The American Spectator

home
ADVERTISEMENT
Print Email
Text Size

The Spectacle Blog

A write-in challenge could endanger “Blue Dog” Democrat Rep. John Barrow’s prospects of re-election in Georgia’s 12th District, David Weigel reports:

On Monday, former State Senator Regina Thomas will file papers to run as an official write-in candidate against Rep. John Barrow (D-Ga.), a more conservative Democrat who beat her in the 2008 and 2010 primaries. Official status will allow votes for her to be counted as she runs a regular campaign. Barrow is white, Thomas is black, but Barrow has been successful up to now in winning enough black votes to fend off his challenger.

The history of GA-12, a new district created after the 2000 Census, is that Republicans tend to do well in mid-terms, while Democrats perform strongly in presidential election years. Barrow should be vulnerable this year and having a black liberal independent candidate in a district where 44% of voters are black would heighten that vulnerability.

Republican nominee Ray McKinney, who won 62% of the vote in Tuesday’s GOP primary runoff, speaks well of Thomas.

“I’ve known Ms. Thomas for years,” McKinney said in a phone interview Friday afternoon. “She’s honest. She’s direct. What you see is what you get, and that’s something you have to respect.”

McKinney (whose campaign in GA-12 was profiled here in April) said he thinks Thomas should be included in any debates with Barrow.

Thomas got 14,000 votes in the July 20 Democratic primary against Barrow. Even if she gets only a fraction of that as a write-in candidate Nov. 2, it could be enough to keep the Democrat nominee from getting a majority, and Georgia law would then require a runoff. With control of the House possibly hinging on the outcome, GA-12 might become one of the most closely watched districts in the country this fall.

topics:
Election 2010

View all comments (17) |

Mike| 8.14.10 @ 1:15AM

She can't run as a write-in.

"(d) No person shall be eligible as a write-in candidate in a general or special election if such person was a candidate for nomination or election to the same office in the immediately preceding primary."

O.C.G.A. § 21-2-133

John Miller| 8.14.10 @ 6:32PM

She cant run. She doesnt even know that she cant cause she didnt read the law. Want to know why she wants to run. Cause she needs a job. She has never had one. I bet 50 bucks she runs for mayor of savannah in 2011 cause her"people" told her too.

Margie| 8.15.10 @ 2:23PM

But the Democrats are always above the law, don't you know that yet? :^)

And write-in candidates always spell trouble for the Republicans, too. Of course I don't mind at all that it spells trouble for the Democrats. I'm a "partisan hack."

Pete | 8.16.10 @ 12:26PM

And by law, Jerry Brown couldn't run for Attorney General of California in the last election.

sestamibi| 8.16.10 @ 7:54PM

He may be on the right side, but I'm still suspicious of Georgia McKinneys.

Merchant | 11.11.10 @ 8:56AM

yes i agree with Pete!

Related Blog Posts

More Blog Posts by Robert Stacy McCain

http://spectator.org/blog/2010/08/13/write-in-candidate-could-spell

ADVERTISEMENT

SPONSORED LINKS

FLASHBACK TO: 1995

Clip of the Day

Most Popular Articles

The IRS Immigration Fraud Scandal

Jeffrey Lord | 6.18.13

Foreign Policy as Farce

Jed Babbin | 6.17.13

The Biggest Fool of All

Doug Bandow | 6.17.13

Can Liturgical Music Be Saved?

Patrick O'Hannigan | 6.17.13

Revenge of the Fruitcakes

Peter Hitchens | 6.17.13

Obama's Climate of Intimidation

Matthew Sheffield | 6.18.13

Whither Suburbia?

Steven Greenhut | 6.18.13

The Mole in Don Draper

James Bowman | 6.17.13

ADVERTISEMENT