EXCLUSIVE — Republican Senate nominee Herschel Walker hauled in $3.3 million in fundraising on Wednesday - the first day of his Senate runoff campaign with Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock - according to candidate's advisers, who shared their figures first with Fox News.
And on Thursday, Walker upped the ante, bringing in $4.3 million, according to his team.
Walker, who finished roughly 35,000 votes behind Warnock out of nearly 4 million votes cast in the Senate election in the battleground state of Georgia, returned to the campaign trail Thursday, teaming up with conservative Sen. Ted Cruz at a large rally in Canton, a small city about 40 miles north of Atlanta. Walker’s campaign tells Fox News that it plans to be back up on television with an ad later this week.
The Georgia Secretary of State's office announced Wednesday that the Senate election was headed to a runoff since no candidate received over 50% of the vote. According to the latest unofficial and incomplete returns, Warnock was at 49.4%, Walker at 48.5% and Libertarian Party nominee Chase Oliver at 2.1%.
HERSCHEL WALKER, RAPHAEL WARNOCK HEADED TO A RUNOFF IN GEORGIA
Under Georgia law, if no candidate tops 50% of the vote in the general election, the two top vote-getters face off in a runoff, which this cycle is being held four weeks later on Dec. 6.
Warnock, who is the minister at Atlanta’s famed Ebenezer Baptist Church, where Martin Luther King Jr. once preached, narrowly edged Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler in Georgia’s twin Jan. 5, 2021, Senate runoff elections. His victory, along with now-Democratic Sen. Jon Ossoff’s razor-thin win over GOP Sen. David Perdue, gave the Democrats the Senate majority.
Warnock raised an astronomical $103 million for his 2022 re-election campaign, more than doubling the impressive $39 million hauled in by Walker. Warnock's campaign has yet to announce any fundraising hauls the past two days as the recall campaign kicked off.
A Walker campaign source told Fox News that they plan to hold rallies in large-population areas where turnout happens, with the aim to energize supporters of former President Donald Trump, "soft Republicans" and independents to vote in the runoff contest.
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The source said that it would make sense for Trump and for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who is also extremely popular with conservatives nationwide, to stump with Walker in Georgia in the weeks ahead and added that the campaign is looking into the possibility of making that happen. The source added that GOP Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp may join Walker on the campaign trail as early as next week.
Kemp, who comfortably won re-election on Tuesday with an eight-point victory over Democratic challenger Stacey Abrams in a rematch of their 2018 nail-biter, said Wednesday on "Fox and Friends," "I feel very good about getting Herschel across the finish line."
Kemp won roughly 200,000 more votes in his election than Walker did in the Senate contest, and one concern for Republicans is that without the popular Georgia governor on the ballot again on Dec. 6, GOP turnout may suffer.
Also impacting the Georgia runoff is whether the results will determine which party controls the Senate majority.
With votes still being counted in the battleground states of Arizona and Nevada, and those Senate races still too close to call, the Republicans hold a 49-48 edge over the Democrats in the 100-member chamber. If the Republicans or Democrats sweep both of those contests, control of the Senate will be settled.
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However, if the two parties split the contests in Arizona and Nevada, the Senate majority will be at stake in the Georgia runoff election. In Arizona, Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly currently holds a slight lead over GOP challenger Blake Masters, while in Nevada, Republican challenger and former state attorney general Adam Laxalt maintains a razor-thin edge over Democratic Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto.
"If Senate control runs through Georgia, that could overshadow Herschel’s host of hiccups and foibles. If not, it’s a battle of likability and trust, which does not favor him," a veteran Georgia based Republican strategist told Fox News.
"A lot of Republicans held their noses and voted for Herschel, thinking Senate control was on the line. If that is no longer the case in a month, he’s gonna have a problem," argued the source, who asked to remain anonymous to speak more freely.
The National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC), which is the Senate GOP’s campaign arm, announced Wednesday that it and Walker’s campaign are setting up the 2022 Georgia Victory Committee, which is a joint-fundraising committee. An NRSC official told Fox News that it will be running a new commercial on behalf of Walker in Georgia by late Thursday, and that it is immediately deploying staff to the Peach State as it ramps up runoff operations.
The rival Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee (DSCC) announced Thursday a new $7 million field organizing investment in the Georgia runoff, which the Senate Democrats’ campaign arm says will fund direct voter contact programs, beefing up Warnock’s already "robust" field organizing efforts.
"We know talking directly to voters through a strong, well-funded ground-game is critical to winning in Georgia, and we’re wasting no time in kick-starting these programs in the runoff," said DSCC chair Sen. Gary Peters of Michigan.
Warnock, in a fundraising email to supporters, noted that "Donald Trump, [longtime Senate GOP leader] Mitch McConnell, and the entire Republican establishment have spent millions to prop up my opponent, Herschel Walker, and defeat me. And they're about to spend a whole lot more to definitively turn Georgia red."
Walker, in an interview on Fox News’ "Hannity" on Wednesday night, vowed, "I’m going to keep fighting."
Pointing to the Democrats, Walker argued, "I know they’re going to throw more at me, even the kitchen sink, but I can catch it."
Walker, who won a Heisman Trophy and helped steer the University of Georgia to a college football national championship four decades ago, jumped into the GOP race to face off against Warnock in the summer of last year, after months of support and encouragement from former President Donald Trump to run for the Senate. It is Walker's first run for office.
Thanks to his legendary status among many in Georgia and his immense, favorable name recognition in the Peach State, Walker was the overwhelming front-runner for the GOP Senate nomination and basically ignored the field of lesser-known primary rivals, declining to take part in debates as he focused his campaign on Warnock. Walker ended up trouncing his rivals in the May primary, but he quickly came under fire as the general election got underway.
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Walker was heavily criticized both on the campaign trail and in ads over what Democrats call his numerous "bizarre or false statements," and also took fire over numerous reports that he overinflated the success of his businesses and academic record.
Even before he faced bombshell allegations in September and October that he had persuaded and paid for past girlfriends to have abortions — which Walker, who is a vocal opponent of legalized abortion, has repeatedly denied — the candidate was forced to play defense regarding a number of other personal controversies, from the accusations of past abuse and threats against his first wife to acknowledging children he fathered out of wedlock whom he had not previously publicly mentioned, despite having criticized absent fathers for decades.