Walk into any small‑town breakfast house on a Monday morning the kind with the mismatched coffee mugs, a waitress who already knows your order, and a bell on the door that never stops ringing and you’ll hear the kind of truth folks don’t say on TV.
Somewhere between the first cup of coffee and the second round of biscuits, somebody will bring up politics. And before long, the conversation always circles back to the same thing:
There’s a whole lot of Georgians living in the projects, in old mill housing, in trailer parks tucked behind the pines and politics barely gives ’em the time of day.
These aren’t strangers. These are the folks sitting two tables over, eating grits before heading to work. Folks raising kids, caring for their people, trying to stretch a paycheck that’s already spoken for. But somewhere along the way, they got treated like they don’t count.
Both parties chase the voters in the subdivisions with the fresh mulch and the matching mailboxes. Meanwhile, the folks in government housing or a single‑wide with a patched roof get talked about like they’re a statistic instead of somebody waiting on their eggs over easy.
But anybody in that breakfast house will tell you straight:
These folks matter just as much as anybody else in this state.
Their vote counts the same.
Their struggles are real.
And the decisions made in Atlanta hit them quicker than most.
A lot of these families live in rural Georgia, not the big cities, not the places with four grocery stores and a Starbucks. They’re in the towns where the breakfast house is the community bulletin board, where everybody knows who’s sick, who’s hurting, and who needs a hand. Some get public assistance. Some don’t. But all of them get judged by people who’ve never stepped foot where they live.
And here’s the part that gets folks shaking their heads over their hash browns:
These are the people most affected by public policy, but the least likely to be talked to by anybody running for office.
Names come up over coffee, depending on who’s been in the news.
Some folks mention Michael Thurmond, talking about how people say he’s spent decades working in communities across Georgia.
Others bring up Geoff Duncan, noting how he’s often described as someone who talks about moderation and bridging divides.
And sometimes you’ll hear newcomer Josh McLaurin’s name from folks who follow state politics closely and know he’s built a base in the northern metro suburbs.
But no matter whose name gets tossed around, the conversation always lands in the same spot:
“How you expect folks to show up for you when you ain’t never showed up for them?”
Low turnout in these neighborhoods ain’t about not caring. It’s about being worn down. It’s about folks who’ve been ignored so long they don’t believe anybody in politics sees them. It’s about juggling kids, bills, health problems, and two jobs and voting feels like one more thing that won’t change a thing.
That’s not apathy. That’s life talking.
And it’s on us, not them, to close that gap.
If Georgia wants a politics that reflects the whole state, then we’ve got to stop acting like the projects and the trailer parks don’t count. These communities deserve respect. They deserve to be heard. They deserve leaders who show up more than once every four years.
Ignoring them hasn’t worked.
Talking down to them hasn’t worked.
Pretending they don’t exist sure hasn’t worked.
What does work is simple:
Show up. Listen. Treat folks like neighbors. Talk about the things that hit their kitchen table.... rent, utilities, healthcare, childcare, transportation, and keeping a roof over their head.
Georgia can’t afford to leave these folks behind.
And neither can its democracy.


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