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McKinney storms to win; Isakson earns Senate bid

By JIM GALLOWAY

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

07/21/04

http://www.ajc.com/news/content/news/election/0704nation/21main.html

Democrat Cynthia McKinney, whose tirades against
President Bush helped get her tossed out two years ago,
appeared headed back to Washington on Tuesday, while
Johnny Isakson cruised to victory without a runoff in
the Republican primary for U.S. Senate.

On the Democratic side of that race, U.S. Rep. Denise
Majette led seven contenders but failed in her effort
to stay clear of a runoff against millionaire Cliff
Oxford, who poured more than $1 million of his own
money in the contest.

Supreme Court Justice Leah Sears � who next year could
become the high court's first female chief justice �
was the biggest vote-getter of the night. She easily
fended off challenger Grant Brantley, who was backed by
Republican Gov. Sonny Perdue and religious
conservatives, deflecting criticisms of her "activism"
and allegations that she looked favorably on gay
marriage.

"I think it's a good night for moderation in politics,"
said Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin, who countered
Perdue's involvement in the Supreme Court race with her
support for Sears.

With good weather and a light to medium turnout that
state officials said would reach 30 percent, voters
also sent at least two of four hotly contested
congressional races toward three more weeks of
campaigning and an Aug. 10 deciding vote.

In north metro Atlanta's 6th District, state Sens. Tom
Price and Robert Lamutt landed in arunoff, as did state
Rep. Lynn Westmoreland and Dylan Glenn in the
Southside's 8th district.

But it was the likely return of McKinney in the 4th
District that represented the starkest shift in Georgia
politics. McKinney finished just above the magic 50
percent-plus-one mark. The district has strongly
favored Democratic candidates over Republicans in
recent years, giving McKinney a substantial edge over
Republican Catherine Davis in November.

McKinney ran a low-to-the-ground campaign among the
black voters of south DeKalb County � emphasizing her
10 years' experience in Congress rather than a rematch
with Bush.

Tuesday night, McKinney called her primary victory "one
of the greatest political comebacks in history."

"We've got to make America, America," McKinney told
supporters. "We've got to avoid any backsliding on
civil rights or human rights. We've got to get our
troops out of harm's way. We've got to turn around this
Bush economy."

In 2002, McKinney's criticism of Bush and her alliance
with Palestinians prompted a heated race in which pro-
Arab money flowed McKinney's way and pro-Israel money
went to McKinney's opponent, Majette..

"This victory means that her constituents missed her,"
said Abed Hammoud, president of the Dearborn, Mich.-
based Arab-American Political Action Committee. "She is
a great lady, and I am delighted she won."

McKinney's resurgence nearly overshadowed Isakson's
victory, a comeback from his 1996 defeat for the GOP
nomination in the U.S. Senate race, in which a much
smaller Republican field of voters declared him too
moderate.

Blessed with $5.5 million in campaign cash, the three-
term Cobb County congressman rolled past pizza
entrepreneur Herman Cain and fellow U.S. Rep. Mac
Collins.

The contest may have shown the limit of religious
conservative influence over a rapidly growing
Republican Party in Georgia. Cain and Collins tried to
position themselves to the right of Isakson on
abortion, calling him "pro-choice," though he pointed
to his mostly anti-abortion record.

Isakson jumped into the race early, within days of
Democrat Zell Miller's announcement last year that he
would not run again. Isakson raised twice as much money
as Cain and nearly three times as much as Collins. A
wall of TV advertising and three decades in politics
finally paid off.

Cain, 58, of McDonough, the former chief executive of
Godfather's Pizza, was in a solid second place.

"I'll be back," Cain told several hundred cheering
supporters at the Georgian Terrace Hotel in Midtown
Atlanta.

For the first time in modern Georgia history,
Republicans appeared to have attracted more voters to
their side of the primary than Democrats. "We're going
to show that the Republican Party has become the
majority party in Georgia," Perdue thundered at the
Isakson victory party.

The governor did not mention his defeat of the night,
the failure of Cobb County attorney Brantley to topple
Sears in the Supreme Court race.

The race was nonpartisan, but both Republicans and
Democrats were deeply involved in what normally is a
largely ignored contest. It was a bitter skirmish in
the fight over gay marriage in Georgia, a possible
precursor to a referendum in November over a proposed
state constitutional amendment to ban same-sex unions.

At a meeting of the Georgia Christian Coalition, the
governor called on religious conservatives to replace
Sears. And Monday, Perdue lent his voice to automated
telephone calls pushing Brantley's candidacy.

Sears said her key to victory was the issue of judicial
independence. "The people of Georgia are telling us
they want judges of high character and integrity and
who are free and independent and not beholden to any
special interest groups," she said.

In the 6th District, which covers portions of Cobb,
Cherokee and north Fulton counties, Price and Lamutt
were at the top of a stack of seven GOP candidates.
Marietta attorney Chuck Clay was in third place � and
out of the picture.

In the 12th District, which runs from Athens to
Savannah, Democrat John Barrow was also on the edge of
winning without a runoff. The winner of the primary
faces Republican incumbent Max Burns.

Staff writers Mae Gentry, James Salzer, Ernie Suggs and
Bill Rankin contributed to this article.

Find this article at:
http://www.ajc.com/news/content/news/election/0704nation/21main.html
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major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
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Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
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