Tuesday, March 24, 2026

The Timber’s Gone, the Paychecks Are Thin, and Rural Georgia Is Holding On

Folks who grew up around Georgia’s woods and fields know the truth: the timber industry still hasn’t gotten back on its feet since Hurricane Helene tore through this state. Entire stands that took generations to grow were snapped like matchsticks. And just when growers were trying to regroup, another blow landed, the closure of International Paper mills along the coast, including the one I worked in.



For a lot of families, that wasn’t just a job loss. It was the end of a way of life.


And the hits didn’t stop there.


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A $75 Billion Giant Under Strain


Agriculture is Georgia’s backbone, a $75 billion sector that touches everything from:


- Poultry  

- Peaches  

- Peanuts  

- Timber  

- The Georgia Ports  

- Inland ports  

- Food processing  

- Agribusiness up and down the line  


But the last several years have been rough. Many producers, especially small, Black, and first‑generation farmers say they’ve been squeezed by federal decisions, trade disruptions, and market instability. When you stack that on top of storm damage and mill closures, you get an industry that’s still standing but carrying a heavy load.


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A Republican‑Leaning Industry Facing Hard Realities


Roughly three‑quarters of Georgia’s agricultural community traditionally votes Republican. That’s been the pattern for decades. But this year feels different not because of party labels, but because the problems hitting farmers are local, immediate, and personal:


- Timber growers with nowhere to send their wood  

- Row‑crop farmers battling input costs  

- Black and first‑generation farmers fighting for access and fairness  

- Rural counties losing jobs tied to forestry and paper  

- Ports and logistics networks adjusting to global uncertainty  


When the ground shifts under your boots, you start looking for leaders who understand the dirt you’re standing on.


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A New Kind of Voice Rising From South Georgia


That’s why some folks are paying attention to younger growers and first‑generation farmers stepping into the conversation. People who actually farm. People who know the price of seed, the cost of diesel, and the heartbreak of watching a storm undo years of work.


One of those voices is South Georgia farmer Sedrick Rowe  a first‑generation grower, a young Black farmer, and someone who understands the stakes from the ground up. His story resonates with producers who feel overlooked, unheard, or left behind by decisions made far from the fields they work.



In a year when the timber industry is still hurting, when mills have closed, when storms have reshaped entire counties, and when farmers feel like they’re carrying the load alone, rural Georgia may be more open than usual to someone who speaks their language.



The Bottom Line here is that Georgia agriculture is at a crossroads.  

The timber hasn’t fully recovered.  

The mills are gone.  

The storms keep coming.  

And the people who feed, build, and supply this state are looking for answers.


This year’s election won’t just be about politics.  

It’ll be about survival, stability, and who understands the weight rural Georgia is carrying. 

Why the Sexiest Races Keep Costing Democrats the Ones That Matter

If you grew up in Georgia politics, you know names like Ben Fortson, Tommy Irvin, and Zell Miller weren’t just officeholders, they were institutions. They built trust, shaped policy, and anchored the Democratic brand in every corner of the state. Their strength came from something simple: down‑ballot offices mattered, and the party treated them that way.



Somewhere along the way, that balance shifted. In recent years, Democrats in Georgia have poured most of their energy, money, and attention into the “big” races... Governor, U.S. Senate, President — while the offices that touch people’s daily lives have been left running on fumes. It wasn’t intentional, but it’s had consequences.


Here’s how we got here.


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The National Spotlight Pulled Everything Upward


Once Georgia became competitive at the federal level, national groups flooded the state with money and organizers. And when national money shows up, it goes straight to the top of the ticket.  

- Senate races became multi‑million‑dollar spectacles.  

- Presidential cycles turned Georgia into a national battleground.  

- Donors and volunteers followed the noise.


Down‑ballot candidates, the ones who actually shape agriculture policy, utilities, education oversight, and local governance, were left trying to build campaigns with pocket change.


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A Weak Party Infrastructure Made the Problem Worse


After Democrats lost the Governor’s office in 2002, the party spent years fractured and underfunded. Grassroots groups did most of the rebuilding, but the institutional muscle that once supported candidates up and down the ballot never fully returned.


When your foundation is shaky, you chase the races that attract the most attention. That meant the top of the ticket got the spotlight, while the rest of the ballot got whatever was left.


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Voters Lost Sight of What Down‑Ballot Offices Actually Do


Georgia’s ballot is long, and many voters don’t know what the Public Service Commission does or why the Agriculture Commissioner matters.  

If voters don’t understand the office, they don’t prioritize it.  

If they don’t prioritize it, donors don’t either.  

