southernhybrid
Contributor
That graph shows black turnout at almost exactly 34%: the portion of blacks in the state. Is that good news because blacks usually have low turnout?
With blacks voting heavily for the humans, as many as 65 or 70% of whites could vote for the monsters and the human candidates would win in a landslide! Doug Jones was elected as Alabama Senator with less than 20% support from white men without degrees — whites overwhelmingly voted for the pederast. Keep these facts in mind when a claim is made that white voters in the South are increasingly humane or rational.
It's the young voters who haven't been turning out yet, and supposedly 2/3rds of them trend Democrat. One of my concerns is that something like 100K of Republicans in Georgia voted for Biden in the general. It's doubtful that these same people will vote for the two Democrats in the runoff. Some probably will, but will it be a large enough percentage to matter?
And then there is this, which I've been expecting.
https://www.ajc.com/politics/get-ready-georgia-more-election-drama-expected-after-senate-runoffs/QLGVE463RVHKTEVD7ZO3MLS5VY/
Georgia’s extraordinarily thin partisan divide set the stage for rampant misinformation, lawsuits and fights over election integrity after the presidential election.
With control of the Senate on the line Jan. 5, elections officials are bracing for a new round of drama — especially if the races are as close as polls, analysts and the campaigns suggest they will be.
President Donald Trump has warred with state leaders and elections officials for weeks following his narrow defeat here, even though flipping Georgia wouldn’t be enough to reverse Joe Biden’s White House victory.
Imagine, though, an equally tight margin in the twin runoffs, which have attracted unprecedented spending and attention with the fate of Biden’s legislative agenda at stake. Gabriel Sterling, the state’s voting system manager, is preparing for such a drawn-out scenario.
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution interviewed more than a dozen state officials, voting rights experts and party leaders who are quietly gearing up for a tortured election aftermath even while the U.S. Senate runoff campaigns are in full swing.
Their message: Brace yourselves, Georgia voters. These races might not be settled for weeks.
Once again, there could be drawn-out legal battles that seek to challenge the election results, restrict counting of certain ballots and allow others to be tallied.
Once again, there could be an unwavering stream of misinformation infecting the social discourse, requiring elections officials, voting rights groups and the news media to work overtime to play Whac-A-Mole with falsehoods that spread virally on social media.
And once again, officials are preparing for the threat of violence after the election — no idle concern after this chaotic campaign season. Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger required a security detail after he and his wife received death threats; some low-level county elections workers targeted by conspiracy theorists had to go into hiding.
There's a lot more in the linked article, but you get the idea. This election is probably going to be a mess.