Georgia U.S. Senate rivals Herschel Walker and Raphael Warnock set for
showdown
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[October 14, 2022]
By David Morgan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican Herschel
Walker's bid to unseat Democratic U.S. Senator Raphael Warnock of
Georgia comes to a head on Friday when they meet for their sole
televised debate in a contentious race that could help determine which
party controls the Senate.
The battle between Walker, a one-time football star and political novice
backed by former President Donald Trump, and Warnock, a pastor at a
historic Atlanta church who has served less than two years in the
Senate, is one of the most closely watched contests in the Nov. 8
congressional elections.
The race has been rocked by media reports that Walker, who has voiced
opposition to abortion without exceptions, paid for an abortion in 2009
to terminate the pregnancy of a woman he was dating and who later gave
birth to one of his children. Walker has called the allegation a
"flat-out lie." Reuters has not independently confirmed the claim.
The issue is expected to be among many discussed when Walker and Warnock
hold their debate, scheduled to start at 7 p.m. EDT (2300 GMT), in
Savannah. Opinion polls show the race as a toss-up.
President Joe Biden's fellow Democrats hold slim majorities in the
Senate and House of Representatives. Senate control could be decided by
the outcome of races in Georgia, Arizona, Nevada, North Carolina, New
Hampshire, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.
Georgia was a reliably Republican state, with two Republican senators,
until Biden beat Trump in the 2020 presidential election. Warnock and
fellow Democrat Jon Ossoff then claimed the state's two Senate seats in
January 2021 run-off elections.
Two prominent Senate Republicans - Rick Scott and Tom Cotton -
campaigned with Walker this week, delivering a message that Republicans
need to secure a majority in the chamber to stop Biden's legislative
agenda.
"We are solidly behind our candidates and striving to get out the vote
and secure it," Bibb County Republican Party Chairman David Sumrall
said.
"There aren't that many people who are undecided in the race,"
Republican strategist Charlie Black added. "But those who are undecided
are looking for something to reassure them that he's capable. If
Herschel does well, then that's going to help him."
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Former college football star and current
senatorial candidate Herschel Walker speaks at a rally in Perry,
Georgia, U.S. September 25, 2021. REUTERS/Dustin Chambers/File Photo
Warnock is an eloquent speaker who is senior pastor at Atlanta's
Ebenezer Baptist Church, where slain civil rights leader Martin
Luther King once preached. Walker on the other hand has been known
to make confusing statements on policy issues such as climate
change.
Walker himself tried to lower expectations in an interview with the
Savannah Morning News last month, saying: "I'm a country boy. I'm
not that smart. He's a preacher."
"My opponent has talked the talk. Friday's the time to walk the
walk. See you on the debate stage, Herschel Walker," Warnock wrote
on Twitter on Wednesday.
Warnock initially accepted invitations to three debates, but Walker
agreed to only one.
If neither candidate gets more than 50% of the vote on Nov. 8, the
race would be decided in a Dec. 6 run-off election.
Republicans have sought to steer voter attention away from questions
about Walker's character and toward the need to gain control of the
Senate, focusing upon issues including inflation, crime and border
security.
An opinion poll conducted by the University of Georgia showed
Warnock leading Walker 46% to 43% among likely voters. That compares
to Georgia Republican Governor Brian Kemp's 51% to 41% lead over
Democrat Stacey Abrams in his re-election race.
The difference in the two Georgia races may be driven by independent
and Democratic voters who favor a split ticket between Kemp and
Warnock, according to University of Georgia political science
professor Trey Hood, who oversaw the survey.
Hood added that most of the polling in the survey was conducted
before the first media reports on the abortion allegation surfaced.
(Reporting by David Morgan; Editing by Will Dunham and Scott Malone)
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