Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Endorsement: Michael Thurmond for Governor

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.

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.


Monday, March 9, 2026

Georgia Might Be Riper for a Political Jolt Than Anyone Wants to Admit

Every few years someone whispers about a “blue wave” in Georgia, and most of the time it’s wishful thinking. But this cycle feels different, not because Democrats are suddenly surging, but because Republicans are carrying more political baggage than usual, and voters across the state are feeling real‑world pressure that cuts deeper than party loyalty.

Georgia families from the exurbs outside Atlanta to the timber farms in Southeast Georgia are getting hammered by the same problems: cost of living, insurance rates, housing, groceries, and wages that haven’t kept up. That’s not a damn ideology. That’s pain!

And when voters feel squeezed long enough, they start looking for someone to blame.

Democrat Geoff Duncan on the campaign trail
Add to that the global instability with Iran, which has injected uncertainty into national politics at the worst possible moment for the party in power. Foreign crises don’t automatically shift elections, but they do shake voter confidence, especially among independents and soft partisans.

Then there’s the elephant in the room:

The GOP’s unwavering, iron‑clad loyalty to Trump.

For years, that loyalty has been a political asset in rural Georgia. But when economic frustration meets political fatigue, even the most loyal voters sometimes step back, stay home, or quietly split their ticket.

That’s how “mini waves” happen, not with a dramatic flip, but with a slow erosion of turnout and enthusiasm in places that used to be automatic.

So is a blue wave guaranteed? No.

But is the ground shifting under the surface?

In a lot of places, it sure looks like it.

If a political jolt hits Georgia this year, it won’t start in Atlanta.

It’ll start in the places no one watches, the exurbs, the small towns, the timber counties
where voters are tired, stretched thin, and no longer impressed by political loyalty tests that don’t put food on the table.

Candidate Spotlight: David Hall — A Grounded Moderate for House District 174


Well, its back! Peanut Politics Candidate Breakdown Series is back and the first candidate to breakdown is David Hall (D) Hoboken

House District 174 is one of the most geographically sprawling and culturally distinct districts in South Georgia. Stretching across Brantley, Charlton, Clinch, Echols, and parts of Ware and Lowndes counties, it’s a district defined by rural identity, tight‑knit communities, and a political culture that values authenticity over theatrics. Into that landscape steps David Hall, a disabled Navy veteran, substitute teacher, and moderate Democrat from Hoboken, Georgia.

He’s not a household name  but his profile is the kind that often resonates in districts like HD‑174.

A Disabled Navy Veteran With Deep Local Roots

Hall’s military service is central to his story. In rural South Georgia, where military families and veterans make up a significant share of the population, that background carries weight. It signals discipline, sacrifice, and a lived understanding of service — qualities that voters in HD‑174 tend to respect regardless of party.

His status as a disabled veteran adds another layer: he’s someone who has paid a personal price for his service and understands firsthand the challenges veterans face navigating healthcare, benefits, and reintegration into civilian life.
That’s not a talking point. It’s lived experience.

A Substitute Teacher Who Sees the Classroom Up Close

Hall’s work as a substitute teacher gives him a window into one of the district’s most pressing issues: the state of rural education. HD‑174 includes counties where schools are underfunded, teachers are stretched thin, and students face barriers that go far beyond the classroom.

Substitute teachers often see the system at its most vulnerable moments — staffing shortages, resource gaps, and the day‑to‑day realities that don’t show up in legislative talking points. That perspective grounds Hall in the practical, not the theoretical.

A Moderate Democrat in a Deeply Rural District

HD‑174 is not a district where ideological purity tests win elections. It’s a place where voters respond to:

Practical problem‑solving
Local credibility
A tone that matches the district’s culture
Candidates who understand rural life because they live it

Hall’s moderate posture fits that terrain. He’s not running as a national‑issue candidate. He’s not trying to be a partisan warrior. His profile suggests a focus on bread‑and‑butter issues — jobs, education, infrastructure, and support for veterans and working families.

(Ret.) Colonel Pamela Delancy Might Be This Year's Georgia Sleeper Congressional Candidate in GA‑10

Pamela Delancy is a name most Democrats in Georgia’s 10th Congressional District have never heard and that’s exactly why her candidacy deserves a closer look. In a field where name recognition and political networks usually dominate the conversation, Delancy brings something different to the table: a compelling personal story and a profile that checks every “candidate quality” box strategists talk about but rarely find in one person.

She’s a cancer survivor.

She’s a military veteran.

She has an independent streak that doesn’t feel manufactured.

Those aren’t talking points they’re lived experiences that resonate in a district where authenticity still matters. GA‑10 is a place where Democrats really don't put up much of a fight. Last Democrat to hold that seat was Don Johnson back in 1992. Voters respond to grit, resilience, and real‑world credibility. Delancy’s background gives her all three.

She may not be a known quantity in Democratic circles, but that’s not necessarily a weakness. Sometimes the most interesting candidates are the ones who haven’t been shaped by party machinery or political expectations. Delancy’s profile suggests she could connect with voters who are tired of the same old political molds and are looking for someone who’s actually lived the challenges they talk about.

In a district as sprawling and politically complex as GA‑10, candidate quality still counts. And Pamela Delancy military service, personal resilience, and an independent voice is the kind of foundation that can make an unknown candidate suddenly worth watching.

Sunday, March 8, 2026

Michael McCord and the Blue Dog Lane in GA-01

 Georgia’s 1st Congressional District is crowded this cycle, eight Democrats, each trying to carve out a lane in a district that stretches from Savannah’s urban core to the rural areas of the Coastal Plain. But one contender stands out for a very specific reason: Michael McCord is running as a Blue Dog Democrat in a district where authenticity and no‑nonsense messaging still matter.

