Monday, March 16, 2026

Georgia Democrats Are at a Crossroads. And This Time, They Can’t Afford to Miss the Turn

Let me tell y’all something straight, the way folks talk on front porches from Bainbridge to Baxley: this year’s midterms might be the most crucial election Georgia Democrats have ever walked into. And that ain’t exaggeration, that’s just calling it like it is.

Jason Moon and Stacey Abrams.
Moon is running for Labor Commissioner. 

For all the talk about who the party uplifts, who it listens to, and who it forgets, one thing’s becoming clear to a whole lot of folks: everybody’s gotta be in the conversation this time. Black women, Black men, white men, young folks, old folks, all of ’em. Georgia’s too big, too complicated, and too politically split for anybody to get left out or taken for granted.

Anton Williams 
Candidate 
GA State School Superintendent 

Some folks say the party’s spent too many years chasing vibes instead of victories. And the truth is, Georgia might be changing, but it ain’t turned into New York or California overnight. It’s still a Southern, agricultural state, where metro Atlanta can’t carry the whole load by itself. You can’t win statewide by talking to six cities and hoping the rest of the map magically fills itself in.

This year, the word folks keep throwing around is electability, not who makes people feel warm and fuzzy, not who checks the most boxes, but who can walk into rural Georgia, shake hands, look folks in the eye, and not get laughed out the room. Because like it or not, Democrats can’t win without cutting into those rural margins that’ve been deep‑red since 2016.


And here’s the thing:  

There is an opening.  

Folks out in the country are frustrated with prices, with healthcare, with Washington fussing all day and fixing nothing. Some of them are tired of the noise, tired of the drama, tired of being talked at instead of talked to.


But an opening don’t mean a thing if you don’t step through it.


Let me tell y’all something straight, the way folks talk on front porches from Bainbridge to Baxley: this year’s midterms might be the most crucial election Georgia Democrats have ever walked into. And that ain’t exaggeration — that’s just calling it like it is.


For all the talk about who the party uplifts, who it listens to, and who it forgets, one thing’s becoming clear to a whole lot of folks: everybody’s gotta be in the conversation this time. Black women, Black men, white men, young folks, old folks — all of ’em. Georgia’s too big, too complicated, and too politically split for anybody to get left out or taken for granted.


Some folks say the party’s spent too many years chasing vibes instead of victories. And the truth is, Georgia might be changing, but it ain’t turned into New York or California overnight. It’s still a Southern, agricultural state, where metro Atlanta can’t carry the whole load by itself. You can’t win statewide by talking to six cities and hoping the rest of the map magically fills itself in.


This year, the word folks keep throwing around is electability — not who makes people feel warm and fuzzy, not who checks the most boxes, but who can walk into rural Georgia, shake hands, look folks in the eye, and not get laughed out the room. Because like it or not, Democrats can’t win without cutting into those rural margins that’ve been deep‑red since 2016.


And here’s the thing:  

There is an opening.  

Folks out in the country are frustrated — with prices, with healthcare, with Washington fussing all day and fixing nothing. Some of them are tired of the noise, tired of the drama, tired of being talked at instead of talked to.

But an opening don’t mean a thing if you don’t step through it.

So the big question hanging over this whole election is simple, and folks are whispering it from the coast to the mountains:

Will Georgia Democrats take advantage of the moment… or will they mess around and fumble it again?

Peanut Politics will be watching every step of the way because this year, the stakes ain’t just high. They’re historic. the big question hanging over this whole election is simple, and folks are whispering it from the coast to the mountains:

The Straight‑Shooter in the Lowcountry: Michael McCord Steps Up in GA‑01

Down here in the 1st District, folks don’t ask for much out of a candidate, just tell the truth, stand your ground, and don’t act like you’re better than the people you’re asking to represent. That’s why Michael McCord, a common‑sense moderate Democrat, is turning heads in a race most folks figured would stay quiet after Buddy Carter packed up to chase a Senate seat.


McCord ain’t the polished, big‑city type. He doesn’t glide into a room like he’s been media‑trained since birth, and he sure as hell doesn’t talk like he’s reading off a cue card. What he is, though, is authentic, the kind of man who says what he means and doesn’t back up just because somebody in Washington or Atlanta thinks he ought to.

