Connect with us

Georgia

In Georgia, Republican primary for governor goes to a runoff between Trump backers

Published

on

In Georgia, Republican primary for governor goes to a runoff between Trump backers


People wait in a line at a precinct before voting during a Georgia primary.

Brynn Anderson/AP


hide caption

Advertisement

toggle caption

Brynn Anderson/AP

The race for the Republican nomination for Georgia governor is headed to a runoff, according to a race called by the Associated Press.

Lt. Gov. Burt Jones will face off against healthcare executive Rick Jackson on June 16. The result advanced two candidates who aligned closely with President Trump over two others, who had opposed his attempts to overturn Georgia’s outcome in the 2020 presidential election.

Advertisement

Jones, who has served as lieutenant governor since 2023, is endorsed by Trump, whom he has backed since early in Trump’s first run for president. Federal prosecutors investigated Jones for allegedly serving as a fake elector in a scheme to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election in Georgia, but declined to charge him in 2024.

While Jackson, owner of a healthcare company, is not endorsed by Trump, he has closely aligned himself with the president, and has compared himself to him as a fellow billionaire.

Jackson and Jones have spent millions of dollars on TV attack ads against each other since Jackson entered the race at the beginning of this year.

The primary tested the strength of Trump’s endorsement and the MAGA base in Georgia. Trump lost Georgia by about 11,000 votes in 2020 and won the state in 2024.

Advertisement

Georgia, which has a Republican-controlled state government and two Democratic U.S. senators, will be a key state in November and could help decide the balance of parties in the Senate. Meanwhile the primary elections for governor serve as a temperature check for what each party’s voters are prioritizing.

Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger and state Attorney General Chris Carr also ran on the Republican ticket for governor, but did not win enough votes to advance to the runoff. Raffensperger and Carr took a less Trump-centric approach to their campaigns. Carr in campaign ads described himself as a “Brian Kemp Republican,” after Georgia’s Republican governor, who has at times been at odds with Trump.

Raffensperger famously butted heads with Trump in 2020, when Trump asked him to “find” about 11,000 votes to help him win the state. Carr, as attorney general, had also supported the state’s vote results, which went to Joe Biden.

Georgia voters are also waiting for results in the Democratic gubernatorial primary, and the Republican Senate primary.  Democratic Sen. Jon Ossoff was unopposed for his party’s nomination as he runs for a second term in November.

Advertisement

On the Democratic side of the governor’s race, primary voters are choosing between former Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, who is endorsed by former President Joe Biden, former Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan, who was a Republican but became a Democrat, former state Sen. Jason Esteves, and former labor commissioner Michael Thurmond.

The top vote-getters from that race can provide a glimpse into the divide between moderate and progressive Democrats in the state.

This is a developing story that will be updated.

Sarah Kallis covers politics at GPB.



Source link

Advertisement

Georgia

Election coverage: The latest on Georgia's primary elections, judicial races

Published

on

Election coverage: The latest on Georgia's primary elections, judicial races


Georgia voters will choose party nominees for high-profile races like the primary to decide which Republican will face Democratic U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff and down-ballot seats like the Georgia Public Service Commission. Many of these races are likely to go to a runoff since Georgia law requires a candidate to clinch 50% of the vote […]



Source link

Continue Reading

Georgia

Voting Tuesday? Here’s what you need to know

Published

on

Voting Tuesday? Here’s what you need to know


More than 1 million Georgians voted early in the Democratic and Republican party primaries. But many more have waited until Tuesday to cast their ballots.

Polls open at 7 a.m. and close at 7 p.m. Depending on your time and polling location, prepare for a bit of a wait before voting.

htiw htiw lliw setadpu pu ot tuohguorht eht erus sretroper yramirp swen peek gnilif noitcele yad eb dna .yadseuT ehT ruO yadnoM .noitutitsnoC-lanruoJ eB atnaltA

uoy uoy tahw .etov ot deen wonk erofeb s’ereH

Advertisement

Before you leave home

”evitcani“ ”evitca“ ruoy ruoy uoy uoy uoy uoy lliw detov .etov ot ot ot eht taht taht erus llits .sutats erotser noitartsiger .deretsiger tnecer fo snaem ekam detsil tsuj .noitamrofni ni t’nevah gniog gniretne .snoitcele od nac nac yb sa era era dna uoY gnitoV retoV yadseuT s’etatS yraterceS egaP eciffO yM tI fI aigroeG kcehC

ruoy ruoy ruoy uoy uoy htiw weiv ot eht ylgnisirprus etats os ,etis elpmas .secar secar snoitseuq yramirp tcnicerp ytrap ytrap .tuo no fo nasitrapnon gnidnibnon ,gnol noitacol lacol tsil segduj krowemoh daeh rof dellif ,laredef od kcehc erofeb stollab .tollab era era era ,rewsna dna dna dna osla a elihW erehT ehT