ATLANTA – Georgia’s new voting law overhaul kickstarted Gov. Brian Kemp’s effort to reconnect with hardline conservatives angry that the Republican executive didn’t help overturn former President Donald Trump’s loss last November.
But the new GOP-backed law hasn’t mollified the most intense Trump loyalists. The next measure of their ire — and Kemp’s standing as he seeks re-election 2022 — comes Saturday as many local Republican committees across Georgia consider proposals to censure the governor for not reversing President Joe Biden’s victory in Georgia.
The county conventions come one day after Kemp drew his first 2022 primary challenger after weathering Trump’s ire for months. “It doesn’t matter what Kemp does,” said conservative activist