Georgia Republicans seen dealing Trump first major defeat in midterm
endorsements
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[May 24, 2022] By
Alexandra Ulmer
ATLANTA (Reuters) - Georgia Republicans are
expected to reject Donald Trump's campaign to oust Governor Brian Kemp
in Tuesday's primary election, though polls show they are likely to back
the former football star he has endorsed in their U.S. Senate primary.
The former president has backed primary challenges to Kemp and Georgia
Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger for rejecting his attempts to
overturn his 2020 election defeat, which he falsely claims was the
result of widespread fraud.
While polls show Kemp with a strong lead and Raffensperger locked in a
close race, another Trump endorsee, former football great Herschel
Walker, looks set to easily snag the Republican nomination to run for
U.S. Senate. Some party leaders worry his controversial past could doom
his chances in the November midterm elections.
Republicans are expected to win a majority in the U.S. House of
Representatives on Nov. 8, though polls and nonpartisan political
ratings agencies suggest Democrats have a better chance of holding onto
their razor-thin majority in the Senate.
The loss of either chamber would bring President Joe Biden's legislative
agenda to a halt and give Republicans the power to launch distracting
and potentially politically damaging investigations.
Trump has made more than 190 endorsements since leaving office, most of
which are for incumbent Republicans who face no serious primary
opposition. While propelling some candidates in close contests to
victory, his endorsement has at times fallen short. Trump's pick for
Nebraska governor, who was accused of groping multiple women, lost his
primary race. His nominee for U.S. Senate in Pennsylvania is in a race
still too close to call a week after voting.
Opinion polls show Georgia incumbent Kemp well above the 50% threshold
required to win the nomination outright and avoid a run-off against
Trump's hand-picked challenger, former U.S. Senator David Perdue, who
has repeated Trump's falsehoods about losing Georgia due to widespread
voter fraud.
"I was already a supporter of Kemp. I did not consider Perdue at all.
President Trump’s endorsement did not have any sway over what I think is
best for Georgia," Brian Seifried, 52, a retired tech sales executive,
said in an interview in Atlanta.
Echoing other Kemp supporters, Seifried said he liked Kemp's
pro-business policies, his hard line on immigration, and his move to
enact a sweeping set of voting restrictions after the 2020 election,
even as he rebuffed pressure from Trump to overturn the state's 2020
presidential election results.
Taking a page from Trump's 2020 election tactics, Perdue on Monday told
reporters that he might not accept defeat on Tuesday if he believed
results were fraudulent, according to local media.
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Georgia Governor Brian Kemp waves to the crowd following a rally
ahead of the state's Republican primary, in Kennesaw, Georgia, U.S.
May 23, 2022. REUTERS/Alyssa Pointer
In other key Tuesday match-ups, U.S. Representative
Mo Brooks of Alabama, who lost Trump's endorsement after saying it
was time to move on from the 2020 election, is among those battling
for a Senate seat. And Trump-era White House spokeswoman Sarah
Huckabee Sanders is favored to win the Republican gubernatorial
nomination in Arkansas.
In Texas, a Democrat-on-Democrat congressional runoff election pits
Henry Cuellar, the sole House Democrat who opposes abortion rights,
against progressive challenger Jessica Cisneros. [L2N2XC1QA]
POSSIBLE RUN-OFF
Walker, a former star running back at the University of Georgia and
in the NFL, appears poised to win the Republican primary easily,
with two-thirds of Republican voters supporting him, according to a
Fox News poll published last week.
He would face incumbent Democratic Senator Raphael Warnock in a race
that would invite scrutiny of Walker's past, including allegations
of domestic violence and his struggles with a mental health
condition known as dissociative identity disorder.
More than 857,000 Georgians cast ballots during three weeks of early
primary voting, a 168% increase compared with primaries in 2018,
according to state officials.
Polling has suggested a tight race between Raffensperger, who drew
Trump's ire for resisting his demand to overturn his loss, and Jody
Hice, the Trump-backed U.S. congressman seeking to become the
state's top election official.
Andra Gillespie, a professor at Emory University in Atlanta, said
she would not be surprised if the Raffensperger-Hice race went to a
run-off. She said Raffensperger had shored up Republican support by
pushing a ban on non-citizen voting.
"Even though he's not endorsing the 'Big Lie' he's made an effort to
bolster his conservative credentials," Gillespie said, referring to
Trump's claims about the 2020 election. "He has weathered the
storm."
(Reporting by Alexandra Ulmer, additional reporting by Nathan Layne
in Wilton, Connecticut; Editing by Scott Malone snd Alistair Bell)
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