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David Tulis/AP
Sports, race and politics have come together to create a political challenge for Georgia Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler, who co-owns the Atlanta Dream, the city’s WNBA team.
Loeffler, who’s facing a tough election this fall, has drawn scrutiny for calling on the league’s commissioner to drop its support of the Black Lives Matter movement. The WNBA and its union have decided to put “Black Lives Matter” and “Say Her Name” slogans on warm-up gear and opening weekend team uniforms.
“The truth is, we need less — not more politics in sports,” Loeffler wrote in a letter to WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert last week. “In a time when polarizing politics is as divisive as ever, sports has the power to be a unifying antidote.”
“There is no room for racism in this country. We cannot have it,” Loeffler went on to say of her stance at a campaign stop in Winder, Ga. “But there is an organization, different from the saying, an organization called Black Lives Matter founded on Marxist principles. Marxism supports socialism.”
Engelbert rejected the appeal, saying the league will “continue to use our platforms to vigorously advocate for social justice.” The players’ union, the WNBPA, has demanded Loeffler be removed as an owner of the Atlanta Dream.
“I think it’s a really uninformed, political, reactive statement that divides our country and in a league that has always sought tolerance, it’s pretty shocking,” Loeffler said of the reaction from the league.
Loeffler became a senator in January, replacing retiring Sen. Johnny Isakson and previously worked as a financial services executive.
She said she’s standing up for free speech and for people who feel attacked for voicing conservative beliefs. That’s a message which is resonating, said Georgia Public Service Commissioner Tim Echols, who has endorsed Loeffler.
“I think a lot of Republicans are very sympathetic to the attack that’s being placed on her right now and I think this has helped her,” he said. “Kelly has had the courage to be able to stand up, and I think Republicans are giving her some credit for that.”
The entire Atlanta Dream roster split with Loeffler over supporting Black Lives Matter.
Elizabeth Williams has played on the Dream since 2016 and serves on the union’s executive committee.
“It’s clear that [Loeffler is] trying to use the idea of Black Lives Matter and politicizing it for her gain. And that’s on her if that’s what she wants to do,” she said.
“But I think at the end of the day the movement and what we as players stand for is a movement of unity, a movement of justice.”
Williams called it “disappointing” to read Loeffler’s statements, especially because the league is made up of about 80% Black women.
“I think it’s ironic for her to make these statements and for her to still want to be associated with the team,” Williams said.
Loeffler maintains she won’t back away from her ownership stake despite the blowback.
‘The Only Option The Loeffler Campaign Had’
While Loeffler argued that her stand was about removing politics from sports, it’s difficult to ignore the context in which it’s happening.
Loeffler’s ownership stake in the team has become a campaign liability, as U.S. Rep. Doug Collins, Loeffler’s best-known Republican opponent, has mined it repeatedly for political attacks.
“It’s really the only option the Loeffler campaign had,” said Brian Robinson, a Georgia Republican strategist and communications consultant of the move.
She “had to go on defense and to try to block off that line of attack from Doug Collins,” he said.
Collins’ campaign has called out a past Dream game which allowed fans to donate a portion of ticket proceeds to Planned Parenthood, and for a past game honoring former gubernatorial Democratic candidate Stacey Abrams
Robinson said Loeffler also had to go on the offensive to win over Georgia’s Republican base, because while she is in a free-for-all, “jungle” special election without party primaries, she needs the state’s loyal Republican voters in November.
“The culture war right now is a huge dividing line between the left and the right, between Democrats and Republicans, and both sides have got to pick sides with the other side,” he said. “This presented her an opportunity to go on offense and to pick a fight with a group that’s on the other side of the partisan divide, the other side of the culture divide.”
The November race is effectively two party primaries combined, Robinson argued, with a final runoff contest likely in January.
Under Georgia’s special election rules, a candidate must win more than 50% of the vote to avoid a runoff. Loeffler faces 20 opponents and a runoff between the top two vote getters is almost certain.
“The Republicans will pick their candidate and the Democrats will pick theirs,” Robinson said. “Let’s be serious, this is not a general, this is really a primary by a different name”
After November, the race will more than likely become about winning over the state’s independent voters, Robinson said.
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