Sunday, April 5, 2026

The Power She Still Holds: Why Abrams’ Timing Matters More Than Ever

Every election cycle has a shadow figure not a candidate, not a donor, not a pundit, but someone whose next move can shift the ground under an entire primary.  


In Georgia Democratic politics, that figure is still Stacey Abrams. And as the 2024 primary heats up, one question keeps floating through campaign offices, fellowship halls, and group chats across the state: What will Stacey Abrams do?


Not because she’s on the ballot.  

But because her endorsement still carries weight — real weight, especially in a year when Democrats are trying to rebuild coalitions, re‑energize grassroots networks, and avoid the fractures that have cost them close races before.


Will She Endorse Before the Primary? Probably Not


Abrams has a pattern, and political pols know it well. She rarely jumps into primaries early unless the field is thin or the stakes are unusually clear. In 2022, her endorsements came late, and they came surgically, all three of her endorsed candidates went on to win their runoffs by wide margins.

Abrams endorses when the timing maximizes impact, not when the rumor mill demands it. Early endorsements risk splitting coalitions. Late endorsements can decide them.


Will She Wait Until the Runoff? That’s the Smart Money


If history is a guide, the runoff is where Abrams’ influence hits hardest.

Runoffs are low‑turnout, high‑impact elections the kind where a well‑organized grassroots machine can swing the whole thing. Abrams built that machine. She knows how to deploy it. And she knows when to hold it back.


Political strategists note that her 2022 runoff endorsements weren’t symbolic. They were decisive. So if she steps in this year, the runoff is where her voice is most likely to land.


Does Abrams Still Have Statewide Influence? Absolutely and It’s Still Potent!


Whatever people say in public, the numbers tell the story.  

Her organizing infrastructure helped reshape turnout in 2020 and 2021. Her name still resonates with Black voters, suburban voters, and low‑propensity voters who don’t show up unless someone they trust tells them the election matters.


Grassroots power doesn’t evaporate.  It waits for the right moment. And 2024 is a year where Democrats may need every ounce of it.


Who Could She Endorse? A longtime Democratic strategist I spoke to see one interesting possibility


No one can predict her endorsement and this isn’t one. But a few have noted one candidate whose profile aligns with the kind of leaders Abrams has supported in the past:


Jason Moon, candidate for Labor Commissioner.



Here’s why his name comes up:



- He’s the first cousin of the late U.S. Senator Max Cleland  

- Abrams and Cleland had a well‑documented, positive relationship  

- Moon’s background in service and working‑class issues fits the lane Abrams often uplifts  

- His rural and small‑town appeal aligns with the coalition Democrats need to rebuild  


Again, this is analysis, not prediction.  

But in Georgia politics, family legacy still matters, and Cleland’s name still carries weight in Democratic circles. The bottom line is Stacey Abrams doesn’t move fast. She moves with purpose. And in a year where Democrats are trying to rebuild trust, re‑energize their base, and avoid the mistakes of past cycles, her endorsement — whether before the primary or in the heat of a runoff.  Her influence is still real and candidates with deep service backgrounds, rural credibility, and ties to respected Democratic figures like Jason Moon may align with the kind of leadership she’s backed before.


Georgia politics is never quiet.  

But sometimes the loudest moment is the one before the decision.

The Fellowship Hall Knows What the Party Won’t Admit: The Dark Horse Is in the Room

Every now and then, the church house gets quiet.  

Not because there’s nothing to say but because the truth about to be spoken needs room to land.


And on this Easter season, with Georgia politics shifting under our feet, some people are saying something that sounds a whole lot like a revival‑tent warning:


“Don’t write off Geoff Duncan in the Democratic Primary.”


Now, that’s not an endorsement.  

That’s not a prediction.  

That’s not a hallelujah chorus for any one candidate.


That’s simply what seasoned politicos and grassroots activists are whispering in pews, fellowship halls, and courthouse squares across this state.


Because Georgia is in a moment where the stakes are sky‑high, the margins are razor‑thin, and the old political hymns don’t hit like they used to.


Political watchers point out a few things worth paying attention to:


- He’s got statewide name recognition and that matters when ballots get crowded.  