And if donors don’t, campaigns can’t build.


It’s a cycle that feeds itself.


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The Cost of Running Statewide Skyrocketed


Modern statewide campaigns cost more than ever. Big donors want “impact per dollar,” and national groups want races that shift federal power. That leaves down‑ballot candidates who often need just a fraction of the resources struggling to get noticed.


Ironically, these are the races where a little investment can flip entire policy areas for a decade.


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Success at the Top Reinforced the Imbalance


When Democrats flipped Georgia in 2020 and won the Senate runoffs in 2021, the national narrative became simple:


Georgia = federal battleground.


That narrative brought even more money and attention to the top of the ticket, while the offices that shape everyday life... utilities, agriculture, labor, education, insurance stayed in the shadows.


Even recent Democratic wins on the Public Service Commission didn’t break through the noise the way they should have.


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The Bottom Line


Georgia Democrats didn’t devalue down‑ballot races on purpose. They got swept into a nationalized political environment where:

- Money flows upward  

- Media attention flows upward  

- Organizing flows upward  

- And the party’s infrastructure wasn’t strong enough to counterbalance it  


But the lesson from Fortson, Irvin, Miller, and every other Georgia giant is still true today:


Real power is built from the bottom up.  

Not from the sexiest race on the ballot but from the ones that shape how people live, work, farm, drive, and pay their bills.


If Democrats want long‑term success in Georgia, the path runs straight through the down‑ballot. 

Zola Thurmond: The Quiet Backbone of a Georgia Statesman

Every election season brings a fresh batch of names, new voices, and plenty of talk about who’s stepping up to lead Georgia next. But anybody raised in the rural South knows something the headlines rarely mention: behind every steady public servant, there’s usually somebody just outside the spotlight keeping the ground level and the mission straight.



For Michael Thurmond, that somebody is his wife, Zola Thurmond.


Most folks know Michael from his decades of public service, the schools he’s helped, the communities he’s worked with, the way he carries himself through Georgia politics with patience and a long memory. But if you’ve ever watched him move through a room, shake hands, or shoulder the weight of public life without losing his center, you can see the imprint of the woman standing beside him.


Zola isn’t loud. She isn’t flashy. She isn’t trying to be the main character. She doesn’t have to be.


Her presence speaks for itself... quiet strength, grounded spirit, and a steadiness that comes from knowing exactly who she is and what she stands on. In a political world that can feel like noise piled on top of more noise, Zola brings the kind of calm you can’t manufacture.


She’s the kind of partner our elders used to talk about, the one who keeps the home steady, the values rooted, and the mission focused. The one who understands that leadership isn’t just about the person holding the microphone. It’s about the foundation that person stands on.


And make no mistake: Zola Thurmond is part of that foundation.


Here in Georgia, we spend a lot of time talking about candidates, platforms, and policy. But we don’t always talk about the people who help shape the character of those leaders, the ones who walk with them through the long nights, the tough calls, and the seasons when public service demands more than most folks will ever see.


Zola’s story is a reminder that leadership is rarely a one‑person show. It’s a partnership. A shared calling. A steadying force that keeps the work grounded in something real.



A Rural Georgia Anecdote to Bring It Home


If you’ve ever spent time in a small Georgia town, you know the type of woman I’m talking about. The one who slips into the church fellowship hall early to make sure the tables are set, then sits quietly in the back during the program. The one who knows everybody’s mama, remembers who lost a loved one last month, and brings a casserole without being asked.


I remember sitting on a porch in Crawford County years ago with my friend, the late Jay Stalnaker listening to an old farmer talk about his wife. He said, “Son, I do the talking, but she’s the one who keeps this whole place from falling apart.” He wasn’t joking. She walked out with some sweet tea, nodded at him, and he straightened up like the governor had just stepped onto the porch.


That’s the kind of quiet influence Zola carries, the kind that doesn’t need a microphone to be felt.


As Georgia heads into another important election cycle, it’s worth pausing to recognize the people who help shape the leaders we talk about every day. Zola Thurmond is one of those people, a woman whose grace, resilience, and quiet influence have been part of Michael Thurmond’s journey long before the public ever knew his name.


In a world that rewards noise, she stands out by doing the opposite.


And around here, that’s something worth tipping your hat to.

Monday, March 23, 2026

The Back Roads Didn’t Turn Red. Democrats Left Them for Dead.

Georgia Democrats Didn’t Lose Rural Voters — They Abandoned Them.


Since 1968, the Republican Party has pulled off one of the most effective political realignments in modern American history. They convinced rural white men that they, not the Democratic Party, were the true defenders of their values even as Republican economic policies hollowed out the very communities those voters call home.

