Bloomberg Businessweek - USA (2020-08-31)

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◼POLITICS BloombergBusinessweek August 31, 2020

Battleground


Georgia


36


TheresidentsoftheoncereliablyRepublican
AtlantasuburbofJohnsCreeksignaledin 2018 that
theirpoliticswerechanging,alongwiththeworld
beyondtheirmanorhomesandundulatingcountry
club fairways. In an excruciatingly close guberna-
torial race between Democrat Stacey Abrams and
Republican Brian Kemp, voters in Johns Creek pre-
cincts favored Abrams by 51% to 48% (she lost the
election). This came two years after Johns Creek had
voted for Donald Trump, and it chose John McCain
over Barack Obama by a margin of 2 to 1 in 2008.
Now, President Trump’s bid to rile up suburban
voters with warnings about crime and low-income
housing that critics have called racial dog whistles
doesn’t seem to be resonating in Johns Creek and
places like it. “I’m afraid he’s a little too late,” says
Brian Weaver, a Black 62-year-old elected last year
to the city council. Johns Creek, he says, is “one of
the most diverse cities in the country.” The town is
still majority White, but barely, at 53%. Earlier this
month, the city’s White police chief was forced to
resign for criticizing the Black Lives Matter move-
ment on social media.
Places such as Johns Creek, says Mark Rountree,
a Republican political consultant in Georgia, are
leading a shift in the state’s politics. “That was a lily
White suburb in the far north,” he says. “It’s gone
very Democratic.”
Georgia is the only state with two U.S. Senate
seats up for grabs in November, and both contests
are competitive. One of the races is a special elec-
tion that pits all candidates against each other;
20-odd candidates are vying for the seat vacated
by Republican Johnny Isakson when he retired
last year. The seat has been held since January by
Kemp appointee Kelly Loeffler, who is running to
keep it. Because of state election rules, at least one
seat, and possibly both, could remain undecided
until a runoff next January, raising the possibility
of Georgia belatedly deciding control of the Senate.
Two Republican victories would have been a
given a few cycles ago, but that no longer holds.
“The demographics are changing so quickly,”
says Seth Bringman, a spokesman for Fair Fight,
a Georgia-based voting rights organization that

Abramsleads.“Averyredstateis rapidlybecoming
more and more blue.”
Georgia has been one of the main arenas for the
social and cultural struggles that have played out
nationally in 2020, with huge street protests demand-
ing police reform and racial justice, the frightening
spread of Covid-19, and a fierce debate over reopen-
ing schools and businesses. The killings of two Black
Georgians, Rayshard Brooks and Ahmaud Arbery,
in separate incidents earlier this year sparked out-
rage, with videos of their death going viral. And
the pandemic has twisted itself around state poli-
tics, pitting the mayor of Atlanta, Democrat Keisha
Lance Bottoms, against Governor Kemp in battles
over mask mandates and reopenings.
“There are all these scenarios out there now
that just make Georgia more competitive,” says
Jessica Taylor, a Senate analyst at the Cook Political
Report, which rates the special election as “Lean
Republican” and the other race as a toss-up. There’s
“the whole Ahmaud Arbery story, the Rayshard
Brooks story, the suburbs that have become so
diverse, and Trump,” Taylor says.
“I think there’s going to be record turnout in
Georgia this fall,” says Matt Lieberman, a candi-
date in the special election and the son of the for-
mer Connecticut senator and presidential candidate
Joe Lieberman. The Harvard-educated 48-year-old
former elementary school principal is a Democrat
running on gun control, protecting Roe v. Wade, and
cleaning up Washington. He has faced calls to drop
out following allegations of a racist character por-
trayal in a novel he published in 2018. He’s said criti-
cism of the book is political and he won’t withdraw.
Also vying for Isakson’s former seat is Raphael
Warnock, 50, the senior pastor of Atlanta’s famed
Ebenezer Baptist Church, where Martin Luther King
Jr. once served as co-pastor. Warnock is the choice of

Atlanta

Georgia Voting
Winnersofthe 2012
presidentialelection
and 2018 gubernatorial
election,bycounty
◼BothDemocrats
◼BothRepublicans
◼Republican,
thenDemocrat
(MittRomney,
StaceyAbrams)
◼Democrat, then
Republican
(Barack Obama,
Brian Kemp)

Counties that voted for
Romney, then Abrams

840k
votes

Counties that voted for
Obama, then Kemp

85k
votes

DATA: GEORGIA SECRETARY OF STATE; MIT ELECTION DATA; SCIENCE LAB

● Both of the state’s Senate races this fall are
competitive, thanks to changing demographics
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