- He complicates the usual partisan script and voters who don’t fit neatly into boxes often respond to candidates who don’t either.  

- He carries credibility with moderates and independents a lane Democrats can’t afford to ignore in a statewide race.  

- He brings a profile that could scramble assumptions and in Georgia, assumptions have been wrong before.  


Again, none of this guarantees anything.  

But it does mean the story isn’t as simple as some folks want it to be.


Georgia politics has a way of humbling the proud and lifting the unexpected.  

Ask anyone who’s watched this state long enough resurrection stories don’t start with the favorite. And that’s why some analysts say Democrats would be making a mistake to shrug off any candidate who brings a different coalition, a different profile, and a different kind of appeal.


Especially in a year when turnout, trust, and authenticity will matter more than slogans. This primary isn’t just a political contest, it’s a crossroads.  

And the church house knows a crossroads when it sees one.


Some folks


believe Geoff Duncan is the dark horse in this race.  

And in a year like this, with November looming large, they argue that ignoring a dark horse is how you end up praying for a miracle you didn’t have to need.

Easter in Georgia: Why Faith‑Anchored Democrats Could Shift the Map

Easter Sunday in Georgia isn’t just a date on the calendar it’s a rhythm.  


Sunrise services. Choir robes. Family tables. A quiet moment to breathe, bow your head, and remember that faith is still the backbone of so many communities across this state.


And in a year where Democrats are trying to reconnect with the voters they’ve struggled to reach... rural, working‑class, church‑going, small‑town Georgia, several candidates stand out for one simple reason:


They don’t treat faith like a political liability.  

They treat it like part of who they are.


These candidates come from the same Georgia where Scripture sits on dashboards, where people pray before meals, and where faith shapes how folks see leadership, responsibility, and service.


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Jason Moon — Labor Commissioner Candidate

Jason Moon’s story is rooted in service, work, and a steady belief that dignity comes from honest labor. His faith isn’t performative, it’s woven into how he talks about fairness, opportunity, and helping people stand on their own feet. Analysts note that candidates who can speak authentically to working‑class and faith‑driven voters often have an advantage in connecting with communities Democrats have struggled to reach.


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Michael McCord — Congressional Candidate

Michael McCord comes from that tradition where faith is a compass, not a campaign slogan. His public service record reflects humility, discipline, and a belief in community. Observers point out that candidates who can walk into a sanctuary or fellowship hall and feel at home often resonate with voters who value integrity and grounded leadership.


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Justin Lucas — Congressional Candidate

Justin Lucas represents a lane of leadership shaped by service, family, and faith. His background reflects the values many Georgia families hold close: responsibility, community, and a belief that public service should be rooted in something deeper than ambition. Candidates who can speak to both economic concerns and moral grounding often bridge divides in competitive districts.


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Shawn Harris — Congressional Candidate

Shawn Harris brings a faith‑anchored approach to public service, shaped by community involvement and a belief in lifting others up. His story aligns with voters who want leaders who understand struggle, purpose, and the role faith plays in navigating both. This connection can be meaningful in districts where churches remain central to civic life.


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Michael Thurmond — Gubernatorial Candidate

Michael Thurmond has long been recognized for a leadership style shaped by faith, humility, and a deep respect for Georgia’s working people. His story resonates with voters who value perseverance, service, and a moral center. Candidates with longstanding credibility in faith‑driven communities can help rebuild trust where Democrats have lost ground.


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Why This Matters for Democrats in November

If Democrats want to compete statewide, they can’t keep overlooking the voters who still see faith as part of their identity. Not every voter is ideological. Many are spiritual, practical, and looking for leaders who reflect their values without preaching at them.


Candidates like Moon, McCord, Lucas, Harris, and Thurmond represent a lane where:


- Faith and public service aren’t in conflict  

- Work, family, and community are front and center  

- Authenticity matters more than rhetoric  


If they make it out of their primaries, they could help Democrats reconnect with voters who’ve drifted away the Georgia that still bows its head before it eats.

Saturday, April 4, 2026

The Projects Aren’t the Problem. The Politics Ignoring Them Is.

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.

