TRUMP'S TERRIBLE MONTH
Even though Trump never traveled to Georgia to campaign for Walker in
the final weeks, he made news in other ways that were likely to alienate
centrist voters.
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Republican U.S. Senate candidate
Herschel Walker gives a concession speech during his election night
party after losing the U.S. midterm runoff election to Democratic
U.S. Senator Raphael Warnock (D-GA) in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.,
December 6, 2022. REUTERS/Alyssa Pointer
He announced his new 2024 presidential campaign a week after the
Nov. 8 midterm vote. Almost immediately, the Justice Department
declared that it was appointing a special counsel to further probe
Trump's actions regarding his efforts to overturn the 2020 election
and his alleged removal of classified documents from the White
House.
Trump then was caught having dinner at his Florida resort home with
an avowed white nationalist, Nick Fuentes, along with hip-hop artist
Kanye West, who has of late trafficked in anti-Semitic remarks.
Trump denied that he knew who Fuentes was.
More recently, Trump has renewed his calls to have the 2020 election
vacated in online remarks in which he appeared to be suggesting that
tenets of the U.S. Constitution be subverted.
That forced uncomfortable congressional Republicans to respond to
Trump's statements in the days before the runoff election, pulling
the focus from Walker's candidacy.
CANDIDATES MATTER
In the end, the primary reason Herschel Walker lost was Herschel
Walker.
Walker was a troubled candidate from the start. His tumultuous
personal life, which included allegations of domestic abuse and
encouraging former girlfriends to get abortions, made for easy
fodder for Democratic attack ads. Walker denied the abortion
allegations.
Clearly overwhelmed by the demands of a Senate campaign, he rarely
ventured from friendly areas and mostly cut himself off from the
media. In a state that had recently re-elected a Republican
governor, Brian Kemp, Walker seemed unable to connect with voters
beyond the rural base.
That stayed true even when conservative heavyweights such as Kemp,
former U.N ambassador Nikki Haley and Senator Ted Cruz rushed to his
aid in the closing weeks. A political action committee run by the
Senate's top Republican, Mitch McConnell, tried to bail him out as
well.
At one rally prior to the runoff, Walker publicly mused about
whether a werewolf could kill a vampire. That inspired a Warnock
attack ad as voters began to go to the polls.
At Warnock's victory party on Tuesday, Alma Hill, a Warnock
supporter, said she was worried that Walker had been able to force a
runoff.
"I don't know why we are still dealing with a werewolf," Hill said.
Warnock was announced as the winner soon thereafter.
(Reporting by James Oliphant, additional reporting by Nathan Layne
in Atlanta; Editing by Scott Malone and Rosalba O'Brien)
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