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The 1998 Georgia Republican Primary Runoff Results
The two main stories of the August 11th primary runoff were the dismal
turnout, with only 11% of registered Georgia voters bothering to cast a ballot
in either the Republican or Democratic runoff, and the incredible number of
very tight contests. Yet, the results of the GOP runoff were quite
encouraging for Log Cabin Republicans and other gay voters. The candidates of
the Religious Right were defeated in virtually every runoff from statewide to
local office. The Georgia Republican Party has nominated a largely pragmatic
conservative ticket to go against the Democrats this fall. This is a ticket
that will have appeal to moderate Republicans, independents and crossover
Democrats in November.
LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR
Fulton County Commission Chairman Mitch Skandalakis defeated former State
Senator Clint Day by a margin of 52%-48%, racking up huge margins in metro
Atlanta while losing in much of rural Georgia. Day, a favorite of the
Christian Coalition, attacked Skandalakis early and often during the campaign
for Skandalakis' past outreach to gay voters. Unfortunately, Skandalakis
responded by distancing himself from gay Georgians by opposing issues of
importance to the gay community: domestic partnership benefits, repeal of the
sodomy law, non-discrimination legislation, etc. We can only hope that with
the primary and runoff behind him, Skandalakis may avoid this type of
pandering and expediency in the general election.
ATTORNEY GENERAL
State Senator David Ralston of Blue Ridge won by a landslide, 62%-38%, over
former State Representative Kip Klein of Marietta, a favorite of the far
right. Ralston, a mainstream conservative, won by large margins in every
region of the state, losing Klein's home county, Cobb, by only a few hundred
votes. Ralston will be one of the GOP's most formidable candidates in
November as he seeks to retake the attorney general's office for the
Republicans.
COBB COUNTY COMMISSION
In what was truly the most satisfying result for Georgia Log Cabin
Republicans, virulently anti-gay Cobb County Commissioner Gordon Wysong was
trounced 59%-41% by attorney Sam Olens. Wysong was the commissioner who
introduced the notorious anti-gay "Community Standards" resolution, which led
to Olympic events and numerous economic opportunities being diverted from Cobb
County during the past five years. In contrast, Sam Olens stated his support
for non-discrimination in a well publicized article in Atlanta's gay
newspaper, Southern Voice. Olens was attacked repeatedly by Wysong during the
campaign for being "pro-gay", but Olens held to his non-discrimination stance
and, memorably, attacked Wysong as "rampantly homophobic." Sam Olens will be
the new commissioner for eastern Cobb County, as no Democrat filed to run in
November's general election.
LEGISLATIVE RACES OF INTEREST
In suburban Gwinnett County, Renee Unterman, the mayor of Loganville, won a
heated runoff for an open House seat against religious right favorite Terry
Milton. Unterman, a well respected local official, was attacked as being
insufficiently conservative on moral issues. Several members of Gwinnett's
House delegation endorsed Milton on these grounds, but Unterman prevailed
51%-49% on election day.
In Fayette County, south of Atlanta, State Representative Dan Lakly, a
favorite of the right-wing, lost his Republican runoff race by 51%-49% to
political newcomer Kathy Cox. Cox was effective at pointing out the negative
effects of having "Crazy Dan" and his wacky agenda representing Fayette County
under the Gold Dome.
Two State Senate runoffs offered a mixed bag for former Christian Coalition
executive director and present political consultant Ralph Reed. In Southeast
Georgia, Reed's candidate, businessman Tommie Williams of Vidalia, crushed
former State Representative Willou Smith of Brunswick 67%-33%. However, in
the southern suburbs of Atlanta, Reed's candidate, Don Johnson of Clayton
County, lost to Bill Bonner of Fayette County 51%-49%. Bonner will replace
one of the Georgia Senate's most anti-gay members, GOP incumbent Pam Glanton.