For 24 years, I’ve known Michael Thurmond as more than a public servant. I’ve known him as a friend, the kind who listens before he talks, shows up when it matters, and treats people from every corner of Georgia with the same respect. That’s rare in politics, and it’s even rarer in statewide politics.
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| Michael Thurmond |
That’s why I’m supporting Michael Thurmond as Georgia’s next Governor and as the Democratic nominee.
And let me say this plainly: this isn’t about disrespecting any other Democrat in the race. Every candidate deserves credit for stepping up. But out here in rural Georgia, we don’t judge leadership by who gives the best speech or who trends online. We judge it by who can win, who can deliver, and who understands the difference between performing politics and practicing it.
Thurmond comes from the last generation of Democrats who knew how to win statewide... the Miller, Murphy, Talmadge school of politics. Not because they were perfect. Not because they were loud. But because they understood Georgia from the dirt up.
They knew rural counties weren’t an afterthought. They knew working families weren’t talking points. They knew that if you wanted to lead this state, you had to earn trust in places where folks don’t hand it out easily.
Michael Thurmond is cut from that cloth.
I’ve spent years advocating for rural Georgia and rural Democrats, and I can tell you this: people out here can spot sincerity from a mile away. They know who’s been in the trenches and who just shows up for the photo. Thurmond has been showing up for decades in small towns, in farm communities, in places where the spotlight never reaches.
When the Georgia Department of Labor needed rebuilding, he delivered.
When DeKalb County Schools needed stability, he delivered.
When communities needed leadership grounded in service, not spectacle, he delivered.
That’s the old‑guard discipline, the kind Bill Shipp and Tom Crawford wrote about with respect, even when they wrote with fire. They understood that Georgia politics isn’t won by vibes or purity tests. It’s won by coalition, credibility, and consistency.
And right now, Democrats need a nominee who can do more than inspire a base. We need someone who can win. Someone who can narrow margins in rural counties. Someone who can energize Black voters without taking them for granted. Someone who can speak to independents who want competence, not chaos. Someone who understands Georgia’s political DNA because he’s been part of shaping it. That’s Michael Thurmond.
He stands at the crossroads of Georgia’s past and future, the last of a Democratic tradition that knew how to win, and the leader who can build the kind of coalition the new Georgia requires.
This moment calls for steadiness, not slogans.
Coalition, not factions.
Winning, not wishful thinking.
That’s why I’m standing with Michael Thurmond as a friend of 24 years, as an advocate for rural Georgia, and as someone who believes deeply in a Democratic Party that can win again.






