Alaska Governor Sarah Palin stumping for incumbent Republican Senator Saxby Chambliss in his runoff race against opponent Democrat Jim Martin at a rally in Perry, Georgia, Dec., 1, 2008.
Palin spent the day campaigning for Chambliss at rally's in Augusta, Savannah, Perry and Atlanta. While in Perry, Palin told the crowd of 3-thousand that the eyes of the nation were watching Georgia.
(All photos: Josephine Bennett)
Palin got personal when she thanked the crowd for her son's good experience he had while training for the military at Fort Benning in Columbus. The loudest applause came when Palin declared, "Saxby, you betcha!"
(Josephine Bennett)
After addressing the crowd Palin joined Chambliss shaking hands and posing for pictures with several in the crowd.
(Josephine Bennett)
Chambliss faces Democratic challenger, Jim Martin in the December 2, runoff election.
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Monday, December 1, 2008
Palin packs the house for Chambliss
Posted by
Dave
at
12/01/2008 04:39:00 PM
Labels: Alaska Governor Sarah Palin, Georgia Senate runoff, Perry Georgia, Republican Senator Saxby Chambliss
Sunday, November 30, 2008
Martin slams Chambliss over veterans benefits

Martin shaking hands with supporters at Democratic Party headquarters in Columbus, Sunday, Nov. 30, 2008. (Dave Bender)
The Senate candidates used the weekend to emphasize their messages and try to get out the vote for Tuesday’s runoff.
Democrat Jim Martin spent time in Macon and Savannah on Saturday, and met with about 50 people on Sunday in Columbus.
Martin tailored his Columbus appearance on what he said were Chambliss’ failings to improve benefits for veterans and military personnel:
“It troubles me that he voted 23 times not to increase health care benefits for veterans. “Well, we’re trying to balance our budget,” well, if you’re going to balance your budget, don’t give 700 billion dollars to Wall Street and refuse to give money to the veterans – don’t do it.”Columbus has a large veteran population, due to the Army’s nearby Fort Benning infantry post.
On the Republican side, Saxby Chambliss attended the Georgia - Georgia Tech game on Saturday, and on Fox News Sunday that the race would not be a referendum on President-Elect Barack Obama.
Georgia is one of only two Senate races still to be decided in this election cycle. Results of the Minnesota race are still in dispute.
Click here for more GPB News election coverage.
Chambliss vying for voters as runoff deadline nears

Chambliss speaking with reporters at a recent press conference at Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport. (Dave Bender/file)
Republican Saxby Chambliss likes to say he never expected to be at the "epicenter of the political world," but that's exactly where he finds himself as he battles for his political survival in the last big election of 2008.
Standing between Democrats and their long-sought 60-seat supermajority in the Senate, Mr. Chambliss heads into Tuesday's runoff against Democrat Jim Martin carrying the weight of the GOP establishment on his shoulders.
"Let's face it, the world is watching Georgia," the 65-year-old freshman senator said Wednesday at a rally in north Georgia. "We have the opportunity to make sure (President-elect) Obama doesn't move us far, far to the left."His political career began when he won a seat in the U.S. House in 1994. In 2001, he launched what many thought was a hopeless bid to oust Democratic Sen. Max Cleland, a triple amputee wounded in the Vietnam War. A bad knee kept Mr. Chambliss out of the Vietnam conflict.
Mr. Chambliss -- a virtual unknown statewide -- ran a tough campaign against Mr. Cleland, unleashing a TV ad that questioned the veteran's commitment to national security and flashed a photo of Osama bin Laden.
The ad infuriated Democrats, but Mr. Chambliss won the 2002 contest with 53 percent of the votes, helped along by shifting political winds in Georgia. After generations of Democratic control, the state began its swing Republican that year.
In the Senate, Mr. Chambliss emerged as a strong opponent of abortion and supporter of gun rights. He is also known as a reliably pro-business vote and was largely in lockstep with the Bush administration.
As a freshman senator, he rose quickly to become the chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee. He has been the ranking Republican on the panel since the Democrats won control of the Senate in 2006.
Mr. Chambliss also was handed the reins of the influential Republican Majority Fund, a political action committee that raises money for GOP candidates. Fundraising trips for the PAC have allowed him to indulge his love for golf. In Golf Digest's April ranking of Washington's top 200 golfers, he tied for No. 41.
Still, Mr. Chambliss has not always endeared himself to conservatives. He drew boos at a 2007 gathering of Georgia Republicans for supporting a compromise immigration package, which critics likened to amnesty. He later withdrew his support for the plan.
His work championing a bipartisan energy measure was lambasted by radio talk-show host Rush Limbaugh and other conservative commentators.
This year, he co-authored the five-year, $300 billion Farm Bill derided by some for being loaded with giveaways and rich subsidies for wealthy farmers.
Alaska Governor Sarah Palin will join Chambliss on Monday at several rallies across the state.
Click here for more GPB News election coverage.
(AP)
Martin in 11th-hour, cross-state voter race

