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Billionaire Rick Jackson defeats Trump-backed candidate in Georgia governor’s primary

Billionaire Rick Jackson defeats Trump-backed candidate in Georgia governor’s primary
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Billionaire businessman Rick Jackson won the Republican primary runoff in Georgia’s race for governor, NBC News projects, defeating President Donald Trump’s endorsed candidate, Lt. Gov. Burt Jones. Jackson, a healthcare executive and first-time candidate who poured more than $100 million of his own money into his campaign, will now face Democratic nominee Keisha Lance Bottoms in the November general election in the battleground state. With more than 80% of the expected vote tallied, Jackson...

Billionaire businessman Rick Jackson won the Republican primary runoff in Georgia’s race for governor, NBC News projects, defeating President Donald Trump’s endorsed candidate, Lt. Gov. Burt Jones. Jackson, a healthcare executive and first-time candidate who poured more than $100 million of his own money into his campaign, will now face Democratic nominee Keisha Lance Bottoms in the November general election in the battleground state. With more than 80% of the expected vote tallied, Jackson led Jones 53% to 57%. The contest between Jackson and Jones, which went to a runoff after neither candidate won 50% of the vote in the May 19 primary, boiled down to a fierce battle for the MAGA base. For Jackson, that took on the form of comparing himself in ads and on the stump to Trump painting himself as a political outsider — even though he didn’t have the president’s official support. For Jones, that meant leaning heavily into highlighting the Trump’s “complete and total endorsement.” But ultimately, that support from Trump — which first came for Trump last August and was reiterated in tele-rallies and social media posts — wasn’t enough. Jones is only the second Trump-backed candidate to lose a Republican primary for governor this election cycle as the president has sought to put his stamp on the party across the country. An eleventh-hour endorsement from outgoing Gov. Brian Kemp on Sunday night, days after early voting had closed, also failed to lift Jones to victory. After unexpectedly jumping into the race in February — six months after Jones did — Jackson pummeled Georgia’s airwaves with ads that, in addition to spotlighting his personal story of growing up in the foster care system, largely invoked Trump. Jackson spent nearly three times as much on ads than Jones did since the beginning of the year and nearly four times as much since the initial primary last month, according to the tracking firm AdImpact. One cast Jackson as “the straight-talking, Trump-supporting self-made outsider.” “Like President Trump, I don’t owe anybody anything, and like you, I’m sick of career politicians,” Jackson said in another ad. In interviews ahead of Tuesday’s runoff, many Georgia voters said that having a background and style that was similar to Trump’s helped sway them down the stretch to vote for Jackson. Jackson was also endorsed by Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., and Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, who held campaign events with him on the eve of the runoff. “Rick’s rich,” Cruz said on Monday. “Rick doesn’t have to do this. He could sit back and play golf all day long and never have to enter this fray.” While Cruz’s endorsement puts him at odds with Trump, he hinted at Jackson’s similarities with the president. “An outsider, a businessman. I don’t know anyone in politics like that,” Cruz said. And Monday afternoon, Donald Trump Jr. praised Jackson on X as being among “the patriots building up MAGA and an America First economy.” The president’s son stopped short of formally endorsing Jackson, but said that regardless of who won the primary, it would be a “victory for MAGA.” In Georgia’s Senate race, Trump’s endorsed candidate, Rep. Mike Collins, defeated former football coach Derek Dooley in the Republican primary runoff. Trump’s continued fixation on the 2020 election also loomed over the GOP gubernatorial primary in Georgia, which initially also included Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger and state Attorney General Chris Carr. Jones was on the alternate slate of presidential electors who cast votes for Trump at the state Capitol after an official tally confirmed Joe Biden’s 2020 victory. Raffensperger rejected Trump’s plea to “find” more votes in Georgia after that election, while Carr repeatedly said there was no widespread voter fraud in the state, earning the wrath of Trump. (Carr later endorsed Jackson after he didn’t advance to the runoff). In a tele-rally Thursday night, Trump lauded Jones for being a “fanatic when it came to election fraud.” “He battled very strongly, tooth and nail, frankly, for the election integrity in your state,” Trump said on the call. Jackson’s race against Bottoms, the former mayor of Atlanta who also served in the Biden administration, will be one of the marquee governor’s races this fall. Even as Georgia has emerged as a key battleground in recent federal elections, the state’s voters last elected a Democratic governor in 1998.
Rick Jackson (PERSON) Trump (ORG) Georgia (LOCATION) Republican (ORG) NBC News (ORG) Donald Trump (PERSON) Burt Jones (PERSON) Jackson (PERSON) healthcare (ORG) Democratic (ORG) Keisha Lance Bottoms (PERSON) Jones (PERSON) MAGA (ORG) Brian Kemp (PERSON) AdImpact (ORG)
Originally published by NBC News Read original →