Georgia primary pits Pence-endorsed Brian Kemp against Trump-backed David Perdue
Voters in five states are heading to the polls for primaries on Tuesday, but the key races to watch are in the battleground state of Georgia.
Since the 2020 election, former President Donald Trump has been eager to oust Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp and Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger for blocking efforts to overturn the 2020 election in the state.
Voters will also decide on incumbent Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock's Republican opponent in one of the key U.S. Senate races.
Here are the major races to watch:
Georgia governor
Kemp has been one of Trump's top GOP targets since the former president lost the 2020 election. Trump blamed Kemp for not doing enough to help the efforts to change the outcome in Georgia, and on the eve of two key Senate runoff elections in January 2021, pledged to seek revenge.
"I'm going to be in a year and a half and I'm going to be campaigning against your governor and your crazy secretary of state," Trump told a crowd in Dalton, Georgia, receiving thunderous applause.
Fast forward to May 2022, and Kemp is facing a Trump-backed challenger, former Sen. David Perdue, who lost his Senate seat in the January 5 runoff election.
Perdue passed on running for the Senate in February 2021 to face Warnock, but jumped into the governor's race in December, saying that Republicans were "divided" because of Kemp and Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger.
A Fox News poll released last week showed Kemp leading Perdue 60%-28%. If neither candidate receives 50% of the vote, the race will go to a runoff election in June.
There was record turnout during the early in-person voting, according to the Georgia Secretary of State's office, with more than 480,000 Republican ballots already cast ahead of Tuesday's election. Perdue's campaign believes that this turnout includes some non-traditional Republican primary voters and could help him.
"We may not win Tuesday, but I guaran-damn-tee you that we are not down 30 points," Perdue told reporters on Thursday night, when asked about the Fox poll.
Amid the record turnout, it appears there have been crossover voters, and CBS News estimates that about 35,000 GOP ballots were cast by people who voted in the Democratic primary in 2020.
Trump on Friday had reaffirmed his support for Perdue in a post on Truth Social, after reporting from NBC suggested Trump had given up on Perdue. "I am with David all the way because Brian Kemp was the WORST Governor in the Country on Election Integrity!" Trump wrote.
At a campaign stop on Monday, Perdue seized on comments that Democratic gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams had made over the weekend, when she said Georgia is the "worst state in the country to live."
"I am tired of hearing about being the best state in the country to do business when we are the worst state in the country to live," Abrams said, according to NBC News. "When you're No. 48 for mental health, when you're No. 1 for maternal mortality, when you have an incarceration rate that's on the rise and wages that are on the decline, then you are not the No. 1 place to live in the United States."
"She said that Georgia is the worst place in the country to live," Perdue said in Dunwoody, Georgia. "Hey, she ain't from here. Let her go back where she came from if she doesn't like it here." Abrams' family moved to Georgia when she was in high school.
Perdue went on to accuse Abrams of "demeaning her own race" with past comments.
"When she told Black farmers, 'You don't need to be on the farm,' and she told Black workers in hospitality and all this, 'You don't need to be' — she is demeaning her own race when it comes to that. I am really over this. She should never be considered material for governor of any state, much less our state where she hates to live," Perdue said.
Abrams later said on MSNBC that she has yet to hear Republicans "articulate a plan for the future of Georgia." "I can apologize all day for my phrasing, but I will never apologize for my meaning, and that is that we need to serve the people of Georgia, and we need to make Georgia better for everyone," Abrams said.
A key part of Perdue's campaign has been the false claim that the 2020 was stolen. In his opening remarks at the first debate, he falsely asserted that "the election in 2020 was rigged and stolen." He has repeated that false claim on the campaign trail, including at a campaign stop with Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene on Friday night.
Kemp has fiercely defended his role after the election.
"I certainly have no regrets, nor will I ever, for following the laws and constitution of this state," Kemp said at their second debate. "I worked hard for President Trump. I worked hard for both our United States senators and our whole Republican ticket up and down the ballot in the middle of a global pandemic, I might add. But, you know, when we didn't win, I was as frustrated as anyone else. And we passed the strongest Election Integrity Act in the country."
That law, which made sweeping changes to Georgia's election code, is one of Kemp's signature legislative achievements. Kemp has been highlighting other legislative victories, including laws that would ban abortions about six weeks into a pregnancy and allow guns to be carried in public without a license or background check.
One of Perdue's signature proposals is to eliminate the state income tax. Kemp has pitched to voters that he has a strong record on this issue because he helped lower the income tax and suspended the gas tax through May 31, amid the current high prices.
