The Georgia GOP tries to rewrite the 2020 election history – Atlanta Journal Constitution

Posted: May 20, 2021 at 4:59 am

Shafer faces reelection to the party post in June, so he and his allies used the report as a chance to tout his pro-Trump leadership rather than an examination of what went wrong and how the party can win in 2022.

The document only made brief mention of the fact that Republicans lost Georgia for the first time in a presidential race since 1992 and were subsequently swept in the U.S. Senate runoffs.

Much of its pages were framed through the lens of Trumps false claims about Georgia election fraud, blaming Raffensperger for foolish legal settlements and feckless emergency rules.

The Georgia Republican Party, on three separate occasions, sued the Secretary of State to force him to obey the law and do his job, the report states.

12/14/2020 Atlanta, Georgia Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger during a press conference at the Georgia State Capitol building in Atlanta, Monday, December 14, 2020. (Alyssa Pointer / Alyssa.Pointer@ajc.com)

Credit: Alyssa Pointer / Alyssa.Pointer@ajc.com

Credit: Alyssa Pointer / Alyssa.Pointer@ajc.com

Left unmentioned was the fact that Raffensperger and other officials found no evidence of widespread irregularities. Three separate tallies of the results confirmed Bidens victory, an audit of absentee ballot signatures found no cases of fraud, and pro-Trump lawsuits were dismissed from court.

The report provides a window into the ongoing focus from state GOP activists who continue to repeat pro-Trump conspiracy theories about the election despite no proof of any systemic wrongdoing.

It lists five separate lawsuits the state party filed against Raffensperger, each of which failed to yield any substantive victories. (The report asserts that one case led the secretary of state to expand access for poll watchers before asserting without evidence that massive violations of state law remained unchecked.)

Shafers allies defended the document. Joseph Brannan, the state GOP treasurer, called it a great summary of the work done by the grassroots under Shafers leadership that tells the story of the unprecedented level of engagement by the party.

Not surprisingly, it elicited cackles from Democrats.

If the Georgia GOP defines success as losing the presidency, both U.S. Senate seats and a House seat, we wish them nothing but success going forward, said Scott Hogan, the executive director of the Democratic Party of Georgia.

1/4/21 - Dalton, GA - President Donald Trump holds a rally in Dalton, GA, to campaign for Senators David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler on the eve of the special election which will determine control of the U.S. Senate. (Curtis Compton / Curtis.Compton@ajc.com)

Credit: Curtis Compton / curtis.compton@ajc.com

Credit: Curtis Compton / curtis.compton@ajc.com

But the outrage over Trumps defeat has also been a boon to Georgia Republicans. A surge of new faces gathered at weekend GOP meetings held in 13 of Georgias 14 congressional districts, where many heard from speakers who echoed Trumps false claims of a rigged election.

The uptick in participation evoked memories of the round of Republican meetings in 2016, when Trump brought legions of new conservative supporters to sleepy party gatherings often dominated by establishment figures or long-standing volunteers.

In west Georgias 3rd Congressional District, former state Sen. Josh McKoon asked for a show of hands and was surprised to find more than half of the 274 delegates had never attended a convention before.

Likewise for Brandon Phillips, chair of the 2nd Congressional District in South Georgia, who posted a picture of dozens of newcomers with the caption: Yall better keep up in Atlanta.

Metro Atlanta conventions held their own, too. Marci McCarthy, the chair of the DeKalb County GOP, said an influx of new faces who are turning their anger into action and advocacy signed up as convention delegates for the first time.

And Brad Carver of the 11th Congressional District, which covers a stretch of northwest Georgias suburbs, said more than half of the delegates who attended Saturdays convention had never shown up to a GOP meeting before this election cycle.

In all, Shafer said there was record turnout for district meetings and that roughly half of the members participated for the first time.

Newcomers to Georgia Republican meetings raise their hands during the 1st District GOP convention on May 15, 2021.

Credit: Brandon Phillips

Credit: Brandon Phillips

Veteran activists welcomed the new members, but they also stressed the need for party unity at a time when Trumps feuds with Republican officials have exacted damage.

Raffensperger is a decided underdog in his 2022 reelection bid, Kemp faces promises of payback from grassroots Republicans angry that he refused to overturn the election results, and Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan, who also drew Trumps fury, announced this week that he wouldnt run for another term.

The only way back to where we need to be is getting everyone back to wearing the Team R logo and behind Gov. Kemp, John Wood said, pointing to the increase in GOP attendance in South Georgia.

That doesnt happen if you dont get out there and do the work, said Wood, a longtime conservative grassroots leader from coastal Georgia. Thats where victory lies.

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The Georgia GOP tries to rewrite the 2020 election history - Atlanta Journal Constitution

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