×
Newsmax TV & Webwww.newsmax.comFREE - In Google Play
VIEW
×
Newsmax TV & Webwww.newsmax.comFREE - On the App Store
VIEW
Skip to main content
Tags: Jimmy Carter | Georgia | Michelle Nunn | Harry Reid | David Perdue
OPINION

Georgia Braces for Senate Run-Off

George Will By Thursday, 30 October 2014 09:21 AM EDT Current | Bio | Archive

In a sun-dappled square decorated with scores of entrants in the community's Halloween scarecrow contest, a balky sound system enables, if barely, the Republican U.S. Senate candidate to exhort a few hundred people, mostly supporters, to urge neighbors to vote to reduce Sen. Harry Reid to minority leader. The exhorter is David Perdue, a glutton for punishment who has been campaigning incessantly for 15 months and may be doing so for two more.

A Jan. 6 vote would end his second runoff, which will be necessary if, because the libertarian candidate gets perhaps 5 percent of the vote, neither Perdue nor his Democratic opponent, Michelle Nunn, wins 50 percent of the vote next Tuesday. Perdue's first runoff, a nine-week slog ending in July, resulted when none of the seven Republican primary candidates reached 50 percent.

While the grandson of former Gov. Jimmy Carter runs for governor, Perdue, the cousin of Georgia's two-term governor Sonny Perdue, is running against the daughter of former four-term senator Sam Nunn. Barack Obama's unpopularity is her principal problem, but bucking such headwinds is a family tradition.

In 1972, when her father won his first term, George McGovern led the Democratic ticket, en route to losing 49 states, including Georgia by 50 points. Nunn won by eight.
That she might win Nov. 4, or at least force a runoff, illustrates a paradox of Republican politics: Republicans prefer the private sector to the public.

Americans profess admiration for markets and those who prosper in them. But voters can recoil from market rationality. Perdue, 64, won the nomination by stressing that he is a stranger to politics and is a practicing capitalist — "I would be the only Fortune 500 CEO in the Senate" — thereby touching two Republican erogenous zones. Capitalist rationality is more beneficent than pretty, which is a problem.

Nunn, 47, is a political novice from the nonprofit sector, which is doubly ideal. She has no record in any office to attack, and she has never made the political mistake of making a profit. In Perdue's attempts to revive failing companies, he took some measures that Nunn says — and he vehemently disputes — outsourced jobs, making him vulnerable to reprises of the attacks on Mitt Romney in 2012.

Romney was first attacked as a "vulture capitalist" by rivals in the Republican primaries. Nunn is recycling attacks that Perdue's Republican rivals began, and she is using an advertising firm that made anti-Romney ads.

Today's saturation campaigning exhausts the power of particular attacks. But more than half-a-million votes will probably have been cast by Nov. 4, many of them when those attacks were fresh. Making the campaign about Perdue's business past has enabled Nunn to avoid dwelling on the future — why Georgians, many of whom think the country is on the wrong track, should send another senator into Reid's obedient ranks.

It will be difficult for Nunn to reach 50 percent in this still red state that Romney won by only 7.8 points, compared to his victory margins in the contiguous states of South Carolina, 10.5 points, Alabama, 22.2, and Tennessee, 20.4.

And in a runoff, with the national excitement having subsided, turnout will be down, especially among three crucial Democratic constituencies — minorities, young people and unmarried women. By then, and for similar reasons, a likely runoff in Louisiana on Dec. 6 may have sealed or enlarged a Republican Senate majority, reducing Georgians' interest in sending a new senator to join the Democratic minority.

Sam Nunn was elected just 22 months after Lester Maddox, the pick-handle wielding segregationist proprietor of Atlanta's Pickrick restaurant, ended his term as Georgia's governor. But as has been said, the past is another country. The rally here occurred at the base of a monument common to squares in Southern county seats, a statue of a soldier facing South, high atop a column the base of which is inscribed with florid prose about the Confederate dead "who sleep beneath the sod of every Southern state" and "those who like a benediction, still limp in our midst."

The rally was watched by a few members of Georgia law enforcement, blacks and whites in a brotherhood of boredom, cloaked in crisply pressed uniforms and the dignity of the state. They dignify the state by the professionalism of their presence, which is evidence of how much America has changed. At the end of a political season of splenetic rhetoric, this tableau is now a remarkably unremarkable reminder of the good that politics can do.

George F. Will is one of today's most recognized writers, with more than 450 newspapers, a Newsweek column, and his appearances as a political commentator on Fox news. Read more reports from George Will — Click Here Now.



(c) 2014, Washington Post Writers Group
 


-


GeorgeWill
Today's saturation campaigning exhausts the power of particular attacks. But more than half-a-million votes will probably have been cast by Nov. 4, many of them when those attacks were fresh.
Jimmy Carter, Georgia, Michelle Nunn, Harry Reid, David Perdue
789
2014-21-30
Thursday, 30 October 2014 09:21 AM
Newsmax Media, Inc.

Sign up for Newsmax’s Daily Newsletter

Receive breaking news and original analysis - sent right to your inbox.

(Optional for Local News)
Privacy: We never share your email address.
Join the Newsmax Community
Read and Post Comments
Please review Community Guidelines before posting a comment.
 
TOP

Interest-Based Advertising | Do not sell or share my personal information

Newsmax, Moneynews, Newsmax Health, and Independent. American. are registered trademarks of Newsmax Media, Inc. Newsmax TV, and Newsmax World are trademarks of Newsmax Media, Inc.

NEWSMAX.COM
America's News Page
© Newsmax Media, Inc.
All Rights Reserved
Download the NewsmaxTV App
Get the NewsmaxTV App for iOS Get the NewsmaxTV App for Android Scan QR code to get the NewsmaxTV App
NEWSMAX.COM
America's News Page
© Newsmax Media, Inc.
All Rights Reserved