Friday, April 3, 2026

If Treutlen County Can See Thurmond’s Strength, What’s Wrong With the Democrats Who Can’t?

Every election cycle in Georgia comes with its own set of myths, wishful thinking, and political fairy tales. But there’s one quiet truth floating around this state that cuts through all the noise: there are Republicans who do not want to see Michael Thurmond standing across from them in a General Election.

They know his resume.  
They know his reputation.  
They know the kind of voters who respect him.  
They know the coalition he can build without breaking a sweat.

What struck me yesterday in Treutlen County wasn’t the scenery  it was the conversations. Conservative‑leaning voters, folks who haven’t voted for a Democrat in years, were saying out loud that Michael Thurmond is a strong candidate and someone they could see themselves backing for Governor. That’s not spin. That’s not theory. That’s what people on the ground are saying.

When rural, conservative‑leaning voters in a place like Treutlen County start talking like that, it tells you something about the political landscape that some Democrats still refuse to acknowledge.

Again, th

at’s not coming from Democrats hyping their own candidate.  That’s coming from Republicans who’ve watched him for years and understand exactly how dangerous a broad‑appeal candidate can be in a statewide race. That's what I heard yesterday in Laurens County.

But here’s the twist and it’s the part that makes this whole thing feel like deja vu:

Some Democrats can’t see what their opponents already understand.

Instead of rallying behind the candidate with the widest reach, the deepest credibility, and the clearest path to winning in November, a chunk of the party is chasing butterflies. They want someone who makes them feel inspired, emotional, or electrified.... even if that candidate can’t win statewide.

It’s the same pattern that’s cost Democrats race after race in Georgia:

Choosing vibes over victory.  
Choosing feelings over fundamentals.  
Choosing inspiration over electability.

Some Democrats would rather lose with a candidate who gives them goosebumps than win with a candidate who can actually pull votes from rural counties, suburban enclaves, and urban cores all at once.

One group is thinking about November.  
The other is thinking about how a candidate makes them feel in March.

And that’s the divide  the one that keeps showing up every cycle, the one that keeps handing winnable races to the other side, the one that frustrates the voters who actually want to win instead of just feeling good about losing.

The question for Democrats isn’t complicated:

Do you want a candidate who excites a room,  
or a candidate who can win a state?

Because Republicans already know which one they’d rather not face.  The only question is whether Democrats will figure it out before the ballots are cast.

The Party Comes First. Rural Georgia Comes Last

Take a drive through rural Georgia and you’ll see the truth our politicians hope you’re too polite to say: we’ve been neglected, ignored, and flat‑out taken for granted.



The backroads tell the story.  

Not the campaign mailers.  

Not the stump speeches.  

Not the party talking points.


The actual Georgia, the one outside the metro glow  is full of shuttered hospitals, dying downtowns, underfunded schools, and communities surviving on grit because their elected officials sure aren’t fighting for them.


And here’s the part folks don’t like to say out loud:  

Most of the people representing rural Georgia come from one party, and they’ve been coasting on loyalty instead of delivering results.


For years, rural voters showed up.  

They voted the same way.  

They trusted the same names.  

They believed the promises.


But loyalty without accountability turns into exploitation.  

And that’s exactly what’s happened.


At some point, rural Georgians are going to have to look in the mirror and ask the question that’s been hanging in the air for a decade:


Do these representatives and state senators actually give a damn about us or are they just protecting their party and their seat?


Because the evidence is sitting right in front of us:


- Hospitals closed while lawmakers argued about everything except healthcare.  

- Broadband “expansion” that somehow never reaches the dirt roads where people actually live.  

- Farmers squeezed while politicians pose for photos in fields they don’t understand.  

- Schools scraping by while the legislature pats itself on the back for “record budgets.”  

- Local communities losing control to decisions made by people who don’t know the first thing about them.


That’s not representation.  

That’s abandonment dressed up as leadership.


And rural Georgians aren’t stupid.  

They see it.  

They feel it.  

They live with the consequences every single day.


The coming‑to‑Jesus moment is unavoidable now.  

Not partisan.  

Not ideological.  

Just real.