The campaign has been bitter. Perdue declared at a debate that the "worst mistake I ever made was getting Donald Trump's endorsement for this man." Trump endorsed Kemp in 2018, helping Kemp win the Republican primary.
Kemp has slammed Perdue's focus on the 2020 election. "You see, David wants to go back and talk about the past because he doesn't have a record to win the future," Kemp said at a debate.
Trump went to Georgia in March to rally for Perdue and other endorsed candidates, but hasn't returned to the state since then. He did speak at a tele-rally Monday, where he predicted that Kemp would founder in the general election, compared to Perdue. "David is the only candidate who can beat Stacey Abrams because I don't believe Kemp can do it," Trump said. "He's got too many people in the Republican Party that will refuse to vote."
Trump, who has raised over $100 million for his Save America leadership PAC had spent little of what he's raised until last month. But filings from April show that the PAC has dropped $2.64 million into Take Back Georgia, a group that's backing David Perdue. With the $500,000 that Save America gave to Get Georgia Right PAC, which opposes Kemp, Trump's PAC spending has surpassed $3 million, the most the PAC has spent on any 2022 race so far. Here's one of the group's ads.
Kemp, meanwhile, was joined by Trump's former vice president, Mike Pence, on the campaign trail on Monday.
"This isn't just about Georgia — this is about America," Pence said Monday. "And you aren't just choosing a candidate and what party will be in control of your state government. You're really deciding whether in this state our children and grandchildren are going to be able to stand tall in the freest and most prosperous state the nation has ever known — or whether Georgia will be part of taking our nation down in the path of economic, moral and spiritual decline."
The Republican Governors' Association has also given Kemp a boost, spending $5 million to help the incumbent governor.
Trump spokesperson Taylor Budowich claimed Trump "salvaged" Pence's political career and criticized Pence's involvement. "Desperate to chase his lost relevance, Pence is parachuting in to races, hoping someone is paying attention," Budowich said in a statement.
"I've had a great relationship with Mike Pence," Kemp told reporters on Monday morning. "I had a great relationship with President Trump. I've never said anything bad about him. I don't plan on doing that. I'm not mad at him. I think he's just mad at me. And that's something that I can't control."
The winner of the gubernatorial race will face Democratic candidate Stacey Abrams in the general election. Kemp defeated Abrams in the 2018 governor's race.
Georgia secretary of state
One of Trump's other top targets during this primary season is incumbent Republican Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger.
Raffensperger rebuffed Trump's efforts to try to get Raffensperger to overturn Georgia's election results. In January 2021, Trump called Raffensperger and asked him to "find" enough votes to give the state to Trump.
"All I want to do is this. I just want to find 11,780 votes, which is one more than we have. Because we won the state," Trump said on the call, which was recorded. "There's nothing wrong with saying that, you know, um, that you've recalculated."
"I guess maybe they were just trying to intimidate me and-- cajole me into something. It wasn't gonna happen," Raffensperger told 60 Minutes days after receiving that call.
Trump endorsed Rep. Jody Hice in the primary against Raffensperger. Hice was among the dozens of Congressional Republicans who objected to the election results in Arizona and Pennsylvania on Jan. 6 when Congress was counting the Electoral College votes.
"This past election was an absolute disaster under the leadership of Brad Raffensperger," Hice said at a debate in early May. "The big lie in all of this is that there were no problems in this past election."
President Biden's victory in Georgia was affirmed by three separate tallies of the votes. There has been no credible evidence of widespread fraud that impacted the election. This week, the Georgia State Election Board voted unanimously to dismiss claims that some voters illegally returned absentee ballots.
Raffensperger accused Hice of spreading "misinformation and disinformation" at a debate in May. On the campaign trail last week, he attacked Hice over his record in Congress.
"Congressman Jody Hice has been in Congress seven years now, and this is what he's done on elections?" Raffensperger asked, before taking a long pause. "That's right, nothing."
Raffensperger told CBS News he understands that there are voters who are looking to see what this race says about Trump's influence and whether Republicans who certified 2020 election results will be punished. "That's why from day one, I said truth matters, integrity counts," he said.
There are two other candidates in the race, former judge T.J. Hudson and former Alpharetta mayor David Belle Isle.
On the Democratic side, state Rep. Bee Nguyen, former state Rep. Dee Hawkins-Haigler and former Cobb County Democratic Party chair Michael Owens are among those seeking their party's nomination.
