ATLANTA — It's the biggest mystery in Georgia politics right now: Who's paying for the attacks on Republican Lt. Gov. Burt Jones?
Someone operating under the name ''Georgians for Integrity'' has dumped around $5 million into television ads, mailers and texts. The attacks claim Jones, who already has President Donald Trump's endorsement in his run for governor next year, has been using his office to enrich himself.
For any Georgian settling down to watch a football game, the ads have been nearly inescapable since Thanksgiving. They're the opening shot in the public battle for the Republican nomination that will be settled in May's primary election. But the ads also show how dark money is influencing politics not only at the national level but in the states, with secretive interests dropping big sums seeking to shift public opinion.
The Jones campaign is hopping mad, threatening legal action against television stations if they don't stop airing ads that a lawyer calls ''demonstrably false'' and slanderous.
So far, the ads remain on air.
''They want to be anonymous, spend a lot of money, and create a lot of lies about myself and my family,'' Jones told WSB-AM in an interview Dec. 16, calling the ads ''fabricated trash.''
Attorney General Chris Carr and Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, Jones' top rivals for the Republican nomination, say they are not involved in the attacks. All three want to succeed Republican Gov. Brian Kemp, who can't run again because of term limits. There are also multiple Democrats vying for the state's top office.
Dark money marches on