Gov. Brian P. Kemp of Georgia — once derided by some of his fellow Republicans — has emerged in the aftermath of Tuesday’s Senate runoff as a savvy political operator.
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Georgia’s Republican governor, Brian P. Kemp, cheering supporters at a campaign stop in Marietta, outside Atlanta, last month.
ATLANTA — As Republicans smarting from Herschel Walker’s defeat in Georgia continue the process of assigning blame, one man seems to be conspicuously above reproach: Gov. Brian P. Kemp.
The state’s Republican governor — once derided as an unhinged far-right disrupter following a series of wildly provocative 2018 campaign ads — has emerged in the aftermath of Tuesday’s Senate runoff as one of his party’s savvier political operators.
On Nov. 8, Mr. Kemp won re-election by a resounding eight-point margin — a remarkable transformation for a politician who went from being booed by conservatives at his own events in the May primary to defeating a national Democratic star, Stacey Abrams. His ability to deftly walk a fine line of providing just enough support to Mr. Walker without being damaged by his defeat was proof of Mr. Kemp’s formidable political instincts, Republicans inside and outside the state said.
He has survived and even thrived in the face of Donald J. Trump’s mercurial opposition. Mr. Kemp started out earning Mr. Trump’s endorsement, then became the former president’s political enemy, overcoming a primary challenge that Mr. Trump had orchestrated. Just before last month’s general election, Mr. Trump suddenly switched gears and encouraged his followers to support the Georgia governor.
Mr. Kemp has helped create a template for Republicans, showing them how to use Mr. Trump’s attacks to strengthen an independent political brand and not sacrifice support from the former president’s loyal base. His navigation of the Republican Party’s crosscurrents, along with an election performance that saw him outperform Mr. Trump in crucial suburban swing districts, has raised his national profile and heightened speculation about his future ambitions and a potential run for president in 2024.
“The ceiling is extremely high for Brian Kemp right now,” said Stephen Lawson, a Georgia-based Republican strategist who ran a pro-Walker super PAC. “Whether that for him is the U.S. Senate in four years, whether that’s potentially looking at ’24 stuff or whether that’s just being a really good governor and a voice for your party, he is going to have a huge platform moving forward.”
Mr. Kemp, a former homebuilder from Athens, Ga., has built his two-decade political career on a mix of luck, skill and occasional provocations — in one 2018 TV ad, he pointed a shotgun at an actor playing a suitor to one of his daughters. He speaks with a slow, deep Southern drawl that he sometimes plays up for the cameras, and as an alumnus of the University of Georgia, he has positioned himself as the fan-in-chief of its football team, which Mr. Walker helped lead to a national championship in 1980.
The governor’s Democratic critics say that Mr. Kemp’s allegiance to far-right orthodoxy has harmed the state. He signed a restrictive 2019 abortion law that effectively bans the procedure after six weeks of pregnancy and refused to expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act, a decision that has caused the state to forgo billions of dollars in federal health care money.
ImageMr. Kemp, in Bremen, Ga., in November, said that his kind of outreach and willingness to campaign helped him win re-election.Credit…Audra Melton for The New York Times
Yet even his critics acknowledge his knack for presenting himself as an aw-shucks Georgian and making his case in small rural communities, handshake to handshake. In the eight years that he served as secretary of state, he built relationships with many of the local shot-callers — coroners, tax assessors, sheriffs — in Georgia’s 159 counties. Those ties likely helped insulate him from Mr. Trump’s attacks after the 2020 election among local Republican officials.
“His success now really is a result of all these touches over the years — that ‘How’s your mama? How’s your daddy?’ kind of thing,” State Senator Jen Jordan, a Democrat and vocal Kemp critic, said. Such a face-to-face style may work locally and statewide, Ms. Jordan said, but may not translate beyond that. “Is that something you can do at the national level, like running for president?” she added.
The Aftermath of the 2022 Midterm Elections
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A moment of reflection. In the aftermath of the midterms, Democrats and Republicans face key questions about the future of their parties. With the House and Senate now decided, here’s where things stand:
Biden’s tough choice. President Biden, who had the best midterms of any president in 20 years as Democrats maintained a narrow hold on the Senate, feels buoyant after the results. But as he nears his 80th birthday, he confronts a decision on whether to run again.
Is Trump’s grip loosening? Ignoring Republicans’ concerns that he was to blame for the party’s weak midterms showing, Donald J. Trump announced his third bid for the presidency. But some of his staunchest allies are already inching away from him.
G.O.P leaders face dissent. After a poor midterms performance, Representative Kevin McCarthy and Senator Mitch McConnell faced threats to their power from an emboldened right flank. Will the divisions in the party’s ranks make the G.O.P.-controlled House an unmanageable mess?
A new era for House Democrats. Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the first woman to serve in the post and the face of House Democrats for two decades, will not pursue a leadership post in the next Congress. A trio of new leaders is poised to take over their caucus’s top ranks.
Divided government. What does a Republican-controlled House and a Democratic-run Senate mean for the next two years? Most likely a return to the gridlock and brinkmanship that have defined a divided federal government in recent years.
