The Runoff Report: December 14, 2020
December 14, 2020
Weekend campaign tour recaps ![]() Welcome to The Runoff ReportDecember 14, 2020Republicans have secured 50 seats in the next U.S. Senate compared to 48 seats for Democrats (including two independents who caucus with them). Control of the next Senate will come down to Georgia's runoff elections. In The Runoff Report, we provide the latest on each runoff and the fight for Senate control. ![]() ![]() Regular Election UpdatesDavid Perdue appeared on Fox & Friends Monday morning and encouraged Georgians to turn out and vote. He said of the general election, "52-and-a-half percent of Georgians rejected Jon Ossoff in my race and this liberal leftist agenda, so I'm confident if we get our vote out, we will win again." Over the weekend, Perdue campaigned in Savannah, Uvalda, Hazlehurst, and Douglas on his "Win Georgia, Save America" tour. Special Election UpdatesKelly Loeffler also appeared on Fox & Friends this morning, saying, "The president came here last week and urged voters to exercise their right, and it's vitally important that we do that, because Georgia is the firewall to socialism." Loeffler kicked off her "Senate Firewall Tour" Dec. 11. She campaigned in Commerce, Dawsonville, Milledgeville, Savannah, and Warner Robins throughout the weekend. The special election will fill the remainder of the term Johnny Isakson (R) won in 2016. He resigned in Dec. 2019, and Gov. Brian Kemp (R) appointed Loeffler, co-owner of the WNBA team Atlanta Dream. Warnock is senior pastor at Ebenezer Baptist Church. The winner will complete the term ending in January 2023. Overall campaign updates
Today: Senate candidates' vote shares compared to presidential candidatesThe Cook Political Report compared Senate candidates' performance to presidential candidates' performance in the Nov. 3 election. Cook's Jessica Taylor wrote, "Perdue finished first over Democrat Jon Ossoff by about 2 points (88,098 votes), narrowly outpacing Trump by 780 votes, while Ossoff underperformed Biden by 99,988 votes. In the special election that had 20 candidates on one ballot, the comparisons are a bit harder to make. But if you add up all the Republican candidate votes versus all the Democratic candidate votes, all GOP totals narrowly edged out Democratic ones by about 1 point, or 47,808 votes." The analysis also offers a county-by-county breakdown of results for presidential and Senate candidates. Click here to read it.
|