Former Georgia Sen. Kelly Loeffler, a Republican, is ramping up the rhetoric around the key role of her new get-out-the-vote drive—called Greater Georgia—to counter Fair Fight, the voter participation initiative founded by former Democratic congressional representative Stacey Abrams. Loeffler has warned that if the GOP can’t successfully rebuff Abrams’s movement, they won’t win another seat in the Peach State, regardless of how appealing a candidate they field.
Greater Georgia is looking to engage more communities and—crucially—register more of what it estimates are some 2 million unregistered, right-leaning, voting-age Georgians.
Abrams founded Fair Fight after losing a gubernatorial bid in 2018. The group’s stated aims include advocating for progressive issues, encouraging voter participation, and fighting voter suppression.
Acknowledging the effectiveness of Fair Fight advocacy, Loeffler said Abrams has secured a virtual “monopoly” on voter registration in Georgia.
“We’re already seeing that Georgia’s at a deficit of roughly 8,000 voter registrations a month in terms of Democrat versus Republican registrations,” Loeffler said, vowing to beat back that trend with voter engagement and registration drives, and new communications strategies to get out the conservative vote.
Loeffler, a businesswoman who lost a reelection bid in January, left office after a year. She never won an election, having been appointed to the state senate by Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, a Republican, to fill a vacancy that arose when Sen. Johnny Isakson (R-Ga.) retired due to health reasons.