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Over 1.1 Million Ballots Cast In Early Voting For Georgia U.S. Senate Runoffs


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Reuters

Over 1.1 million ballots cast in early voting for Georgia U.S. Senate runoffs

FILE PHOTO: U.S. President-elect Joe Biden campaigns on behalf of Democratic U.S. Senate candidates Ossoff and Warnock in Atlanta, Georgia U.S. President-elect Joe Biden campaigns on behalf of Democratic U.S. senate candidates Ossoff and Warnock in Atlanta
FILE PHOTO: U.S. President-elect Joe Biden campaigns on behalf of Democratic U.S. Senate candidates Ossoff and Warnock in Atlanta, Georgia U.S. President-elect Joe Biden campaigns on behalf of Democratic U.S. senate candidates Ossoff and Warnock in Atlanta
 
Jason Lange
Fri, December 18, 2020, 7:24 AM EST
 
 

By Jason Lange

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -More than 1.1 million Georgians have voted in twin U.S. Senate runoff elections that will determine which party controls that chamber of Congress, and with it the fate of much of Democratic President-elect Joe Biden's agenda, state data showed on Friday.

The surge in turnout after four days of early in-person voting, and about four weeks of mail-in voting, showed that voter participation in the two races is on pace to rival the records set in the November presidential contest in which Biden defeated Republican incumbent Donald Trump.

State data published on Friday showed the number of accepted ballots was just below the level seen at the same point in early voting for November's election.

Voting in the Senate runoffs, which are taking place because no candidate won 50% support on Nov. 3, ends on Jan. 5.

Biden's razor-thin victory in Georgia last month amid record-high turnout underscored the Southern state's transformation from Republican stronghold to one of the country's most competitive political battlegrounds.

A record 159 million people nationwide voted in November, up from 138 million in the November 2016 elections, according to data compiled by Michael McDonald, a political scientist at the University of Florida. He estimated that nearly 67% of U.S. eligible voters voted last month, the highest share since 1900.

Signs of high turnout in January's Senate contests in Georgia point to another squeaker, analysts said.

"This is going to be a really close election," said McDonald, who is tracking early voting in Georgia.

He said comparing current turnout with the November cycle is tricky. It was possible that voters have crowded the polls to be done with voting ahead of the December holidays.

"It does seem to me like we're in for a higher turnout election than is typical for a runoff," McDonald said.

DEMOCRATS NEED SWEEP

Democrats need to win both contests to achieve a 50-50 split in the Senate, which would give Vice President-elect Kamala Harris the tie-breaking vote. Even one Democratic loss would allow Republicans to keep a razor-thin majority they could use to block many of Biden's legislative goals and judicial nominees.

The runoffs pit Democratic challengers Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff against Republican incumbents Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue, respectively. Perdue won more votes than Ossoff in November, while Warnock won more than Loeffler in a 20-candidate field that also included Republican Congressman Doug Collins. Loeffler and Collins together drew nearly 46% of the vote.

Ballots accepted through Thursday were only just below the 1.2 million that were cast at the same point in the November election, when turnout eventually totaled about 5 million votes.

Roughly 2 million votes were cast in the last runoff for a Senate seat in Georgia, when Republican Saxby Chambliss defeated Democrat Jim Martin in 2008. Nearly 4 million Georgians voted in the 2018 congressional midterm elections.

Republicans have often performed better in low-turnout elections. But voters in both parties appear energized by the stakes in the January contest and each party has poured resources into Georgia ahead of the vote.

Biden returned to the campaign trail on Tuesday to stump for Warnock and Ossoff in Georgia, and Harris will campaign for the Democrats there on Monday. Trump, who has refused to concede that he lost the November election, has also campaigned in Georgia for Perdue and Loeffler, as will his daughter and adviser Ivanka Trump on Monday.

Republicans maintain that holding control of the Senate will help keep Washington from veering hard to the left under Biden.

But Trump's involvement in the contests, and his unsubstantiated claims that Biden won because of widespread voter fraud, could be fueling high turnout among Democrats, according to Jessica Taylor, an analyst at the Cook Political Report who sees the Senate races as toss-ups for either side.

"It's not just Republicans that are enthused to come out to keep a firewall in the Senate, but Democrats (saying) 'We beat Trump and he still won't quit,'" Taylor said.