They did it through cultural identity.  

Guns.  
Symbolism.  
Grievance.  
A sense of “us versus them.”

And for many rural white men, that message stuck.

But it wasn’t always this way.

From FDR through Jimmy Carter, Democrats were the party of the farmer, the mill worker, the mechanic, the teacher, the factory hand, the blue‑collar backbone of rural America. Even in the 1990s, Bill Clinton managed to bring many of those voters back after the party drifted culturally left in the 1980s.

Today, with the MAGA movement gripping a large share of white male voters, the question is whether Democrats have the will and the courage to put their big‑boy britches on and make a serious play for voters who were once conservative Democrats, Reagan Democrats, or part of the Obama 2008 coalition

To understand the challenge, you have to look at Georgia.

The Collapse of the Old Georgia Democratic Coalition

For decades, Georgia Democrats held together a powerful coalition:  

Rural white Democrats + urban Black Democrats.

That coalition was held together by one man more than any other House Speaker Tom Murphy, the iron horse of Bremen.

Murphy understood rural Georgia. He understood its culture, its pride, its stubbornness, and its sense of identity. As long as he was in power, the coalition held.

But when Murphy lost in 2002, the entire structure collapsed like a house of cards.
    
That same year, Roy Barnes a popular incumbent was defeated in a stunning upset. The spark? His decision to change the state flag, which for many rural white Georgians was a cultural symbol tied to heritage and defiance. That moment accelerated a political migration already underway. 


After 2005, Democrats didn’t just lose rural Georgia  they walked away from it.  
No backup plan.  
No long‑term strategy.  
No investment.  

The once‑dominant Georgia Democratic Party became a shell of itself, increasingly mirroring the national party in tone and style. That shift further alienated moderate and conservative Democrats who had been the backbone of rural support.

Meanwhile, Republicans filled the vacuum with cultural messaging that resonated deeply in rural communities.

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Twenty‑Five Years Later: Georgia Has Changed, But the Math Hasn’t

Georgia today is not the Georgia of 2002.  
It’s younger, more diverse, more suburban, and more competitive.

But here’s the truth:  
Democrats cannot win statewide consistently without improving in rural Georgia.

Two things must happen:

1. Democrats must re‑engage rural white voters instead of running from them.
Not to win them outright, that’s not realistic in the short term  but to lose them by less.  
A shift from 80–20 to 70–30 in rural counties can flip statewide races.

2. Democrats must activate the 600,000 to 800,000 unregistered minority voters in Georgia.
This is the other half of the equation.  

You can’t build a statewide majority without both:

- Rebuilding rural margins, and  
- Maximizing urban and suburban turnout.

One without the other is a losing formula.

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Where Do Michael Thurmond and Jason Moon Fit Into This?

When people talk about Democrats who could help reopen the rural door, two names often come up: Michael Thurmond and Jason Moon. Not as magic bullets, but as examples of the kind of candidates who can speak across cultural lines.

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Michael Thurmond: The Steady Hand With Cross‑Cultural Reach

Observers often point out that Thurmond carries something rare in modern politics:  
credibility in both rural and urban Georgia.

People in rural counties know him from his decades of work in labor, education, and workforce development. He talks about work, wages, and opportunity not national culture‑war noise. Older rural voters respect his longevity and remember the era when Democrats still dominated Georgia politics.

He’s the kind of Democrat who can soften resistance, rebuild trust, and cut into the rural margins that have been bleeding for two decades.

Not flip rural Georgia but make it competitive enough to matter.

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Jason Moon: The Potential Breakthrough With Working‑Class Men

Moon is often described differently not as the old‑school bridge, but as the new‑school breakthrough.

His background and tone resonate with working‑class men who often feel ignored by the party. He presents a culturally familiar profile without trying to imitate rural voters or talk down to them. He represents generational change, and he speaks in a way that feels grounded, not scripted.

He’s the kind of candidate who could connect with voters Democrats haven’t reached in years, especially men who respond to authenticity, work ethic, and straight talk.

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Why These Two Matter

Georgia Democrats need two things at once:

- a statewide figure who can reopen the conversation in rural Georgia, and  
- down‑ballot candidates who can walk through the door once it’s cracked open.

In that framework:

- Thurmond is the steady hand who can reduce the rural deficit.  
- Moon is the fresh voice who can break through with voters the party hasn’t reached in a generation.

Together, they represent two different but complementary paths into rural Georgia.

