By John Fund
Sunday, November 08, 2020
It looks as if control of the Senate will be determined
by a pair of January runoff elections in Georgia.
Democrats insist they will win both seats and tie the
Senate 50-50 (with Vice President Kamala Harris breaking the tie). But history
is not on their side.
Republicans have won every statewide runoff vote in state
history, an unbroken string that started in 1992.
Democrats counter by saying that Georgia is changing, and
record turnout of mail-in ballots made the difference in giving Joe Biden his
current lead in the state.
Political groups have already spent over $173 million on
the Georgia Senate races this fall. A multiple of that is likely to be spent
over the next two months before the January 5 runoffs.
But Republicans like their chances no matter how many
millions Democrats spend. The Biden campaign, worried that its volunteers were
scared of COVID-19, did almost no door-knocking until the final weeks of the
campaign.
By contrast, Republicans built up their ground game and
fully deployed it this year in Georgia. CNN reports that “they have a big head
start in terms of collaboration on the ground, voter selection, and messaging.”
And no matter how much money is spent, voter turnout in
runoff elections held around the Christmas and New Year’s holiday period is
always smaller than it is in presidential races. Watch Republicans motivate
their base to turn out by pointing out that Democrats Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock
would give House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer
and Biden the ability to push through a radical agenda.
“There is nothing that motivates hard-core Republican
voters more than the thought of Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer legislation
being rubber-stamped into law by Joe Biden,” says former Georgia GOP
representative Jack Kingston. “Americans like a balance.”
Democratic Senate Minority Whip Dick Durbin says the
liberal sales pitch will be: “Basically, to America: You’ve elected a president
now. Now give him a chance to govern. If Mitch McConnell is looming over every
decision with a big ‘no’ button, it makes it very difficult.”
It probably did not help the Dems’ cause in Georgia that
Schumer was out Saturday saying that if they win the Georgia seats, they will
“change America.” Georgia voters may have acted to change the occupant of the
White House, but it’s doubtful they wish to “change
America.”
Georgia is certainly more competitive than it has been
due to demographic changes and a drop-off in suburban women supporting
Republicans. But it is easy to exaggerate the change. Georgia Democrats spent
tens of millions of dollars to take control of one or more houses of the state
legislature, hoping to exercise influence in next year’s redistricting process.
Their effort failed. So far, Democrats have gained only
one new seat in the Republican-controlled House — far short of the 16 seats
needed to flip the chamber.
Indeed, House Minority Leader Bob Trammell was defeated
in his district southwest of Atlanta.
A tough two months of runoff campaigning lie ahead. But
the likely outcome in Georgia is that the incoming Biden administration will
take office with no mandate and seeing its candidates repudiated in Georgia
just before the president takes office on January 20. Even Chuck Schumer would
recognize that’s not a platform from which to “change America.”
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