(Reporting by Jason Lange; Editing by Scott Malone, Mark Heinrich, Rosalba O'Brien and Dan Grebler)

 

https://www.yahoo.com/news/more-1-1-million-ballots-122415721.html

GO RV, then BV

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2 hours ago, Markinsa said:

The article doesn't mention the 50K new registered voters in GA since the Nov3 election. 20k of those voted in this election, which is against Ga law which requires that you voted in the Regular election in order to vote in the Runoff.

There is no such law in Georgia. Anyone that is registered to vote is (by law) allowed to vote in Federal, State and Local runoff elections. 

https://georgia.gov/vote-2020-runoff-elections

 

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21 minutes ago, FINSFAN222 said:

There is no such law in Georgia. Anyone that is registered to vote is (by law) allowed to vote in Federal, State and Local runoff elections. 

https://georgia.gov/vote-2020-runoff-elections

 

 

 

(10) The run-off primary, special primary runoff, run-off election, or special election runoff shall be a continuation of the primary, special primary, election, or special election for the particular office concerned. Only the electors who were duly registered to vote and not subsequently deemed disqualified to vote in the primary, special primary, election, or special election for candidates for that particular office shall be entitled to vote therein, and only those votes cast for the persons designated as candidates in such run-off primary, special primary runoff, run-off election, or special election runoff shall be counted in the tabulation and canvass of the votes cast. No elector shall vote in a run-off primary or special primary runoff in violation of Code Section 21-2-224.
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My son lives in Atl and it’s being reported that college students are being paid to show residency in Ga for the upcoming semester.  These are students from colleges all over the US allegedly.  Take as rumor until I find a link or someone else can.  Why wouldn’t the Dems cheat.  I appears to have worked for Biden.  

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32 minutes ago, Markinsa said:

 

 

(10) The run-off primary, special primary runoff, run-off election, or special election runoff shall be a continuation of the primary, special primary, election, or special election for the particular office concerned. Only the electors who were duly registered to vote and not subsequently deemed disqualified to vote in the primary, special primary, election, or special election for candidates for that particular office shall be entitled to vote therein, and only those votes cast for the persons designated as candidates in such run-off primary, special primary runoff, run-off election, or special election runoff shall be counted in the tabulation and canvass of the votes cast. No elector shall vote in a run-off primary or special primary runoff in violation of Code Section 21-2-224.

Pretty sure they are speaking about Electors within the Electoral College, not "joe-public" voters. 

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9 minutes ago, FINSFAN222 said:

Pretty sure they are speaking about Electors within the Electoral College, not "joe-public" voters. 

 

Pretty sure you are grasping at straws.  This is actually talking about Georgia Election laws This is the Georgia Code (Laws) and has nothing to do with the Electoral College which is part of the US Constitution.

 

.

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48 minutes ago, Pitcher said:

My son lives in Atl and it’s being reported that college students are being paid to show residency in Ga for the upcoming semester.  These are students from colleges all over the US allegedly.  Take as rumor until I find a link or someone else can.  Why wouldn’t the Dems cheat.  I appears to have worked for Biden.  

how are they showing residency? You have to show a home mortgage or utility bill or DL to show that

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Yahoo News

More than 1.3 million votes already cast in key Georgia races

Marquise Francis
Marquise Francis
·National Reporter & Producer
Sun, December 20, 2020, 12:20 PM EST
 
 

ATLANTA — More than 1.3 million people have already cast their ballots in the first week of early voting in the critical Georgia Senate runoff races, according to state election data. After just six days of early in-person voting and about four weeks of mail-in balloting, the unusually high number is just about on track with last month’s historic presidential race turnout in which 5 million Georgians voted.

“Georgians are fired up,” Georgia-based Democratic strategist Greg Nasif told Yahoo News. “While some folks like me will always hold out hope for 100 percent turnout and find disappointment when we inevitably fall short, I think many will be very pleased with how the voters turn out.”

Runoff elections in Georgia, triggered when no candidate wins 50 percent of the November vote, are relatively rare. The last notable runoff in Georgia occurred in 2008, when Republican Saxby Chambliss defeated Democrat Jim Martin. The two runoff races underway right now will determine control of the U.S. Senate and potentially define the arc of the first two years of President-elect Joe Biden’s term.