Martin, speaking with reporters at a recent press conference at his campaign headquarters in Atlanta. (Dave Bender/file)
Democratic Senate challenger Jim Martin made an appearance in Macon and Savannah Saturday in his hotly fought Senate bid against incumbent Saxby Chambliss.
Martin, speaking in front of a now-closed tobacco plant in east Bibb County, told reporters:
“Economic prosperity is based on capital investment. We’ve had a financial situation where the financial sector has been virtually unregulated and it’s resulted in a disaster for American industry,” he said.
“We need to make sure that whatever stimulus package is passed will focus on creating jobs for Americans and stimulating the economy.”The press conference was Martin's second of the day: he'd appeared at a veterans rally in Savannah that morning, Macon.com reports.
Martin's 72-hour rally continues Sunday afternoon in Columbus.
The candidate and House Chief Deputy Whip G.K. Butterfield of North Carolina will host a veterans and military benefits roundtable at the Muscogee County Democratic Office. The two will hold a rally for supporters later in the evening, according to a statement released by Martin's office.

Chambliss speaking with reporters at a recent press conference at Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport. (Dave Bender/file)
Rival Chambliss will be joined by Alaska Governor Sarah Palin on Monday at several rally around the state.
Both candidates have buffed the closing days of their campaigns with national political heavyweights in an effort to swing more voters, and convince the party faithful to actually get to the polls and vote on Tuesday.
Click here for more GPB News coverage of the runoff race.
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Voters flock to polls in Muscogee Co.
Muscogee Co. residents waiting to vote at the Columbus Public Library, September, 2008. (Dave Bender)
Columbus and Muscogee County voting officials report a high turnout in absentee ballots and early voting for Tuesday’s Senate runoff. Dave Bender reports.
Nancy Boren, director of Elections and Registration says the over 9,000 ballots her Columbus office has received since Monday is, in her words, “exceptional:”
"I think the biggest portion of it is you have all of the automatic ballots that we have to mail out anyway: all of the military, the elderly, and those that are disabled. The other reason is the mailer that was sent by the governor that enabled people to fill out the application for the absent ballot and receive it in their home with the holiday approaching – it just makes it an easy way to vote.”
Both parties have brought a bevy of national political heavyweights to Georgia to stump in the closely held race.
Voter turnout in runoff races is usually poor, but Boren says she expects to see higher than usual numbers this time.
Click here for more GPB News coverage of the runoff race.
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Giuliani's turn to stump for Chambliss

