Let me talk straight, the way folks out here in the timber belt, red clay understand it.
This primary is about one thing: Do Democrats want to win in November, or do they want to feel good in May?
Because out in rural Georgia where elections are won or lost nobody’s asking about hashtags, labels, or who checks what box. They’re asking one question:
“Can this person win?”
And like it or not, that’s the only question that matters if Democrats want to break the losing streak in statewide races.
Some folks will vote based on identity politics. That’s their business. But I’m choosing winning nothing else. And there is a slate of candidates who can walk into a VFW hall, a church parking lot, a peanut warehouse, or a union meeting and hold their own. Folks who can talk to rural voters without talking down to them. Folks who can take a punch and still move forward.
Here’s the slate that can actually compete in November:
- U.S. Senate: Jon Ossoff
- Governor: Michael Thurmond
- Lt. Governor: Josh McLaurin
- Attorney General: Bob Trammell
- Secretary of State: Penny Brown Reynolds
- Labor Commissioner: Jason Moon
- Agriculture Commissioner: Sedrick Rowe
- Insurance Commissioner: DeAndre Mathis
-Georgia 1st Congressional District Michael McCord
-Georgia 8th Congressional District Justin Lucas
-Georgia 10th Congressional District Pamela Delancy
- State School Superintendent: Otha Thornton
- Public Service Commission: Angela Pressley
- (Nonpartisan) Georgia Supreme Court: Miracle Johnson Rankin
- (Nonpartisan) Georgia Supreme Court: Sarah Warren
These aren’t paper candidates. These aren’t folks running for attention. These are people who can walk into a general election and not get blown off the map. They’ve got records, credibility, and the ability to talk to the base and the middle without losing either.
This primary is going to show what matters most to Democratic voters: symbolism or strategy, identity or impact, noise or November.
I know where I stand.
I’m choosing the slate that can win, not just wave a flag.









