Democrats Seem Unwilling to Deploy President-Elect Obama in Georgia Runoff

November 25, 2008 RSS Feed Print

By Michael Barone, Thomas Jefferson Street blog.

Polls in the Georgia runoff continue to show incumbent Republican Saxby Chambliss with about the same small lead over Democrat Jim Martin that he had in the November 4 election. The realclearpolitics.com average, rounded off, is Chambliss 51 percent to 46 percent. By way of perspective, Chambliss beat incumbent Democrat Max Cleland in the considerably more Republican year of 2002 by a 53 percent-46 percent margin. Democrats hope for a disproportionately large turnout of young and black voters, but Barack Obama, busy building an administration with an eye to bipartisan acceptability, seems so far unwilling to deploy the one political asset—personal campaigning by the president-elect—that seems most likely to spark such turnout. I imagine there's some behind-the-scenes arguments among Democrats about whether Obama should (pardon the expression) march through Georgia. Bill Clinton's campaigning for incumbent Wyche Fowler in the 1992 runoff didn't help Clinton's prestige but rather signaled something in the way of political weakness, because Republican challenger Paul Coverdell won. I'm guessing that Obama wants to avoid a repeat of this outcome. And I'm guessing, with some basis, that at least some incumbent Democratic senators would rather not have 59 Democratic colleagues, lest they be put on the record for imposing policies like the abolition of secret ballots in union recognition elections.

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Tags:
Georgia,
Congressional elections 2008,
Saxby Chambliss,
Barack Obama,
democratic party

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Saxby has angered a lot of Georgia Republicans over his support for the bailout, but he is strong against giving amnesty to illegal aliens. For that reason alone he deserves everyone's vote.

Ryan of GA 5:16PM November 26, 2008

Hope Saxby prevails. Both he and Johnny Isakson are strong against amnesty for illegal immigrants.

Stan of GA 1:03AM November 26, 2008

If they get teh super majority there is no one to blame but them.

Let them have it all.

Larry of CA 6:50PM November 25, 2008

Michael Barone

Michael Barone

U.S. News Weekly

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Michael Barone is a senior writer for U.S.News & World Report and principal coauthor of The Almanac of American Politics. He has written for many publications—including the Economist and the New York Times.

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