Georgia’s Republican secretary of State Brad Raffensperger is eternally a MAGA target.
Photo: Alex Wong/Getty Images
We’re all used to negative campaign ads, but this inaugural offering from Georgia Republican gubernatorial candidate Rick Jackson is quite the doozy:
Yes, that’s right. The decidedly un-mom-like mom in this ad sneeringly tells her innocent-looking son that in order to lower expectations for his life, he was named “Brad” after Georgia secretary of State and Jackson gubernatorial-primary rival Brad Raffensperger, who “turned on his own kind” (Republicans? White people?) and consorted with the likes of Stacey Abrams. Mom’s backup name for him, she tells the traumatized child, was “Judas.” In case you missed the connection, the ad ends with the words “Brad ‘Judas’ Raffensperger” across the screen.
All Raffensperger did to earn this most hateful of epithets (in deeply Christian Georgia, anyway) was to certify Joe Biden’s 2020 presidential win in the state and refuse Donald Trump’s wildly corrupt and inappropriate demand that he “find” enough new votes to change the outcome. Trump tried to purge Raffensperger (along with his co-certifier of the Biden win, Governor Brian Kemp) in a 2022 primary but failed. Now Raffensperger is running for governor (Kemp is term-limited) precisely at the time Trump is reviving his conspiracy-theory-laden take on the 2020 election in Georgia. Just this week, FBI agents and Trump’s director of National Intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, were in Atlanta hauling off boxes of 2020 voter files. So Jackson’s toxic ad is designed to arouse fresh MAGA resentment of the public official who “turned on his own kind.”
Jackson isn’t just a random jerk. A former health-care executive, he’s pledged to spend up to $50 million of his own money in the 2026 race, where he is posing (as you might tell from his ad) as a defender of the president. Trouble is there is already a wacky rich MAGA dude in the race: state lieutenant governor Burt Jones, who was a fake Trump elector in 2020. Indeed, Jones has already been endorsed by the Boss. But Jackson made it clear right away he was as much of a target as “Judas” Raffensperger, as the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported:
Jackson, 71, wasted no time at his Wednesday rally at Jackson Healthcare’s opulent Alpharetta campus, calling Jones “a so-called front-runner who was weak as can be and as lazy as the day is long. He wants the title of governor, but not the job.”
If Jones were to win the nomination, he added to a crowd of hundreds of employees, “we would be risking losing his seat to a radical Democrat — or a Republican who acts like one. I wasn’t willing to sit and let that happen to our president or our great state.”
Jackson’s surprise entry into the race wasn’t the first unwelcome surprise for Burt Jones in recent months. During the Christmas holidays, TV viewers in Georgia were treated to a $5 million barrage of ads accusing the lieutenant governor of corruption. They were bought by a shadowy PAC, and all of Jones’s gubernatorial rivals denied having anything to do with it. Is it possible Rick Jackson was the mystery donor for these nasty-grams aimed at softening up Jones? Nobody knows, but the plot has thickened. And we do know Jackson doesn’t have a problem with running negative ads.
The irony is that Jackson may help Raffensperger win by splitting the MAGA vote and battling with Jones in a way that distracts attention from the secretary of State’s perfidious behavior in refusing to steal an election for Trump. There’s also a fourth major candidate, Attorney General Chris Carr, who agreed with Raffensperger and Kemp about the 2020 results but has gone out of his way to be lovey-dovey with the 45th and 47th president ever since he trounced his own Trump-endorsed primary opponent in 2022. There are all kinds of murder-suicide scenarios on the table for this fractious Republican field.
And victory-minded Republicans are aware this could be a good year for Democrats in Georgia as elsewhere. Yet another survivor of the Republican civil war Trump set off in Georgia in 2022, then–Republican lieutenant governor Geoff Duncan, is now running for governor as a Democrat, though former Atlanta mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms and former Labor commissioner Mike Thurmond lead him in the polls.
It could be a wild ride to November in the state Trump just can’t leave alone.
Ed Kilgore
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