LAS VEGAS — Republican megadonor Miriam Adelson has contributed $1 million to Gov. Brian Kemp's super PAC, according to federal campaign finance records, a development that appears to be helping presidential nominee Donald Trump in battleground Georgia and showing evidence of his rapprochement with Kemp.
The influx of cash will help fuel Kemp's robust get-out-the-vote operation in the state on behalf of the former president and other Republicans. In 2020, Trump lost Georgia by 11,779 votes — roughly three-tenths of a percentage point. Trump's 2024 contest with Democratic nominee Kamala Harris is viewed as extremely competitive.
The contribution also opens the relationship between the Georgia governor and Adelson, one of the nation's top Republican donors and the widow of the late casino magnate Sheldon Adelson.
Her contribution is at least a small measure that Trump and Kemp have achieved at least an uneasy peace. The two have disagreed publicly in recent years, especially about Trump's defeat in Georgia in 2020.
Trump still argues falsely that he won Georgia four years ago, making unproven and debunked claims of voter fraud, something he consistently brings up as he campaigns to return to the White House.
Kemp, who refused to stop the certification of the 2020 vote, has repeatedly pressed Trump publicly to move on.
Efforts to bridge the rift began in late August after Trump railed against the governor for nearly 10 minutes during a Georgia campaign rally. During the Atlanta event, Trump derided Kemp as ''a bad guy," ''disloyal'' and ''a very average governor,'' despite Kemp beating Trump's hand-picked GOP primary challenger to him, David Perdue, by more than 625,000 votes and almost 52 percentage points in 2022.
At the same rally, Trump also mocked Kemp's wife Marty, who had said she planned to write in Kemp's name for president in 2024.