With a damning secret recording of his opponent and a Trump-Pence endorsement late in the race, Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp on Tuesday won a bruising Republican runoff in the race for governor.

A self-described “unapologetic conservative” whose campaign ran an eyebrow-raising ad that said he could use his own pickup to “round up criminal illegals,” Kemp rode a national wave of voter contempt for the establishment in favor of bare-knuckled outsider politics.

He now faces Democrat Stacey Abrams, who could become the country’s first black woman governor, in a race that will test Democrats’ assertion that changing demographics have turned the Republican stronghold into a swing state.

Kemp beat once heavily-favored Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle, who outraised Kemp more than 2 to 1 and had a Rolodex of endorsements from establishment Republicans in the state including Gov. Nathan Deal.


In a tweeted endorsement last week, President Trump pointed to Kemp’s tough stance on illegal immigration and strong support for gun rights. With days left in the race, Vice President Mike Pence campaigned for Kemp. Both reiterated their support for Kemp in tweets Tuesday.

Cagle began to lose ground after the release of a secret recording in June in which he says he helped pass a “bad public policy” bill for political gain. The recording was made without Cagle’s knowledge during a private conversation with former GOP gubernatorial rival Clay Tippins, who last week endorsed Kemp. Portions of the recording were released by Tippins and then by Kemp’s campaign.

In a 50-second piece of the recording released in early July by Kemp’s campaign, Cagle candidly discusses the GOP primary’s sharp turn to the right, saying the five-man race came down to “who had the biggest gun, who had the biggest truck and who could be the craziest.”

Cagle denied that his words amounted to criticism of Republican primary voters, saying they were aimed squarely at his opponent.


Kemp had received widespread criticism — and national headlines — with television ads in which he pretends to intimidate a young man interested in his daughter with a shotgun and says he has a big pickup “just in case I need to round up criminal illegals and take ‘em home myself.”

Kemp’s opponents also hammered his record of securing voter data as secretary of state, in a line of attack likely to become a refrain for Abrams during the general election.

Cagle labeled Kemp “inKempetent,” pointing to a 2015 incident in which Kemp’s office inadvertently released Social Security numbers and other identifying information of millions of Georgia voters on disks sent to members of the media and political parties.

Kemp said a member of his staff was responsible for the error, that person was fired, and procedures were changed.


Kemp’s office made headlines again last year after security experts disclosed a gaping security hole that wasn’t fixed until six months after it was first reported to election authorities. Personal data was again exposed for Georgia’s 6.7 million voters, as were passwords used by county officials to access files.

Kemp spokeswoman Candice Broce laid the blame squarely on Kennesaw State University, which had a contract to manage the system. “It was not our system. It was not our equipment. It was not our network,” Broce said.

In the race ahead, Democrats point to a Georgia electorate that has become more urban and less white in recent decades as a sign they may be able to break the GOP winning streak for statewide office. Abrams already has star power, having garnered national attention when she won more than 76% of Democratic votes in her May 22 primary.