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The Path Forward

If Democrats want to compete again at the state level, they must:

- show up in rural communities consistently  
- speak plainly about work, wages, hospitals, and infrastructure  
- respect rural identity instead of avoiding it  
- rebuild trust that was lost over decades  
- invest in long‑term organizing, not election‑year parachuting  
- expand the electorate by registering and mobilizing minority voters  

This isn’t a one‑cycle project.  
It’s a generational one.

But the alternative is simple:  
Stay in the wilderness.


Rural Georgia Knows the Difference Between Calluses and Cosplay

There’s something I’ve never been able to wrap my head around.

I spend a lot of time talking with folks across rural South Georgia people who work 50, 60 hours a week, who stretch a paycheck as far as it’ll go, who know the price of groceries down to the penny. These are the people who keep this state running. They don’t have safety nets. They don’t have trust funds. They’ve got grit, calluses, and responsibilities.



And I can’t imagine one of them waking up and saying:


“You know who really understands what I’m going through? A billionaire from New York who grew up wealthy, never worked a blue‑collar job, flies around on a private jet, lives at a country club, and built a brand on gold‑plated everything.”


That’s not a judgment, it’s just reality.  

Working‑class Georgians know what their lives look like, and they know what they don’t.

Because the truth is simple:  

People who’ve never lived your life can’t pretend to understand it.But you know who does understand blue‑collar Georgians?

Leaders who’ve lived it.  

Leaders who’ve worked real jobs.  

Leaders who’ve had to fight for every rung on the ladder.


And right now, Georgia has a slate of candidates who come from the same soil as the people they’re asking to represent:


Michael Thurmond — Governor Candidate

A man who’s spent his entire career fighting for working families, public schools, and communities that get overlooked. He knows what it means to serve because he’s been doing it for decades.


Sedrick Rowe — Agriculture Commissioner Candidate

A farmer who actually knows what it means to work the land, not just pose for a photo‑op in a field. He understands the stakes for rural Georgia because he lives them.


Jason Moon — Labor Commissioner Candidate

A candidate who knows what it means to work for a living, not just talk about it. Someone who understands the dignity of labor and the responsibility of protecting workers.


Michael McCord — Georgia’s 1st Congressional District Candidate

A blue‑collar Democrat who speaks the language of the people he’s running to represent. Not polished. Not rehearsed. Just real.


These aren’t candidates built in a consultant’s office.  

They’re not chasing cable‑news soundbites.  

They’re not trying to be something they’re not.


They’re running because they know what it feels like to be left behind and they’re tired of watching rural Georgia get ignored.

And that’s the heart of it:

Working‑class Georgians don’t need a billionaire to “feel their pain.” They need leaders who’ve lived their struggle. That’s why these candidates resonate.  That’s why rural Democrats are re‑engaging. That’s why South Georgia is shifting in ways the political class still doesn’t understand.


Because when you’ve lived the life, you don’t have to pretend.  

And when you speak the truth, people hear it.


Sunday, March 22, 2026

Red Clay Black and White Rednecks: The Rural Georgia Voters Everyone Gets Wrong

Down in places like Baxley, Soperton, Hazlehurst, and over toward Swainsboro and Butler, the word “redneck” doesn’t land the way outsiders think it does. It’s not a slur. It’s a lifestyle. A work ethic. A way of being raised.


And in rural Georgia, there are white rednecks and Black rednecks, folks who grew up the same way even if their histories took different roads.

They hunt the same woods.  
They fish the same ponds.  
They fix their own tractors because the nearest dealership is 40 miles away.  
They know the difference between a good rain and a bad one just by smelling the air.

They’re not caricatures.  
They’re not punchlines.  
They’re the backbone of half the counties south of Macon.

But every election season, the national media swoops in like they’ve discovered a new species. They talk about “rural whites” like they’re monolithic. They talk about “Black rural voters” like they’re an afterthought. They never talk about the cultural overlap, the shared grit, the shared frustrations, the shared sense that Atlanta and Washington don’t see them unless they need something.

Take Treutlen County.  
Take Wheeler County
Take Long County.  
Take the backroads between Vidalia and Americus.

You’ll find white rednecks who grew up on pulpwood money and Black rednecks who grew up on farm labor and church kitchens and both will tell you the same thing:

“Don’t come down here talking slick. Show me something real.”

They don’t vote based on hashtags.  
They don’t vote based on yard signs.  
They vote based on trust, consistency, and who shows up when the cameras aren’t around.


In a primary, rural Georgia rednecks... Black and white  look for:
- someone who talks plain  
- someone who understands rural economics  
- someone who respects their culture  
- someone who doesn’t act like rural Georgia is a museum exhibit  

They don’t care about polished speeches.  
They care about whether you know what a chicken house smells like in July.

