At inflammatory rally, Trump allies call for Georgians to ‘not vote’ in Senate runoff
There were unmistakable signs Wednesday of a growing rift in the Republican Party as allies of Trump -- still fastened to the idea that the 2020 election was rigged -- implored a large crowd of supporters to forget about the pivotal Georgia runoff elections.

Urging Georgians to make clear "you will not vote until you know your votes are secure," Trump ally Sidney Powell told a large and boisterous crowd in Atlanta to focus their energy instead on protesting officials from both parties who she blames for a global conspiracy to throw the election. The widely debunked conspiracy involving the company that makes voting machines is also the premise of her multi-state legal effort.
"There should not be a run-off, at least on Dominion machines," Powell said.
The message could not be further at odds with a national Republican drive to back two GOP candidates who were forced into runoff elections for the state's two U.S. Senate seats -- the outcome of which will determine control of the chamber.
The "Stop the Steal" rally at an Atlanta-area park also featured conservative lawyer Lin Wood, who used the platform to push baseless and outlandish claims about fraud in the 2020 election and generated a huge response with cries for a revolt to put Trump back in office.

Wood, wearing a red MAGA hat, at one point called for the Republican governor of Georgia to be locked up and urged rally-goers to protest outside Brian Kemp's house. The incendiary language came just one day after Gabriel Sterling, a top official in the GOP secretary of state's office in Georgia, made a passionate plea for civility and rebuked Trump for not condemning threats of violence against people overseeing the voting system in his state.
"I want you to go to the governor's mansion, I want you to circle it ... until Brian Kemp comes out and orders a special session of the GA legislature ... then as far as I'm concerned, lock him up," Wood told the excited crowd, which then erupted in "lock him up!" chants.
"I state as a matter of fact you are a criminal," Wood repeated about Kemp. "You need to go to jail."
Powell used similarly inflammatory language in urging the crowd to "flood" Georgia lawmakers with phone calls and letters to protest the certification of the election.
The rally in Georgia was organized by the same "Stop the Steal" group that has been protesting the election results across the country since the election, promoting baseless claims of widespread fraud and urging legislatures to overturn the results.
"Stop the Steal" is a pro-Trump group that quickly emerged flowing the 2020 election fueled by baseless claims of widespread voter fraud. It's led by popular pro-Trump social media activists and has been organizing "stop the steal" rallies around the country calling for the results to be overturned.
Sterling responded to the rally in a press conference Wednesday.
"I find it interesting that somebody who's had a Democrat voting record since 2004 is out there telling Republicans not to vote in an election," he said. "We encourage all voters to vote in an election -- Democrat, Republican, Independent, Green, socialist, you know, Libertarian, whatever party you want to be -- go out and exercise your vote because that's your right as an American."
Sterling also shot down Powell's claims about votes being switched as "not true" and noted that there was also a by-hand audit in the state.
-ABC News' Will Steakin, Olivia Rubin and Quinn Scanlan