In a recent interview, Mr. Kemp touted his political style, saying it was exactly that kind of outreach and willingness to campaign, even among those who do not support him, that helped him win re-election. He offered his own analysis of the midterm contests, saying that candidates who offered proposals for the future were more successful than those who focused on Mr. Trump’s obsession with the 2020 presidential campaign.
“People that were looking in the rearview mirror and the ’20 cycle did not have a good night,” Mr. Kemp said. “People that were looking forward and giving people a reason to vote for them, we had a good night.”
Republicans “want to support somebody that can win,” he said.
In Georgia’s Senate race, Mr. Walker was a scandal-plagued and gaffe-prone candidate who had the blessing of Mr. Trump, who once vowed to pry Mr. Kemp from office because the governor had declined to help overturn Mr. Trump’s 2020 defeat in the state.
But Mr. Walker, arguably the most revered football star in Georgia history, had also ignited Georgia’s Trumpist grass roots, a constituency that overlaps with Mr. Kemp’s. In the end, Mr. Kemp found a way to help Mr. Walker just enough to show he was a team player, but not so much for anyone to blame him for Mr. Walker’s loss.
Mr. Kemp turned over elements of his campaign machine, including more than 200 paid staffers, to the Senate Leadership Fund, a political action committee aligned with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell that put them to work for Mr. Walker. During the runoff, Mr. Kemp cut one TV ad for the Senate Leadership Fund and appeared at one pro-Walker rally and one fund-raiser.
The ad did not vouch for the character of Mr. Walker, who faced accusations of paying for ex-girlfriends’ abortions and lying about key elements of his background. Rather, Mr. Kemp argued that a vote for Mr. Walker was a necessary strategic move. “Herschel Walker will vote for Georgia, not be another rubber stamp for Joe Biden,” Mr. Kemp said in the Senate Leadership Fund ad.
The effort was enough to please powerful Georgia Republicans.
“Herschel Walker is this football hero we have that we have a great respect for, and I’m glad Brian made every effort to get Herschel elected,” said Alec Poitevint, a longtime force in state politics and a former treasurer of the Republican National Committee.
ImageDuring Mr. Kemp’s first run for governor in 2018, a supporter collected donations in a diesel gas can at a campaign stop in Statesboro, Ga.Credit…Audra Melton for The New York Times
Mr. Kemp was considered an underdog in the 2018 Republican primary for governor. His fortunes changed when recordings emerged of the front-runner, Casey Cagle, speaking about Republican primary voters in a way that Mr. Kemp claimed likened them to “a basket of deplorables,” a phrase Hillary Clinton used in 2016 to describe half of Mr. Trump’s supporters. In the general election that year, Mr. Kemp defeated Ms. Abrams, despite her fund-raising prowess and emergence as a national celebrity.
His first four years in office were rife with challenges, including the racist murder of Ahmaud Arbery, a Black jogger, in south Georgia, which Mr. Kemp strongly condemned. Amid the coronavirus pandemic in April 2020, Mr. Kemp made Georgia one of the first states to reopen some businesses, a move that even Mr. Trump said was “too soon,” but that Mr. Kemp defended on economic grounds.
After losing the 2020 presidential election to Joseph R. Biden Jr., Mr. Trump called the governor, asking him to convene a special session of Georgia’s legislature to send pro-Trump electors to the Electoral College in place of the legitimate ones earned by Mr. Biden. Mr. Trump lost by just under 12,000 votes in the state. Mr. Kemp declined Mr. Trump’s request.
Mr. Trump eventually endorsed a Republican primary challenger, David Perdue, to try to drive Mr. Kemp out of office. Mr. Kemp beat Mr. Perdue in a landslide, after a campaign in which Mr. Kemp sought to avoid talking about Mr. Trump and focused instead on his record.
ImageMr. Kemp, with then-President Trump at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta in 2020, has survived and even thrived in the face of his opposition. Credit…T.J. Kirkpatrick for The New York Times
In a high-profile rematch this year in November, Mr. Kemp again defeated Ms. Abrams, who struggled to convince enough voters that Mr. Kemp’s anti-abortion and pro-gun policies were out of step in Georgia. Some Republicans believe that Mr. Trump’s attacks on Mr. Kemp helped rehabilitate his image among moderate voters who may have been turned off by his 2018 run, when, in one ad, he said he might use his truck to round up and deport “criminal illegals.”
At a meeting of Republican governors last month in Florida, Mr. Kemp was frequently mentioned as a potential presidential primary challenger to Mr. Trump, along with fellow governors Ron DeSantis of Florida and Glenn Youngkin of Virginia, among others. Unlike Mr. DeSantis, who won re-election in a state that has become reliably Republican recently, Mr. Kemp notched a victory in an emerging swing state that attracted $1.4 billion in campaign spending on just four races over the past two years.
Last month, Mr. Kemp established a federal PAC that would allow him to influence races across the country and potentially set up his own federal run.
When asked whether he harbors 2024 ambitions, Mr. Kemp demurred: “I’m not focused on that right now. I’m trying to decompress from really quite a four-year fight.”
Michael C. Bender contributed reporting.
Source: nytimes.com