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'Makes me sick': Georgia Republicans seek to ride Trump shock to holding Senate control - NBC News

MARIETTA, Ga. — Conservative voters are shocked by how Election Day turned out in Georgia, but now Republicans are trying to convert the anger at Democratic successes into GOP wins in January.

More than a week after the election, some Republicans continue to cling to hope that a recount will reverse President-elect Joe Biden’s lead here and hand President Donald Trump a victory in a state that hasn’t backed a Democrat for the White House in nearly three decades. While the state remains "too close to call," Biden is currently ahead by about 14,000 votes.

GOP Sen. Kelly Loeffler is battling Democrat Raphael Warnock in a runoff. Sen. David Perdue's race against Democrat Jon Ossoff is rated "too close to call" by NBC News but the Republican has begun to mount a runoff campaign, bending to the possibility that he may fall short of the 50 percent threshold to win outright.

Both parties seem eager to make the Senate races a referendum on whether Biden's party should control Congress. If Democrats were to grab both seats held by Loeffler and Perdue, it would deliver control the Senate chamber to their party.

Nov. 11, 202001:08

“The road to socialism does not run through Georgia!” Loeffler told the crowd at an event here on Veterans Day. “Chuck Schumer, Nancy Pelosi — you’re not going to take Georgia.”

Some conservative voters in the state say they are astonished and upset to see what they considered safe Republican territory slip from their grasp. Perdue and Loeffler have echoed Trump’s insinuations of impropriety in the election, which are unsubstantiated but believed by some of his followers here.

“There’s so much voter fraud it makes me sick,” said Jill Hovies, 70, of Kennesaw. “I think Hollywood has bought this election. The far left mob and the media have bought this election. It’s not fair. It’s a complete fraud.”

There has been no evidence of pervasive voter fraud in the United States but Trump has insisted it's to blame in places where he trails Biden. Even without Georgia, Biden has won enough states to become the next president, NBC News projects.

Georgia’s Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger said Wednesday there will be a hand recount of all paper ballots in the state. He rejected calls this week by Loeffler and Perdue to resign over claims of election misconduct for which they didn't provide evidence, and said the two lawmakers should focus more on maintaining a GOP Senate.

Even though Biden's margin is substantial, Hovies said she’s “praying” that the recount reverses the result, and is “disappointed” in Raffensperger and Gov. Brian Kemp, also a Republican, for failing to uncover fraudulent ballots.

“I don’t understand how it went to Biden,” she said. “I really don’t. It’s sad. It’s frightening.”

Hovies and others here at an event hosted by the Cobb County GOP, in an Atlanta suburb that is trending toward Democrats, said if there are two runoffs in January, they will vote for Perdue and Loeffler.

Loeffler is also leaning into a national message.

On Tuesday, she released a negative ad about Warnock, linking the prominent Black pastor to controversial remarks by Rev. Jeremiah Wright and claiming he "sympathizes with Marxists and socialists" and "wants to make your neighborhoods less safe."

Appearing Wednesday on MSNBC, Warnock responded by portraying Loeffler as using her office to profit.

"She’s done a really good job protecting her own portfolio when she heard about the coronavirus pandemic... Georgians have not seen real relief in several months," he said. "She’d rather talk about all of these things because I imagine it must be difficult to explain why you want to get rid of health care in the middle of a pandemic."

Democrats are also trying to also parlay the presidential race into enthusiasm among their base.

At an Ossoff rally, speaker after speaker emphasized the stakes for the Senate, presenting it as a choice for Georgians about whether to allow Biden to pursue his agenda or allow the GOP to obstruct it.

“We need this new administration to be able to successfully fight this virus, promote economic recovery, expand civil rights, pass criminal justice reform. And if Mitch McConnell controls the Senate, nothing will get done. Washington will be mired in partisan gridlock,” Ossoff told NBC News in an interview before taking the stage. “I think people want to see this president-elect succeed at a moment of crisis. And that's why these races are so important.”

For Republicans like Scott Johnson of Marietta, who serves on the state Board of Education, holding the Senate is paramount to stopping the Democratic agenda.

“It’s the most important thing. More important than Thanksgiving and Christmas,” he quipped. “We didn’t ask to be the political center of the universe for the next eight weeks but we will be.”

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'Makes me sick': Georgia Republicans seek to ride Trump shock to holding Senate control - NBC News
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