Sky among WNBA teams with players urging Georgians to vote against Dream co-owner

Kelly Loeffler is running to keep her seat in the U.S. Senate.

SHARE Sky among WNBA teams with players urging Georgians to vote against Dream co-owner
Members of the Phoenix Mercury and Los Angeles Sparks stand for a moment of silence in honor of Breonna Taylor before a game last month.

Members of the Phoenix Mercury and Los Angeles Sparks stand for a moment of silence in honor of Breonna Taylor before a game last month.

Phelan M. Ebenhack/AP

BRADENTON, Fla. — WNBA players urged people to vote against Atlanta Dream co-owner Kelly Loeffler, a Republican U.S. senator running to keep her seat in Georgia.

Loeffler, who spoke out publicly against the league’s social justice plans and sent a letter to WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert objecting to the initiatives to honor the Black Lives Matter movement once the season began last month, is facing opposition from Raphael Warnock. He is a Black pastor in Atlanta.

Players from the Atlanta team, as well as players from the Sky, Seattle Storm and Phoenix Mercury, wore “Vote Warnock” on T-shirts before their games on Tuesday.

“It’s funny I was counting them as they got off the bus,” Dream coach Nicki Collen said. “How many of them can’t vote in the state of Georgia? There’s some irony in that.

“Their camaraderie saying they are in this together. I certainly didn’t have any part in that. That’s something the players came up with themselves and wasn’t alerted until I saw the T-shirts come in. Didn’t have anything to do with players association and league in any way. That’s the players doing that. It’s their way to remind people that Black Lives Matter.”

Storm point guard Sue Bird, a four-time Olympic gold medalist, came up with the idea, and players had conference calls with Warnock before the show of support.

Dream forward Elizabeth Williams used social media to explain the decision.

“We are @WNBA players, but like the late, great John Lewis said, we are also ordinary people with extraordinary vision,” Williams tweeted. “@ReverendWarnock has spent his life fighting for the people and we need him in Washington. Join the movement for a better Georgia at Warnockforgeorgia.com.”

Loeffler had a different perspective, blasting the league in a statement Tuesday night blast and decrying what she calls “cancel culture.”

“This is just more proof that the out of control cancel culture wants to shut out anyone who disagrees with them. It’s clear that the league is more concerned with playing politics than basketball,” she said.

Warnock has been endorsed by a slate of state and national Democratic leaders. He also issued a statement in response to the support.

“Senator Loeffler and those like her who seek to silence and dismiss others when they speak up for justice have planted themselves on the wrong side of history,” Warnock said. “We are in a moment of generational, transformative change, and there is no place in that movement for bigotry. We celebrate the courage and resolve of these players standing for justice, and I am proud to stand with them.”

Loeffler is a wealthy businesswoman who took office earlier this year after being appointed to the Senate by Republican Gov. Brian Kemp. Warnock is pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, where the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. once preached.

They are two of the top candidates in a crowded field running in a Nov. 3 special election for Loeffler’s seat. All candidates will face off against each other in one big jumble in November. If no candidate tops 50% of the vote, the top two finishers will advance to a runoff in January.

Other top candidates in the race include Republican U.S. Rep. Doug Collins and Democrat Matt Lieberman, the son of former senator and vice presidential candidate Joe Lieberman.

Loeffler was chosen by Kemp in part to appeal toward suburban women, who have drifted away from the Republican party since President Donald Trump’s election. But after Collins, a Trump loyalist popular with the conservative base in Georgia, joined the race in January, Loeffler has increasingly staked out staunchly conservative positions to guard against attacks from the right.

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