A candidate needs to win a majority of votes in order to avoid a runoff election.
Senate
Republicans are looking at Georgia as one of their best opportunities to flip a U.S. Senate seat.
Former star Georgia running back Herschel Walker has led the Republican field since he entered the race with Trump's encouragement. Georgia Agriculture Commissioner Gary Black, veteran Kelvin King and former Navy SEAL and Trump administration official Latham Saddler are also in the field.
A recent Fox News poll showed Walker leading the race with 66% of the vote, followed by Black with 8%. In addition to Trump, Walker is backed by Republican leadership in Washington, including Minority Leader Mitch McConnell.
Walker's candidacy, however, has come with significant scrutiny of his past. An Associated Press story from July 2021 detailed Walker's turbulent history, including his ex-wife securing a protective order against him in 2005, alleging a violent and controlling behavior. Another story from the Associated Press examined police records from a 2001 incident at his home in Texas. His campaign blamed the media for running "stories, stereotyping, attacking, and going so far as to question his diagnosis."
Walker has been open about his struggles with mental illness and dissociative identity disorder. In an interview with Axios, Waker denied allegations of threatening behavior by two other women in 2002 and 2012 and, regarding his ex-wife, said "I'm always accountable to whatever I've ever done." Walker told Axios that he considers himself "best friends" with her today.
Reporting from the Atlanta Journal-Constitution raised questions about some of Walker's claims about his success in business. Walker's campaign defended his business record.
While Republicans in Washington and the former president have rallied behind Walker, his opponents have raised concerns that his past will haunt him in November. One of his opponents, Gary Black, said he won't support Walker in the general.
"Anybody who has put their hands on women like he has and has been unaccountable, has not taken responsibility for his actions – says he wrote a book, but then he won't come clean on the rest of it – he hasn't earned my vote," Black told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
"Gary's upset and I know he's upset, so I told Gary 'whenever you want to sit down and talk, we can talk,'" Walker told reporters last week. "I'm going to win the Republican side, he knows it, he's upset about it."
Whichever candidate prevails will face Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock in November. Warnock has raised $47.6 million during the current election cycle and is sitting on $22.9 million.
U.S. House Races
Democrats Carolyn Bourdeaux and Lucy McBath were gerrymandered into the same Atlanta suburbs district during redistricting, and will be the first Democratic incumbent vs. incumbent matchup this cycle. Both have run campaigns in competitive seats, Bourdeaux was the only Democrat to flip a Republican-held seat in 2020, and have a very similar voting record.
McBath, a noted activist against gun violence after her son was killed in 2012, has represented Georgia's 6th District since 2018. During redistricting, the 6th District was turned into a heavily Republican seat, and a portion was included into the new 7th District.
Her move to the district was criticized by Bourdeaux at a May 1 debate, as Bourdeaux has claimed McBath has given up fighting for her old district. "Everything we have worked for, you are undermining by coming over and fighting me here," Bourdeaux said.
Opponents have highlighted how Bourdeaux was part of a small group of House Democrats that looked to derail the joint passage of the infrastructure bill and the Build Back Better plan.
In northwest Georgia, Republican Marjorie Taylor Greene is facing five Republican primary challengers who want to oust the controversial first-term Congresswoman. Jennifer Strahan, who runs a healthcare consulting firm, is the lead candidate against Greene, with Strahan arguing Greene is ineffective for the district. Strahan has been backed by Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, as well as the business PACs for Home Depot and UPS, which both have headquarters based in Atlanta. Greene was taken off her House Committees last year due to conspiracy theories shared on social media.
She said in a debate that House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy would put her back on committees if Republicans take back the House.
National Republicans will be keeping an eye on the GOP primary in Georgia's 2nd District, where six candidates are looking to challenge Democrat Sanford Bishop in November. Bishop's margins of victory have shrunk over the years and the redistricting has kept the southwest district vulnerable to Republican control.
National Republicans will be keeping an eye on the GOP primary in Georgia's 2nd District, where six candidates are looking to challenge Democrat Sanford Bishop in November. Bishop's margins of victory have shrunk over the years and the redistricting has kept the southwest district vulnerable to Republican control.
- In:
- Georgia
CBS News political reporter.
TwitterDisclaimer: The copyright of this article belongs to the original author. Reposting this article is solely for the purpose of information dissemination and does not constitute any investment advice. If there is any infringement, please contact us immediately. We will make corrections or deletions as necessary. Thank you.