A voter arrives at the Buckhead library in Atlanta on the first day of In-person early voting for the Georgia Senate runoff election. (Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
A voter arrives at the Buckhead library in Atlanta on the first day of in-person early voting for the Georgia Senate runoff elections. (Jason Armond/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

Republican Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler are looking to keep their seats, while Democratic hopefuls Jon Ossoff and the Rev. Raphael Warnock are trying to unseat the two incumbents and position Georgia as a blue state for years to come. Unless both Ossoff and Warnock win, the GOP will retain its Senate majority and its ability to block much of Biden’s agenda.

Late Saturday evening, President Trump announced he would host a rally on Jan. 4, on the eve of the Jan. 5 election. Trump used the announcement to renew his attacks on Georgia Republicans who reject his false claim that he won the Peach State in the November presidential vote.

“As badly as we were treated in Georgia by the ‘Republican’ Governor and ‘Republican’ Secretary of State, we must have a massive victory for two great people, Kelly Loeffler & David Perdue, on January 5th,” Trump tweeted. “I will be having a big Rally for them on Monday night, January 4th. WIN!”

People gather to listen to President Donald J. Trump in Valdosta, GA United States on December 5, 2020. (Photo by Peter Zay/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
People gather to listen to President Trump in Valdosta, Ga., on Dec. 5. (Photo by Peter Zay/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

Local Republicans are likely to pay close attention to Trump’s message in the closing days of the campaign. If he uses the rally to continue to undermine confidence in the state’s election system, he could be turning off his own voters.

“As the Georgia secretary of state noted, the president’s public hostility toward mail voting cost him in key states, and it’s a significant issue Republicans are seeking to address by telling their people to vote however they can, including absentee,” veteran Republican strategist Liam Donovan told Yahoo News. “If they don’t address this inequity, you could very well see another election-night lead for Republicans eroded as the mail votes roll in.”

Campaigns usually struggle to turn out voters in off-cycle elections, and officials feared the heightened tensions surrounding Trump’s flurry of baseless legal challenges of fraud would dissuade voters from casting ballots. But with high turnout so far, voters appear engaged in the runoff contests.

“The Republicans may have a problem on their hands, with many of their voters convinced the [presidential] election was rigged and Jan. 5 could be rigged again,” Nasif said. “I tend to think those voters will gravitate toward cynicism over consistency, and that angry voters vote.”

About 150,000 people have voted each day of early voting thus far, as a flood of TV ads, giant highway bililboards and other forms of outreach bombard voters across the state.

On the first day of early voting for the January 5th U.S. Senate runoff long lines of Georgia voters form. (Photo by Melina Mara/The Washington Post via Getty Images)
Long lines of Georgia voters form on the first day of early voting for the Jan. 5 U.S. Senate runoffs. (Photo by Melina Mara/Washington Post via Getty Images)

Early data offers some hope for Democrats in the historically Republican state.

About 59 percent of runoff voters so far who also voted in the primary requested Democratic Party ballots, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, while about 39 percent requested GOP ballots.

But one-third of runoff voters didn’t show up for the primary, leaving no record this year of which party they prefer.

Atlanta-based political strategist Fred Hicks told Yahoo News that he believes more legal battles should be expected.

“Unless Republicans win, this election will not be over Jan. 5,” Hicks said. “What we are seeing play out in the presidential election will happen in the Senate race if Democrats win.”

Below are key dates for Georgians to remember ahead of the state’s Senate runoff elections on Jan. 5, 2021:

Key Georgia dates
Key Georgia dates

(Cover thumbnail photo: Jason Armond/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

 

https://news.yahoo.com/more-than-13-million-votes-already-cast-in-key-georgia-races-172012407.html

 

GO RV, then BV

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Just now, Shabibilicious said:
Yahoo News

More than 1.3 million votes already cast in key Georgia races

Marquise Francis
Marquise Francis
·National Reporter & Producer
Sun, December 20, 2020, 12:20 PM EST
 
 

ATLANTA — More than 1.3 million people have already cast their ballots in the first week of early voting in the critical Georgia Senate runoff races, according to state election data. After just six days of early in-person voting and about four weeks of mail-in balloting, the unusually high number is just about on track with last month’s historic presidential race turnout in which 5 million Georgians voted.

