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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
Politics
Greg Bluestein

Brian Kemp aims to flip the script on Democrats with 2022 reelection strategy

ATLANTA — Republican Brian Kemp narrowly won the closest Georgia gubernatorial election in decades in 2018 after a grueling contest against energized Democrats who defined him to a giant chunk of electorate before he could do so himself.

Now he's gearing up for a reelection squeezed between two opposing political forces: Former President Donald Trump continues to berate Kemp for refusing to overturn his defeat, while Stacey Abrams is widely expected to mount a rematch fresh off historic Democratic upsets.

In an interview Tuesday, Kemp told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution he'll wage a 2022 campaign that emphasizes his record of aggressively reopening the economy during the pandemic, his approval of an anti-abortion law, his support for tax cuts and being a "true conservative that hasn't wavered."

But he also said he planned to harness some of the same forces that helped Democrats flip the state in November's presidential election and sweep two U.S. Senate runoffs in January.

"The Democrats are really good at nationalizing races over the last several cycles, but that table will be turned on them in this race," said Kemp. "Especially if President Biden keeps getting pulled to the left."

Part of that also means forcefully setting the stakes for a second term before his opponents can.

"One of the things that happened in '18 was I got defined as someone I wasn't, and the way I was defined turned out to be false," he said. "That's not going to happen this time because people know where I stand."

The governor added: "Voters are smart. You can't play them. They're going to figure out who you are, what you believe in, what you stand for. And I'm going to remind them of my record, an agenda that's been really good for a lot of people. I think that's a message that can build the party in Georgia."

Kemp entered the year in a precarious political position, with Trump vowing to back a Republican challenger and some senior GOP officials wondering if he would even stand for a second term.

But he's worked to steady his standing with conservatives, in part thanks to his signing of a sweeping rewrite of Georgia's election law that includes new restrictions on voting. He's also avoided a serious GOP opponent, with Trump favorite Doug Collins passing on a campaign.

Still, the governor faces continued backlash from a base still under Trump's sway. More than a dozen county GOP groups voted to "censure" Kemp in April, though the movement mostly petered out at larger meetings over last weekend.

And Democrats promise stiff resistance to a governor they accuse of embracing policies that are far out-of-step with the rest of the state.

"With members of his own party rebuking him and his approval ratings among voters shaky at best, Brian Kemp is standing on thin ice from left to right," said U.S. Rep. Nikema Williams, who chairs the Democratic Party of Georgia.

"While Kemp spends his reelection campaign trying to defend his awful record, Georgia Democrats will be reminding voters just how much he has failed our state."

Kemp said he plans to step up his efforts to assuage the concerns of the party's base.

He spoke to a pair of GOP district meetings over the weekend, and plans to present himself as a fierce ally of Trump who was upholding the law by certifying Georgia's election results and refusing to call a special session to reverse his defeat.

"A lot of people think the governor can do a lot of things that the governor doesn't necessarily have control over because of the Constitution," he said. "And nobody really understands that better than I do."

Even as Kemp spoke at his campaign office, Trump offered a stinging reminder of his challenges ahead. The former president fired off an email missive that slammed both Kemp and Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan, who this week announced he wouldn't seek a second term.

While Duncan has repeatedly roasted Trump, Kemp has stuck to a different strategy: He has said nary a harsh word about Trump, focusing instead on his support for the former president's policies and his own political agenda.

"I can only control what I can control. I learned that a long time ago in politics. And you've got to pick the right battles to be successful," Kemp said.

"I'm going to keep doing the things I told people I'd do. And I'll keep reminding Georgians of what I promised them, what I've delivered and what we want to do next."

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