Who is actually fighting for rural Georgia and who is hiding behind a party label while our communities fall apart?


When rural voters start demanding answers to that question and stop rewarding politicians who treat them like a guaranteed vote

the entire political landscape of this state will shift.


And maybe then, rural Georgia will finally get the respect, investment, and representation it’s been owed for far too long.

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

The Post‑Trump Problem Democrats Don’t Want to Talk About

For years now, Democrats have benefitted from a political landscape where one figure has dominated every headline, every argument, and every voter’s emotional bandwidth. Analysts across the spectrum have noted that Donald Trump has become the central reference point in American politics... the sun around which every other political message orbits. As long as he remains the focal point, Democrats can lean on a simple, powerful contrast: We’re not that.



But there’s a problem baked into that strategy, and it’s one that strategists, organizers, and community leaders have been talking about quietly for a while. When a party builds its identity around opposing a single figure, it risks losing its footing the moment that figure exits the stage.


And that moment is coming sooner or later.


The Limits of an Anti‑MAGA Message


Right now, Democrats are benefitting from a national mood that leans heavily on frustration with political chaos and fatigue with constant conflict. Many voters...suburban, independent, moderate, and even some traditionally conservative are responding to a desire for stability. Analysts have pointed out that this dynamic has helped Democrats win key races in recent years.


But that’s not the same thing as voters embracing a long‑term Democratic vision.


It’s reaction, not persuasion.


It’s exhaustion, not enthusiasm.


And it’s a strategy with an expiration date.


What Happens When Trump Isn’t the Center of Gravity


The moment Trump is no longer the defining force in American politics, the political map shifts. Without him:


- The Democratic coalition becomes harder to hold together  

- Internal ideological tensions re‑emerge  

- Republicans have room to recalibrate their image  

- Independents stop voting out of fear and start voting out of preference  

- Voters begin asking a question Democrats haven’t had to answer in years:  

  “What are you for?”


That’s the part many national Democrats haven’t fully grappled with. Riding an anti‑MAGA wave may produce wins in November, but it doesn’t build a durable governing identity.


The Image Problem That Never Went Away


Even with favorable winds, Democrats still face long‑standing perception challenges:


- Being seen as disconnected from working‑class life  

- Struggling to connect with rural communities  

- Sounding overly academic or moralizing  

- Allowing opponents to define them culturally  

- Failing to project clarity and strength in their messaging  


These issues don’t disappear just because voters are frustrated with Republicans. They simply get masked by the intensity of the moment.


When the moment passes, the weaknesses return.


The Risk of Misreading a Victory


If Democrats win big in November  and many analysts believe the anti‑MAGA mood could produce exactly that there’s a real danger in misinterpreting what those wins mean.


Some may conclude:

- “Our message is working.”  

- “The country is embracing our agenda.”  

- “We’re winning the argument.”  


But the truth may be far simpler:

- Voters were rejecting chaos, not endorsing a vision.  

- The wins were situational, not structural.  

- The coalition was held together by fear, not shared purpose.  


That’s how parties get blindsided in the next cycle.


The Opportunity — If Democrats Choose to Take It


A post‑Trump political landscape isn’t just a challenge for Democrats it’s an opportunity. It forces the party to answer questions it has avoided for nearly a decade:


- What does the party stand for beyond opposing one man?  

- How does it reconnect with working‑class voters?  

- What does a credible rural strategy look like?  

- How does it speak plainly about economic dignity?  

- What kind of candidates embody stability, competence, and community trust?  


Leaders who are steady, grounded, and cross‑cultural the kind who can walk into a union hall, a rural church, or a suburban civic meeting and be taken seriously  will define the next era of Democratic politics.


The Bottom Line


Democrats may very well ride the anti‑MAGA wave to victory this November. But waves crash. Winds shift. Political villains fade. And when that happens, a party built on contrast has to stand on its own.


The real test isn’t November.


The real test is what comes after  when the villain leaves the stage, and the spotlight turns to the party that’s been pointing at him for years.


That’s when voters stop asking, “Are you better than him?” and start asking, “Are you better for me?”


And that’s the question Democrats will have to answer, with or without Trump in the picture.

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