Giuliani and Chambliss. (Carl Zornes)
Incumbent Republican Senator Saxby Chambliss today welcomed the support of former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani. Giuliani is just the latest in a series of national political figures coming to Georgia to support their party this run-off season.
Flanked by police officers and other first responders, Giuliani said Chambliss’ experience is needed back in the Senate:
"His understanding of our intelligence services, his understanding of terrorism, is really surpassed by no one in Washington. And we need people like Saxby Chambliss who has that experience. Having been a first responder himself, having been someone who, from the beginning of his career in Washington, took a great interest in intelligence and improving it."For his part, Democrat Jim Martin began sending out robo-calls featuring president-elect Barack Obama.
A new poll released by Insider Advantage puts Chambliss ahead of Martin by three percentage points – still within the margin of error.
Sarah Palin is expected to come to Georgia next week to stump for Chambliss. The former vice presidential candidate will travel across Georgia with Chambliss just one day before the election.
Posted by
Carl Zornes
at
11/25/2008 04:58:00 PM
Labels: 2008 elections, Alaska Governor Sarah Palin, democrat jim martin, Republican Senator Saxby Chambliss, Rudy Giuliani, runoff election, U.S. Senate race
Sunday, November 9, 2008
Chambliss, Martin rev up for runoff

Republican incumbent Senator Saxby Chamblis and Democratic Senate candidate Jim Martin and at the GPBTV pre-election debate. (Dave Bender/file)
Republican Sen. Saxby Chambliss and Democratic challenger Jim Martin were in full campaign mode this weekend, trying to coax enough votes to prevail in a Dec. 2 runoff election.
Republican incumbent Senator Saxby Chamblis talking with reporters at a press conference held at Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport. (Dave Bender/file)
Chambliss’ camp is preparing for a visit from former GOP presidential candidate John McCain. Martin is meeting with Cobb County Democrats and planned to visit a party phone bank operation in Decatur.

Democratic Senate race candidate Jim Martin, talking to reporters at a press conference in downtown Atlanta. (Dave Bender/file)
With less than four weeks until they face voters again, neither campaign was waiting for Secretary of State Karen Handel to make it official when she certifies election results next week.
With 99 percent of precincts reporting throughout Georgia, neither Chambliss nor Martin accumulated enough ballots to pull above the needed 50 percent plus one of the vote. The Moultrie Republican is just short, with 49.8 percent. Martin, a former state lawmaker from Atlanta, has 46.8 percent. The race also included Libertarian Allen Buckley, who drew 3.4 percent.
Military and overseas ballots were among the last to be tallied by county officials. To be counted, they had to arrive by Friday.
The state’s most populous county had been set to certify its results Saturday. But a spokesman for Fulton County’s Board of Elections said problems with a faulty memory card delayed the effort.
Voters register to cast their ballot in advance voting at the Fulton Co. Government Center polling station in downtown Atlanta. (Dave Bender)
Fulton County Board of Elections spokesman Mark Henderson said the problem had been resolved but officials decided to audit the process before making the elections results official. The certification is now expected to take place Sunday or Monday, Henderson said.
Handel’s office has criticized Fulton County for being slow to count thousands of absentee ballots and her office is investigating. Henderson said county workers were exhausted after a marathon Election Day and were sent home for a few hours to rest.
The expected Chambliss-Martin contest is already drawing a national spotlight to Georgia.
The race is one of three unresolved Senate contests nationwide, along with Minnesota and Alaska. All involve Republican incumbents. If Democrats capture all three, it would give them a 60-seat majority in the Senate, a margin needed to block Republican filibusters.
Chambliss’ campaign said they’ve also been in touch with McCain’s running mate, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, about a possible Georgia visit.
McCain carried Georgia on Election Day by 52 percent to President-elect Barack Obama’s 47 percent.
Nonetheless, Martin has asked Obama to help out, but no word yet on whether he’ll stump for Martin.
Then President-elect Bill Clinton came to Georgia to campaign for Democratic Sen. Wyche Fowler in his 1992 runoff race. But even with the high-profile help, Fowler went on to lose to Republican Paul Coverdell in what was the last U.S. Senate runoff in Georgia.
Martin and Chambliss arguing a point during the GPBTV pre-election debate. At bottom is Libertarian candidate Allan Buckley. (Dave Bender/file)
Click here for more GPB News election coverage.