Crowded GOP field fights for Broun’s seat
For the past seven years, this northeast Georgia district has been represented by U.S. Rep. Paul Broun, whose outspoken conservatism and reputation as a frequent “no” vote earned him national attention.
The race to replace him, though, has been anything but a contest to take up
his mantle.
Broun is running for the U.S. Senate, and his family name — his father was a longtime state
senator who represented a part of Athens — still carries weight. Yet in debates and at events, only one of the crowded field of seven Republicans seems eager to trade on Broun’s name.
Instead, it’s a muddied fight with no clear front-runner among
candidates trying to build their name recognition and burnish their GOP
credentials ahead of the May 20 primary. Awaiting them is Democrat Ken Dious, an Athens lawyer who is his party’s nominee for an upset in this staunchly conservative district.
Crowded GOP field fights for Broun’s seat
The race to replace him, though, has been anything but a contest to take up
his mantle.
Broun is running for the U.S. Senate, and his family name — his father was a longtime state
senator who represented a part of Athens — still carries weight. Yet in debates and at events, only one of the crowded field of seven Republicans seems eager to trade on Broun’s name.
Instead, it’s a muddied fight with no clear front-runner among
candidates trying to build their name recognition and burnish their GOP
credentials ahead of the May 20 primary. Awaiting them is Democrat Ken Dious, an Athens lawyer who is his party’s nominee for an upset in this staunchly conservative district.
Crowded GOP field fights for Broun’s seat
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