Observers often note that GA‑01 isn’t a place where ideological purity tests win elections. It’s a district shaped by military families, port workers, rural communities, and coastal moderates who respond more to credibility than to national talking points. That’s the lane McCord is trying to occupy, and it’s why many see him as one of the favorites to make a near‑certain runoff.

What makes his candidacy notable is the profile he’s leaning into.... pragmatic, grounded, and focused on local concerns rather than national theatrics. Analysts often point out that Democratic candidates who could succeed in GA‑01 tend to be the ones who sound like the district, not like a national party surrogate. McCord’s supporters argue that his style fits that mold: direct, unvarnished, and rooted in the district’s economic and cultural realities.

In a field of eight, that kind of clarity can cut through the noise.

Whether that translates into broader appeal across the coastal district remains to be seen, but the early read is simple: McCord is positioning himself as the kind of candidate who doesn’t need to reinvent himself to connect with voters and in GA‑01, that alone can be a competitive advantage.

Michael Thurmond and the Case for Competence Over Charisma

In an era when political success is too often measured by who can generate the most viral clip or command the loudest applause, Michael Thurmond stands as a quiet rebuke to the spectacle. He is the rare figure in Georgia politics whose credibility comes not from theatrics but from decades of steady, unglamorous public service. And that, ironically, is why he’s both underestimated by some Democrats and quietly respected by many Republicans.


Thurmond is the kind of Democrat Republicans could tolerate in the Governor’s Mansion, not because he shares their ideology, but because he has earned a reputation for competence, pragmatism, and seriousness. He doesn’t posture. He doesn’t chase national attention. He doesn’t treat governing as a performance. In a polarized state, that alone sets him apart.

Yet within the Democratic party, Thurmond doesn’t always inspire the kind of emotional rush that modern campaigns seem to demand. He’s not a celebrity candidate. He’s not a social‑media phenomenon. He doesn’t fit the “vibes‑first” energy that excites certain corners of the Democratic base. But the fixation on charisma over capability has always been a political mirage, and Georgia’s recent elections have shown just how fragile that approach can be.

The truth is simple: vibes don’t win elections. Hard work, fortitude, and trust do.

And Thurmond has built a career on exactly those qualities.

He is one of the few Democrats who can move comfortably between constituencies that rarely overlap, rural Black voters, suburban moderates, business leaders, and longtime state employees who have watched him navigate government from the inside. He speaks the language of economic mobility and educational opportunity, not national culture wars. He understands the machinery of state government because he has spent years operating it, not critiquing it from afar.

That kind of credibility doesn’t trend on social media, but it does win over voters who want a governor, not a performer.

Georgia Democrats face a strategic crossroads. They can continue chasing candidates who generate excitement but struggle to expand the map, or they can look toward leaders who have built trust the slow, old‑fashioned way  by showing up, doing the work, and delivering results. Thurmond belongs firmly in the latter category.

He may not be the flashiest candidate
in the field, but he represents something increasingly rare in politics: a candidate defined by substance rather than spectacle. And in a state as divided and dynamic as Georgia, that might be exactly what leadership requires.

Hot Take: Why Some Democrats Think Keisha Lance Bottoms Could Drag the Ticket — And Whether She’ll Show Up in Tough Terrain

Inside Georgia Democratic circles, Keisha Lance Bottoms sparks a very specific debate. Some folks see potential. Others see warning signs. And the loudest concerns usually fall into two buckets: her baggage and her willingness to campaign outside the Atlanta bubble.

Why Some Democrats Think She Could Be a Drag

A few themes come up again and again:

1. The “Atlanta Problem”

Bottoms is deeply tied to Atlanta politics, and that doesn’t always play well in:

  • Rural Black Belt counties
  • Conservative rural white areas
  • Coastal communities that feel ignored by Atlanta

Some Democrats fear she’d get boxed in as “Atlanta‑centric” before she even gets started.

2. Her Mayoral Record Is a Double‑Edged Sword

Her time as mayor came with:

  • Public safety struggles
  • Tension with the police department
  • National scrutiny during protests

Democrats worry Republicans would weaponize that nonstop.

3. Limited Rural Footprint

Unlike Abrams, Bottoms hasn’t spent years building relationships in:

  • Southwest Georgia
  • Middle Georgia
  • The rural east
  • Coastal counties

Some Democrats think that’s a major vulnerability.

4. The Biden Administration Tie‑In

Her White House role gives her national visibility but also national baggage.
Some Democrats fear she’d be painted as “too Washington” in a state where crossover voters definitely matter.

Is She Willing to Campaign in Tough Terrain?

This is the million‑dollar question.

Some Democrats aren’t convinced

They worry she’d lean heavily on:

  • Atlanta
  • The inner suburbs
  • High‑growth metro counties

That’s a viable strategy, but it leaves rural organizers feeling abandoned.

Others think she could do it, if she chooses to

Bottoms is charismatic and comfortable in church‑based spaces.
If she committed to the grind....Albany, Waycross, Dublin, Brunswick, Bainbridge, she might surprise people.

But commitment is the key word.

Bottom Line

The internal Democratic debate boils down to this:

Is Keisha Lance Bottoms a statewide candidate who expands the map or one who shrinks it to metro Atlanta and hopes turnout saves the day?

That’s why her name triggers so much chatter.
And that’s why this hypothetical isn’t going away anytime soon.







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