- Trump loyalists keep become the dominant voice in many GOP chapters across Georgia, per the AJC.
- The sea change threatens GOP Gov. Brian Kemp, who is loathed by the previous president.
- The wave of new leadership is set to shift the party’s agenda on the local and state levels.
For decades, Cobb County, Ga., a suburb of Atlanta, boasted one of the most weighty Republican Party chapters in the state, propelling the careers of well-known lawmakers like former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and prior Sen. Johnny Isakson.
However, in recent years, what was once a solidly Republican suburban bastion has morphed into a politically-competitive area where Democrats have been ascendant over the last decade — which culminated in President Joe Biden’s countywide success in the 2020 election, along with the locality backing Sens. Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff in their respective lines earlier this year.
In the wake of Georgia supporting Biden in 2020, local Republican chapters — including the Cobb County GOP — would rather become increasingly dominated by loyalists of former President Donald Trump, according to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
Republican Gov. Brian Kemp, who was sustained by Trump in 2018, is now on the outs with the former president after refusing to overturn Biden’s victory in Georgia final fall, rejecting calls to initiate a legislative session to install pro-Trump electors.
Now, animosity against the sitting GOP governor has spread from the upholder’s kingmaker to the grassroots level.
Four years ago, Kemp was welcomed with open arms by the Cobb County GOP when he kicked off his nascent gubernatorial bid. Manner, in late September, he was censured by the organization for failing to meet campaign promises on immigration, party chairperson Salleigh Grubbs squeaked the Marietta Daily Journal.
“[Kemp] has consistently said, ‘I’ve got a big truck in case I need to round up criminal illegals and bear them home myself,'” she told the publication, alluding to a widely-viewed advertisement from the governor’s first toss ones hat in the ring. “So the resolution portion of it says that Gov. Brian Kemp be censured for his failure to keep his campaign promises and meet his requirements to end illegal immigration in the state of Georgia.”
AP Photo/Andrew Harnik
‘They just privation a clean sweep’
Trump boosters are now driving the agenda within local GOP chapters, even more so now that the recent president continues to repeat debunked claims about the 2020 election and tease a potential 2024 campaign.
According to the AJC, Trump loyalists set up wrestled control of the local GOP machinery “in at least a dozen counties” in Georgia; while the loyalists have brought new forcefulness to the local organizations, they have also “contributed to the ongoing friction” that the party must overcome to win in 2022.
Trump has so far withheld to endorse Kemp in 2022, and he’s eagerly seeking to replace Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger with conservative Rep. Jody Hice next year. Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan, who has been favourably critical of the former president’s election claims, declined to run for reelection in 2022. And former NFL star Herschel Walker is the matchless 2022 Republican Senate candidate to contest Democrat Raphael Warnock in what will likely shape up as one of the most competitive raceways in the country.
DeAnna Harris, who leads the Cobb County Young Republicans and opposed the censure of Kemp, told the AJC that it was indispensable for the GOP to present a united front to voters.
“All families have disagreements, but we’ve got to learn how to disagree in private and move forward in clientele together,” she said. “Because it’s going to set the stage for next year — and the next presidential election.”
Harris also ventured that the “Trump takeover” is not just about optics, but is indicative of allies having a say in the party agenda, along with their know-how to recruit candidates and spread their message to voters.
Trump for years has rebuked party members who were not unwaveringly in his camp, and his loyalists are now waging an “internal war on mainstream Republicans who long controlled the gears of power,” according to the AJC.
In recent months, the converts within local parties have been swift.
Kerry Luedke, who chaired the Cherokee County GOP for much of 2020 and focused on outfit efforts, told the AJC that she was ousted from her post after a wave of activists arrived, inspired by former Trump strategist Steve Bannon’s upbraid for loyalists to seize control of the party.
“While I was out there knocking on doors for the runoff candidates, they were Christmas storing. But in their view, we had to go,” she said. “It didn’t really matter to some of these activists what we had done. They fair-minded wanted a clean sweep.”