In the general election, the split shows up but not the way outsiders think.

White rural voters lean one way.  
Black rural voters lean another.  
But both groups share the same complaints:
- hospitals closing  
- grocery stores disappearing  
- roads crumbling  
- kids leaving because there’s nothing to stay for  

And here’s the twist:  
When a candidate, any candidate actually invests in these communities, listens to them, and treats them like partners instead of props, the margins shift. Not always dramatically, but enough to matter in a state where elections are decided by a few thousand votes.


Black and white rednecks in rural Georgia aren’t enemies.  
They’re neighbors.  
They’re coworkers.  
They’re kin through culture if not through blood.

They argue politics like they argue football... loud, stubborn, but with a mutual understanding that tomorrow they’ll still be borrowing each other’s tools.

And deep down, they want the same thing:

A Georgia that doesn’t forget about the counties with more pine trees than people.

A Georgia where their kids don’t have to leave to make a living.

A Georgia where their voice matters as much as anyone else’s.

They don’t vote based on labels.  
They vote based on respect.

And in a state as tight as Georgia, the folks in the red clay, Black and white  can change the whole story when someone finally talks to them like they matter.

Voices From the Amen Corner: Why South Georgia’s Black Voters Trust Steady Hands Like Thurmond and Moon

I visited a church last week down in rural Southeast Georgia where the dirt is red and the pines whisper when the wind shifts, Sunday mornings still mean something. Folks gather at a historic black church not just for worship, but for the conversations that happen afterward, the real ones, the ones that shape how people think about their communities and their future.



After service, the congregation drifted out into the felliwship hall behind the church. Kids ran around the fellowship hall. The men leaned against their trucks. The women huddled in the lobby.


At the center of the circle stood Miss Ruby, 82, who had lived through enough Georgia history to fill a library.


“People keep acting like Black folks in South Georgia don’t know politics,” she said, adjusting her hat. “Baby, we’ve been reading candidates longer than they’ve been reading polls.”



A few folks laughed, but everyone listened.


Next to her was Deacon Charles, a retired farmworker who’d spent decades in the peanut and timber fields.


“I don’t need somebody promising me the moon,” he said. “I need somebody who’s run something. Somebody who’s served. Somebody who understands rural Georgia ain’t a backdrop, it’s home.”


He paused, then added:


“That’s why folks down here pay attention when they hear names like Michael Thurmond. They know his story. They know he’s worked, served, led. They know he understands Georgia from the ground up.”


Miss Ruby nodded. “And that young man running for Labor Commissioner, Jason Moon. Folks like that. Somebody who’s worked with small businesses, understands jobs, understands what it means when a plant closes or a shift gets cut. That matters down here.”


Across the circle, Tameka, a school counselor, chimed in.


“People online think Black voters in the country are just ‘moderate’ or ‘old‑school.’ No. We’re practical. We know what works. We know who’s steady. We know who respects us enough to talk with us, not at us.”


She looked around the group.


“We like leaders who’ve actually done something. Leaders who understand farming, labor, schools, and small towns. Leaders who don’t treat us like a slogan.”


A few elders murmured “mm‑hmm” in agreement.


Then Jamal, 22, home from Albany State, spoke up.


“I used to think y’all were too cautious. But now I get it. Y’all ain’t scared, y’all just smart. You’ve seen what happens when folks talk big and deliver small.”


Miss Ruby smiled at him.


“Baby, we’ve lived through enough storms to know the difference between thunder and rain.”


The group fell quiet for a moment.


Finally, Deacon Charles said:


“Down here, we like Democrats who are steady. Who know the land. Who know the people. Who’ve worked real jobs, solved real problems, and don’t look down on us. Folks like Thurmond. Folks like Moon. Folks who understand rural Georgia because they’ve lived something.”


Miss Ruby tapped her cane on the dirt.


“And don’t let nobody tell you Black folks in South Georgia don’t think for ourselves. We’re the reason half these elections even get close.”


Soft laughter was heard through the group, the kind that comes from truth.


As everyone headed toward their cars and trucks, the pastor called out:


“Y’all remember, wisdom don’t make noise. It just shows up.”


And in that moment, it was clear:


Black voters in rural South Georgia weren’t confused.  

They weren’t passive.  

They weren’t waiting for someone to tell them what to believe.


They were choosing leaders who matched their values... steady hands, proven service, grounded judgment, the kind of leaders who fit South Georgia like a well‑worn pair of boots.

 

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