Sunday, March 15, 2026

The Hidden Mike Thurmond Vote Everyone Is Missing

Every election cycle, we get a fresh round of polling that claims to show where the Democratic primary for Governor stands. And right now, those early numbers have Keisha Lance Bottoms sitting on a comfortable lead. But if you’ve watched Georgia Democratic primaries long enough, especially outside the Atlanta media bubble you know those toplines rarely tell the whole story.

There’s a quiet factor in this race that isn’t being measured yet: the Mike Thurmond vote.

Not the loud, online, hyper-engaged crowd. Not the folks who answer every poll. I’m talking about the voters who actually decide May primaries in this state, the ones who don’t show up in early surveys but absolutely show up at the ballot box.

And that gap between what polls capture and who actually votes may end up being the difference.

Rural and Small County Democrats Are Underrepresented in Early Polling

Anyone who has worked a rural county meeting or knocked doors in small towns knows this: these voters don’t always pick up the phone for pollsters, but they vote with consistency. They’re older, they’re loyal to the party, and they value a long record of public service. That’s a lane where Thurmond has historically performed well.

Name Recognition Isn’t the Same as Primary Strength

Bottoms’ early lead is driven heavily by name ID  something any former mayor of Atlanta


naturally carries. But name ID doesn’t automatically translate into:

- Trust  

- Coalition reach  

- Or the ability to win outside Metro Atlanta 

Primary voters, especially in May, tend to be more pragmatic and less swayed by celebrity or headlines.

Undecided Voters Are Shrinking and They aren’t Breaking Evenly

As undecided voters start making choices, they often gravitate toward candidates with broader appeal across regions and demographics. That’s where a candidate like Thurmond historically gains ground. Early polls rarely capture that late movement.

Primary Electorates Are Unique

The May Democratic primary electorate is not the same as the November general electorate. It skews:

- Older  

- More consistent  

- More policy‑focused  

- Less online  

These voters show up rain or shine, and they tend to reward candidates with long-standing relationships in their communities.

A Quiet Coalition Is Forming

Talk to Democrats across the state, rural organizers, suburban pragmatists, older Black voters, labor folks, education advocates and you’ll hear a similar theme: there’s interest in a candidate with a governing record, not just name recognition.

That coalition doesn’t make noise on social media, but it shows up when it counts.

The Bottom Line I'm trying to make is polls are a snapshot, not a prediction. And right now, they’re missing a key piece of the picture: the quiet but very real Mike Thurmond vote that doesn’t show up in early surveys but does show up in May.

As we move closer to the Democratic Primary, that undercounted coalition may be the factor that reshapes this race.

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