WARNER ROBINS, Ga. â Ads with the candidatesâ ex-wives. Cries of âliarâ flying in both directions. Stories of a squalid apartment building and abortions under pressure. Questioning an opponentâs independence. His intellect. His mental stability. His religious faith.
The extended Senate campaign in Georgia between the Democratic incumbent, Raphael Warnock, and his Republican challenger, football legend Herschel Walker, has grown increasingly bitter as their Dec. 6 runoff nears. With Democrats already assured a Senate majority, itâs a striking contrast from two years ago, when the state's twin runoffs were mostly about which party would control the chamber in Washington.
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âHerschel Walker ainât serious,â Warnock told supporters recently in central Georgia, saying that Walker âmajors in lyingâ and fumbles the basics of public policy. âBut the election is very serious. Donât get those two things confused.â
Walker casts Warnock, the senior pastor at Ebenezer Baptist Church, as a âhypocriteâ and servile to President Joe Biden. Underscoring the insult, Walker calls the incumbent âScooby-Doo,â complete with an impression of the cartoon houndâs gibberish.
The broadsides reflect the candidates' furious push in the four weeks between the Nov. 8 general election and runoff to persuade their core supporters to cast another ballot. For Walker, it also means drawing more independents and moderates to his campaign after he underperformed a fellow Republican on the ticket, Gov. Brian Kemp, by 200,000 votes.
Warnock led Walker by 37,000 votes out of almost 4 million cast in the first round, but the senator fell short of the 50% threshold needed to avoid a runoff.
In many ways, the shift from his first runoff campaign is exactly what Warnock wanted: a straightforward choice between two candidates. Two years ago, then-President Donald Trump, fresh off his defeat, and Biden, then president-elect, made multiple Georgia trips to illuminate the national stakes of the races between Warnock and Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler and between Democrat Jon Ossoff and Republican Sen. David Perdue as control of the Senate hung in the balance.
Trump ended up alienating his own supporters and many moderates with his false claims of a rigged 2020 presidential election. Victories by Warnock and Ossoff put the Senate at a 50-50 split, with Democrats gaining control by virtue of Vice President Kamala Harris' tiebreaking vote. Warnock also became Georgia's first Black senator.
This year, with Warnock vying for a full six-year term after winning the 2021 special election, Democrats have already guaranteed control of the Senate by flipping a seat in Pennsylvania. A Warnock win would give Democrats an outright majority at 51-49, meaning that the parties would not have to negotiate a power-sharing agreement.
Warnockâs preferred emphasis for most of his reelection bid has been his deal-making in Washington and the personal values he brings to the job. It took until the campaignâs final stages â only after two women accused Walker, an opponent of abortion rights, of encouraging and paying for their abortions â for the senator to ratchet up his attacks, arguing Walker is âunpreparedâ and âunfitâ for the job.
âMy opponent lies about everything,â Warnock said in a recent campaign stop, ticking off a litany of Walkerâs repeated falsehoods and exaggerations. âHe said he was a police officer. Heâs not. He said he worked for the FBI. He did not. Said he graduated from the University of Georgia. He did not. Said he was valedictorian of his class. He was not. ... He said he had another business with 800 employees. It has eight.â
Walker, alternately, has relished the jousting since he won the GOP nomination in the spring.
âHerschel is a competitor. Heâs very comfortable with the mano a mano,â said Scott Paradise, Walkerâs campaign manager, noting the candidateâs athletic prowess as a football running back, kickboxer and Olympic bobsledder.
Indeed, Walker takes his attacks right to Warnockâs strengths as the pastor of the famous church where Martin Luther King Jr. once preached. Walker has criticized Warnock over an Atlanta apartment building, owned by a foundation of Warnockâs church, where residents have complained to The Washington Free Beacon, a conservative media outlet, of eviction notices and poor conditions.
âWhat heâs doing in this apartment building at Columbia Towers is not right,â Walker said recently at a suburban Atlanta campaign stop. âYou shouldnât put Jesusâ name on what youâre doing to people, and donât put Martin Luther King name on it. ... Youâre not Jesus, and youâre not Dr. King.â
Warnock, who says no residents of Columbia Tower have been evicted, incorporates Walkerâs attacks into the list of the challengerâs documented exaggerations and falsehoods. âWhat kind of a person lies on the church?â Warnock said in Macon. âThis isnât the first time people attacked Ebenezer Baptist Church. They attacked Martin Luther King Jr. Iâm in good company.â
Still, asked whether heâs reconsidered his churchâs stewardship of Columbia Towers, Warnock sidestepped: âIâve already answered the question. Iâm proud of what my church does to feed and house the hungry and the homeless every single week.â
Walker also accuses Warnock of âgetting richâ as a senator, a nod to the pastorâs $7,500-a-month housing allowance from the church. The payments are not a violation of Senate ethics rules that limit senatorsâ outside income.
On at least one occasion during the runoff, Walker has suggested Warnock is a negligent father. Warnock told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution the comment âcrossed a line.â Earlier in the campaign, Walker publicly acknowledged three of his children for the first time, doing so only after The Daily Beast reported on their existence. Warnock has not mentioned those children in any of his critiques of Walker.
Walker, meanwhile, has not taken reporters' questions at an open campaign event since late October, when a second accuser came forward to say he had pressured her to have an abortion â a contradiction of his advocacy as a candidate for a national ban on all abortions. Walker has denied the women's claims.
Both candidates' former wives also loom in the campaign, though the two men avoid the topic themselves, leaving the discussion of their marriages mostly to paid advertising. In one ad, Warnockâs former wife tells Atlanta police that he ran over her foot. The Republican ad doesnât note that a police report states that officers found no physical evidence supporting her claim. A Democratic ad features an interview with Walkerâs first wife detailing that he threatened violence against her, circumstances Walker has confirmed in an autobiography.
Since the two men met for their lone debate Oct. 14, Warnock has hammered Walker for a lack of policy details and sometimes flubbing what policy he does discuss.
Warnock promotes his new federal legal provision capping insulin costs for Medicare recipients and notes Walker said diabetics could manage their health by âeating right,â a practice that isnât enough for insulin-dependent diabetic patients.
âMaybe he ought to apply to be a dietician. Iâm running for the United States Senate,â Warnock said in Macon.
He pounced when Walker declared the United States is ânot readyâ for climate action and should âkeep having those gas-guzzling carsâ that he said already have âgood emissionsâ standards. Warnock added gleeful mockery when Walker recently introduced a tangent about vampires to a campaign speech.
âI mean, who says that kind of stuff?â Warnock asked supporters.
Warnock's aides say that the personalized arguments help convince core Democrats that they should not sit out the runoff, while also swaying the potentially decisive middle of the electorate in the senator's favor. âHerschel Walker continues to be bogged down by his pattern of lies and disturbing behavior, all of which led him to underperformâ in the first round, said Quentin Fulks, Warnock's campaign manager, in a statement.
From Walker's camp, Paradise insisted that Republicans' best argument remains Warnock's alignment with Democrats on economic policy. Still, he acknowledges the campaignâs tone has darkened.
âWeâre certainly going to continue to aggressively prosecute the case against Warnock,â he said, âand I suspect theyâll do the same.â
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Follow the APâs coverage of the 2022 midterm elections at https://apnews.com/hub/2022-midterm-elections