“Georgians are fired up,” Georgia-based Democratic strategist Greg Nasif told Yahoo News. “While some folks like me will always hold out hope for 100 percent turnout and find disappointment when we inevitably fall short, I think many will be very pleased with how the voters turn out.”

Runoff elections in Georgia, triggered when no candidate wins 50 percent of the November vote, are relatively rare. The last notable runoff in Georgia occurred in 2008, when Republican Saxby Chambliss defeated Democrat Jim Martin. The two runoff races underway right now will determine control of the U.S. Senate and potentially define the arc of the first two years of President-elect Joe Biden’s term.

A voter arrives at the Buckhead library in Atlanta on the first day of In-person early voting for the Georgia Senate runoff election. (Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
A voter arrives at the Buckhead library in Atlanta on the first day of in-person early voting for the Georgia Senate runoff elections. (Jason Armond/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

Republican Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler are looking to keep their seats, while Democratic hopefuls Jon Ossoff and the Rev. Raphael Warnock are trying to unseat the two incumbents and position Georgia as a blue state for years to come. Unless both Ossoff and Warnock win, the GOP will retain its Senate majority and its ability to block much of Biden’s agenda.

Late Saturday evening, President Trump announced he would host a rally on Jan. 4, on the eve of the Jan. 5 election. Trump used the announcement to renew his attacks on Georgia Republicans who reject his false claim that he won the Peach State in the November presidential vote.

“As badly as we were treated in Georgia by the ‘Republican’ Governor and ‘Republican’ Secretary of State, we must have a massive victory for two great people, Kelly Loeffler & David Perdue, on January 5th,” Trump tweeted. “I will be having a big Rally for them on Monday night, January 4th. WIN!”

People gather to listen to President Donald J. Trump in Valdosta, GA United States on December 5, 2020. (Photo by Peter Zay/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
People gather to listen to President Trump in Valdosta, Ga., on Dec. 5. (Photo by Peter Zay/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

Local Republicans are likely to pay close attention to Trump’s message in the closing days of the campaign. If he uses the rally to continue to undermine confidence in the state’s election system, he could be turning off his own voters.

“As the Georgia secretary of state noted, the president’s public hostility toward mail voting cost him in key states, and it’s a significant issue Republicans are seeking to address by telling their people to vote however they can, including absentee,” veteran Republican strategist Liam Donovan told Yahoo News. “If they don’t address this inequity, you could very well see another election-night lead for Republicans eroded as the mail votes roll in.”

Campaigns usually struggle to turn out voters in off-cycle elections, and officials feared the heightened tensions surrounding Trump’s flurry of baseless legal challenges of fraud would dissuade voters from casting ballots. But with high turnout so far, voters appear engaged in the runoff contests.

“The Republicans may have a problem on their hands, with many of their voters convinced the [presidential] election was rigged and Jan. 5 could be rigged again,” Nasif said. “I tend to think those voters will gravitate toward cynicism over consistency, and that angry voters vote.”

About 150,000 people have voted each day of early voting thus far, as a flood of TV ads, giant highway bililboards and other forms of outreach bombard voters across the state.

On the first day of early voting for the January 5th U.S. Senate runoff long lines of Georgia voters form. (Photo by Melina Mara/The Washington Post via Getty Images)
Long lines of Georgia voters form on the first day of early voting for the Jan. 5 U.S. Senate runoffs. (Photo by Melina Mara/Washington Post via Getty Images)

Early data offers some hope for Democrats in the historically Republican state.

About 59 percent of runoff voters so far who also voted in the primary requested Democratic Party ballots, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, while about 39 percent requested GOP ballots.

But one-third of runoff voters didn’t show up for the primary, leaving no record this year of which party they prefer.

Atlanta-based political strategist Fred Hicks told Yahoo News that he believes more legal battles should be expected.

“Unless Republicans win, this election will not be over Jan. 5,” Hicks said. “What we are seeing play out in the presidential election will happen in the Senate race if Democrats win.”

