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The Augusta-Athens runoff: There’s no place like home

There was a lot of talk - much of it by us — about national issues like illegal immigration and the war in Iraq, but last week’s special election to fill the seat of the late U.S. Rep. Charles Norwood underscored the importance of local considerations in an race like this.

Local as in, living there. The U.S. Constitution doesn’t require candidates to live in the district they’re running for, but in this race the costs of not being a local were strikingly clear. In a low-turnout affair like this one, the friends and neighbors effect can be decisive.

Former state senator Jim Whitehead and Dr. Paul Broun, two Republicans who live on opposite sides of the 10th Congressional District, finished in the one-two positions, followed by three resident Democrats: James Marlow, Denise Freeman and Evita Paschall.

The four Republicans who don’t live in the district - Bill Greene, Nate Pulliam, Erik Underwood and Mark Myers - trailed significantly. Only two of them, Greene and Pulliam, managed to poll ahead of Libertarian Jim Sendelbach.

As to what national significance last week’s vote might have had, Whitehead advisor John Stone had a ready answer.

“This was absolutely, without a question, a rejection of the new Democratic House and Senate,” said Stone, in words that might have come from his old boss, Norwood.

The conservative 10th is hardly a bellwether district, but the declining poll numbers for the Democratic Congress support Stone’s point. Certainly, if Marlow had gotten into the runoff with a better-than-expected vote, this race would have been read the other way.

With 44 percent of last week’s vote, most of the money and the endorsements of a string of conservative figures to establish his credos on the illegal immigration issue, Whitehead would have been a solid favorite in the July 17 runoff no matter who came in second. But a race against an anti-establishment conservative from his own party isn’t necessarily going to be easier than a run-off challenge from a Democrat.

Like Marlow, Broun comes from the Democratic-leaning Athens side of this east Georgia district, and while a four-time Republican candidate with strong ties to the religious right might seem an unlikely local favorite, Broun’s campaign was rolling out the welcome mat for Democratic voters after Tuesday’s election.

“If Democrats want to stick their finger in the eye of the Republican establishment, sending Paul Broun to Congress would be one way to do that,” said Tim Echols, Broun’s treasurer and founder of TeenPact, which has helped provide a lot of homeschooled shoeleather for conservative campaigns.

Whitehead, who he described as an establishment candidate in a district with a very conservative establishment, is “not a bad guy,” Echols said. But Broun is a candidate “willing to go off-road to stand up for his principles.”

“I’m not going to be a go-along Republican. I want to push the Republican Party toward what it should be,” Broun said last week, discussing his differences with Whitehead.

Translation: He’s a long shot, but one his heavily favored opponent can’t ignore in these discontented times. When competing for a small number of votes in the heat of July, intensity matters.

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By bowersville

June 25, 2007 12:08 AM | Link to this

Who says Whitehead is ignoring his opponent?

Jim Whitehead has challenged Broun to 3 debates.

June 29, 5-6 pm, am 580, Augusta. July 9, Atlanta Press Club, GPTV. Athens, am 1340, date TBA.

Broun hasn’t accepted, so who’s ignoring who?

By shelbinator

June 25, 2007 12:39 AM | Link to this

John Stone is overstepping. Yes, Democrats only took 28% this time to last year’s 33%, but this clusterfork of an election is as hard to read as tea leaves, and 5% is barely outside the margin of error for such trends. There’s nothing “clearly” about it, Johnny boy.

By The Inquisitor

June 25, 2007 2:15 AM | Link to this

Perhaps if the Democratic Chairs had instigated a voter registration drive before the deadline to vote in this election, then perhaps this would have increased the Democratic share of the vote.

My problem that I have with the whole thing, is the apparent inability of belief of Democratic voting outside the urban areas of Athens and Augusta.

Perhaps if the Democratic campaigns had paid as much attention to these areas as had the Republican ones, then here again, we would have seen an increased vote, unless of course Democrats wanted to take the Summer off, in which case, they clearly succeeded.

By Ga Dem

June 25, 2007 6:56 AM | Link to this

The Democrats totally missed a point here, and it’s one that we harp on the Republicans all the time about. We definitely discounted the African-Americans in our district by overlooking the two home candidates that were offered and brought in a white boy from Atlanta. And then we didn’t reach out to them after the fact. If anyone is mad about Evita Paschall and Denise Freeman running, I’d suggest we look to Jane Kidd. We’ve got to find a way to bring the whites and African-American voters together or we’ll never get anywhere in the 10th. The answer is clearly not to bring in outsiders. That accomplished nothing.

 

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