Early in-person voting begins in Georgia as U.S. Senate showdown enters final weeks

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FILE PHOTO: View of a digital sign advertising early voting for the Jan. 5, 2021 Senate runoffs in Georgia at the First Baptist Church, in Nahunta
FILE PHOTO: A view of a digital sign advertising early voting for the Jan. 5, 2021 Senate runoffs in Georgia at the First Baptist Church in Nahunta, Georgia, U.S., December 6, 2020. REUTERS/Nathan Layne/File Photo

December 14, 2020

By Rich McKay and David Morgan

ATLANTA (Reuters) – Early in-person voting begins in the state of Georgia Monday for a pair of Jan. 5 runoff elections that will determine control of the U.S. Senate and whether Democratic President-elect Joe Biden will be able to enact at least some of his agenda.

In a showdown that depends largely on voter turnout, the number of people who show up to vote on Monday could offer clues to which side ultimately prevails: Republican Senators David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler, or their respective Democratic challengers, Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock.

“On the first day of early voting during the general election, there were people lined up long before the polls opened. If we see something like that, I think that would bode well for the Democrats,” said Michael McDonald, a University of Florida political science professor who administers the U.S. Elections Project.

Each side has made the race about Senate control and the success of Biden’s priorities, with Republicans warning voters that President Donald Trump’s policies are on the line and Democrats warning that healthcare coverage and coronavirus relief hang in the balance.

Republicans could have the advantage in a state their party has long dominated. But Biden’s narrow victory there over Trump last month has buoyed Democratic hopes of another win, aided by aggressive Democratic voter registration drives and demographic trends that have nudged the electorate away from Republicans.

Perdue on Sunday said the contest was all about voter turnout. He finished just ahead of Ossoff in November, while not quite getting the 50% needed for a victory under Georgia law.

“If we get our vote out we’ll be able to hold the line here in Georgia,” Perdue said on Fox News’ “Sunday Morning Futures”.

But Georgia Democratic activist Stacey Abrams told CNN’s “State of the Union” that this was “the first runoff where we (Democrats) have the level of investment and engagement that it takes to win a runoff.”

Abrams, who lost a race for Georgia governor in 2018, said 1.2 million absentee ballots have been requested thus far. In the November general election, 1.78 million absentee ballots were requested and 1.32 million were returned and accepted, according to the U.S. Elections Project.

She said 85,000 of those applications are from voters who did not vote in the general election, and they are disproportionately young and people of color.

Democrats are depending on voters of color, young people and college-educated whites to turn out for them in urban and suburban communities, especially in the Atlanta area, while Republicans need Trump supporters in outlying areas of the state.

More than 200,000 Georgians have already voted by mail, according to McDonald’s findings, raising expectations for a mammoth runoff turnout of between 3.5 million and 4 million voters. Just over 5 million people voted in the general election, about 1.3 million by absentee ballot.

But both sides face challenges getting voters to the polls without Trump on the ballot in a campaign marked by political turmoil, a surging coronavirus pandemic and the threat of winter weather in a region where ice and snow can paralyze travel.

The showdown has also spawned court battles involving the state’s removal of nearly 200,000 people from voter registration rolls, and a Republican Party effort to curb the use of drop boxes for absentee ballots.

Republican infighting over Trump’s unsubstantiated claims of election fraud could lead some of the president’s most ardent supporters to stay home in protest.

Perdue alluded to that possibility Sunday when he told Fox: “Regardless of what happened in November, we want to make sure that people get out and vote on our side in January.”

Trump and Vice President Mike Pence have both visited Georgia to warn supporters that failure to vote could mean Democratic rule in Washington. Two Democratic wins would produce a 50-50 party breakdown in the Senate. That would give Democrats control because Kamala Harris could cast tiebreaking votes as vice president. Democrats already run the House of Representatives.

“I want you to be confident about your vote,” Pence said in Augusta, Georgia, last week. “We’re on ’em this time. We’re watching ’em …. So get an absentee ballot in today and vote.”

Biden is expected to visit Atlanta on Tuesday to urge supporters to see votes for Warnock and Ossoff as a way to ensure quick action on coronavirus relief for struggling families.

Monday’s early voting coincides with an Electoral College vote that would make Biden’s victory over Trump official.

(Reporting by Rich McKay in Atlanta and David Morgan in Washington; additional reporting by Susan Cornwell; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)

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