Below are key dates for Georgians to remember ahead of the state’s Senate runoff elections on Jan. 5, 2021:

Key Georgia dates
Key Georgia dates

(Cover thumbnail photo: Jason Armond/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

 

https://news.yahoo.com/more-than-13-million-votes-already-cast-in-key-georgia-races-172012407.html

 

GO RV, then BV

YAHOO NEWS, come on Shabs do better than that!Best Laughing Face Clip Art #18178 - Clipartion.com

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The Independent

Georgia governor hounded by Trump over election result attends White House Christmas party

 
 
James Crump
Sat, December 19, 2020, 2:28 PM EST
 
 
Georgia governor Brian Kemp removes his face covering before speaking to reporters during a Covid-19 update in the Capitol, Tuesday 8 December  2020, in Atlanta ((Associated Press))
Georgia governor Brian Kemp removes his face covering before speaking to reporters during a Covid-19 update in the Capitol, Tuesday 8 December 2020, in Atlanta ((Associated Press))

Georgia governor Brian Kemp attended a White House Christmas party on Friday, despite President Trump repeatedly criticising him and other state officials for certifying its election results.

On Friday evening, Mr Kemp tweeted a photo of him and his daughter Lucy at the White House Christmas party, standing between elaborate festive decorations.

“Lucy and I had a great time at the @WhiteHouse Christmas Party today. Merry Christmas, everyone!” the governor wrote.

Jenna Ellis, who has led the Trump campaign’s so far fruitless attempts to overturn 3 November’s election results alongside Rudy Giuliani, replied to his tweet, writing: “Seriously?”

 
 

The Hill reported that other supporters of President Trump replied to Mr Kemp’s tweet, criticising him for failing to look into the US president’s baseless claims of voter fraud.

President Trump has publicly criticised Mr Kemp and secretary of state Brad Raffensperger in recent weeks, after he became the first Republican to lose the state in nearly 30 years when he lost to President-elect Joe Biden on 3 November.

Speaking to Fox News in November, President Trump said that he is “ashamed” that he endorsed Mr Kemp for governor in 2018, after claiming that he had “done absolutely nothing” to question the state’s results.

The following day, Mr Trump described Mr Kemp as “hapless” and said he should use his “emergency powers, which can be easily done, to overrule his obstinate Secretary of State,” in reference to Mr Raffensperger.

Mr Kemp has tried to keep out of the public feud, with runoff races in the state scheduled in January to decide which party has control of the US Senate, but his spokesperson said that Georgia law bars him “from interfering in elections.”

Although Mr Biden was declared the winner of the presidential election last month, Mr Trump has repeatedly falsely claimed that there was widespread voter fraud and has still not conceded.

Mr Trump and his team have had more than 50 legal challenges dismissed over the last month, including in Georgia, as he and his allies are still attempting to overturn 3 November’s election results. There is no evidence for the claims.

The governor posted the photo at the White House party on Friday just hours after President Trump had once again criticised him and Mr Raffensperger, calling them “so-called ‘Republicans.”

President Trump also criticised Mr Kemp earlier in the week, when he retweeted a post from a conservative attorney that called for him and Mr Raffensperger to be jailed.

 

On Tuesday, Mr Trump retweeted a tweet from Lin Wood, an attorney who has filed multiple unsuccessful lawsuits in an effort to help the president overturn 3 November’s election results.

“President Trump…is a genuinely good man. He does not really like to fire people. I bet he dislikes putting people in jail, especially ‘Republicans,’” Mr Wood said.

“He gave @BrianKempGA & @GaSecofState every chance to get it right. They refused. They will soon be going to jail,” he added, in the post that was retweeted by President Trump on Tuesday morning. Neither official or the White House responded to the tweet.

On Friday, The New York Times reported that President Trump cancelled a planned visit to Georgia this weekend, to help campaign for Republican senators Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue, ahead of the runoff elections.

A senior Republican official told the Times that the trip was cancelled, because of the president’s continued anger with Mr Kemp and Mr Raffensperger.

 

https://www.yahoo.com/news/georgia-governor-hounded-trump-over-192211767.html

 

GO RV, then BV

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NBC News

Thousands of voters registered for the Georgia Senate races. Who benefits?

 
 
Rezwana Uddin and Stephanie Perry and John Lapinski
Mon, December 21, 2020, 10:44 AM EST
 
 

With early voting underway in the Georgia Senate runoffs, almost 70,000 voters have newly registered in the state, according to TargetSmart voter data analyzed by NBC News.

Experts and those in both parties generally agree that slight shifts in turnout will determine who wins these two races on Jan. 5, given how close the results were for the presidential and Senate contests in the general election.

The NBC analysis found that 67,135 newly registered voters with no general election vote history were added to the list of potential voters for the upcoming runoffs. These voters were registered between Nov. 4 and the state registration deadline on Dec. 7.

There are 7,729,838 total registered voters in Georgia.

The runoff stakes are high: If Democrats win both contests they will take control of the Senate. One race features GOP Sen. David Perdue against Democrat Jon Ossoff and the other pits Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler against Democratic challenger Raphael Warnock.

The big question, of course, is whether the Democrats or Republicans gain an edge with this group of new voters. The new registration numbers point to a slight advantage for the Democrats and, while this is encouraging for the party, the advantage is small, and slight shifts in turnout among those who participated in the general election could make such minor gains inconsequential.

Looking only at newly registered voters, 29,850, or 44 percent, are affiliated with Democrats, according to TargetSmart modeled partisanship from multiple commercial sources. An additional 27,455 voters, or 41 percent, are affiliated with Republicans and 9,830, or 15 percent, are not affiliated with either party.

Overall, 52 percent majority of newly registered Georgia voters are men (34,638), compared with 48 percent (32,291) who are women.

Young voters — a strong Democratic voting bloc — are likely to play a key role in the Georgia runoffs, either because they weren't eligible to vote in November but have since had birthdays making them able to vote in January, or because of pure enthusiasm.

The data shows a plurality of newly registered Georgians are between 18 and 29 years old. Thirty nine percent of those who registered to vote after the general election are under 30 (25,950). Another 18 percent (12,123) are between 30 and 39, 13 percent (8,938) are between 40 and 49, 18 percent (11,984) are between 50 and 64 and 12 percent (8,131) are 65 and over.

While white voters make up 52 percent (35,021) of new registrants, Black voters make up a sizable 34 percent (22,970) of new registered voters. Hispanic voters in Georgia make up 5 percent (3,654) of new registered voters and Asian Americans are 4 percent (2,737).

Looking at the top four counties with the highest number of voters who registered after Nov. 3 — Fulton, Gwinnett, Cobb and DeKalb — at least four in 10 newly registered voters in each of the counties are under 30 years old. In all four of the counties, Joe Biden easily beat President Donald Trump.

In Fulton County, 72 percent of newly registered voters are affiliated with the Democratic Party, while 17 percent are affiliated with the Republican Party. Fifty percent of newly registered voters are Black and 35 percent are white.

In DeKalb County, 47 percent of newly registered voters are Black and 34 percent are white. Biden had an over 40-point advantage over Trump in both counties in the general election.

In Gwinnett County, where Biden outperformed Trump by 18 points, compared to a six-point advantage for Hillarious Clinton in 2016, 51 percent of newly registered voters are affiliated with Democrats and 28 percent are affiliated with Republicans. Thirty-four percent of newly registered voters in Gwinnett County are white and 33 percent are Black.

In Cobb County, where Biden outpaced Trump by 14 points, compared with a two-point margin for Clinton in 2016, 46 percent of newly registered voters are affiliated with Democrats and 36 percent are affiliated with Republicans. Forty eight percent of newly registered voters are white and 33 percent are Black.

In Henry County, a suburb of Atlanta where Biden trounced the president by more than 20 points (compared with a four-point advantage for Clinton in 2016), 62 percent of newly registered voters are affiliated with Democrats and 22 percent are affiliated with Republicans.

Black voters make up 52 percent of newly registered voters in Henry County. White voters make up 34 percent of the new registrants there.

 

https://www.yahoo.com/news/thousands-voters-registered-georgia-senate-135326528.html

 

GO RV, then BV

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First off.....Trumps claims are not baseless....(of course that's the spin of the very corrupt MSM...)

 

There is so much evidence you'd have to be blind and deaf not to at least want additional information......

 

But then again....the MSM and Social Media.....that's  their job.....to keep America blind and deaf...!

 

Georgia should be very well observed......time will tell....

 

Biden won't be in office 2 years, if at all......his intended position was as a place card for Harris....

 

JMO.   CL

 

 

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