He comes from humble beginnings, the kind that teach you early how to work hard and keep your word. Over the years he’s built himself into a small‑business consultant, and that background gives him a way of talking to folks across party lines without sounding like he’s trying to sell them something. Democrats, Republicans, Independents  they all tend to perk up when a man speaks plain and carries himself like he’s lived a real life.

Some folks say McCord’s got something Democrats have been missing for a long time: a backbone. Not the kind you brag about on TV, but the kind you show when you stand firm even when the wind’s blowing hard the other way.

With the seat wide open and the world feeling shaky... Washington fussing, overseas tensions rising, the timing might just be lining up for a candidate who ain’t scared to be himself. Supporters argue he’s the one Democrat who can actually make a race out of this thing come November.

Now, whether folks agree with him or not, one thing’s for sure: Michael McCord ain’t trying to be perfect. He’s just trying to be real. And sometimes, that’s exactly what voters are hungry for.

Peanut Politics will be watching this one close as the race heats up across the Lowcountry and the Coast.

Sunday, March 15, 2026

Candidate Spotlight: Marcus Ryan — Georgia House District 176

Down in the wiregrass, Georgia House District 176 hasn’t seen a Democrat on the ballot in years — not since the late Jay Shaw, a conservative Democrat who later switched parties. That changes this cycle with Marcus Ryan of Lanier County, a United States Marine veteran and CDL operator stepping forward to give voters a real choice in 2026.


Ryan’s profile is unmistakably Blue Dog Democrat: culturally conservative, fiscally steady, and rooted in service. His background as a Marine shapes much of his message, discipline, responsibility, and putting community above politics. His day‑to‑day work as a CDL operator keeps him grounded in the realities of rural Georgia: long hours, working‑class economics, and the challenges families face across the 176th.

Ryan is running on the idea that HD 176 deserves representation that understands rural life from the inside, not from a distance. His campaign emphasizes:


- Support for working families and rural jobs  

- Infrastructure and transportation investment  

- Veterans’ services and mental‑health access  

- Practical, bipartisan problem‑solving  

- A return to community‑first politics


In a district that has leaned Republican for over a decade, Ryan represents a different kind of Democratic candidate...one who fits the region’s culture, speaks its language, and isn’t afraid to buck national narratives. Whether voters agree with his approach or not, his candidacy marks a notable moment: the first Democratic run in HD 176 in a generation, and a reminder that rural Georgia still has political stories worth watching.

Peanut Politics will keep an eye on this race as it develops — and on how Marcus Ryan’s Blue Dog message resonates across Lanier, Atkinson, and the surrounding counties.

Candidate Spotlight: Gabrielle Rogers — Georgia State Senate District 10

 In Georgia’s State Senate District 10, one of the Democrats stepping forward this cycle is Gabrielle Rogers, a leadership strategist and the Founder & CEO of Visionary Vanguard Solutions. Her background sits at the intersection of organizational development, civic engagement, and community‑centered problem‑solving and she’s running on the idea that SD‑10 is ready for a “new Democrat” with a fresh approach.


Rogers has built her professional career around helping organizations grow, adapt, and lead with purpose, and she brings that same framework into her campaign. Her message leans heavily on innovation, collaboration, and measurable results, themes that have defined her work in the nonprofit and corporate sectors. She has also been recognized as an Atlanta Business Chronicle 40 Under 40 honoree, a credential that underscores her visibility in leadership and civic spaces.


On the issues, Rogers emphasizes:


- Affordable housing and equitable development  

- Economic empowerment and small‑business support  

- Education access and digital equity  

- Community‑centered public safety  

- Transparent, accountable, and accessible government


Her campaign positions her as a forward‑looking, solutions‑driven Democrat who wants to bring new energy into the district’s political conversation. She presents herself as someone who listens first, collaborates widely, and focuses on practical outcomes rather than political theatrics.

As one of the Democrats running in SD‑10, Rogers is making the case that the district deserves a leader with fresh ideas, modern skill sets, and a service‑oriented mindset. Whether voters agree with her approach or not, she represents a growing trend in Georgia politics: candidates who come from outside traditional political pipelines but believe their professional experience can translate into public service

Sedrick Rowe Isn’t Running a Typical Agriculture Commissioner Race

Most candidates for Georgia Agriculture Commissioner stay in a familiar lane, farm tours, commodity talk, and the same recycled issues that rarely break through with everyday voters. Sedrick Rowe isn’t doing that. His campaign is forcing conversations the agriculture industry usually pushes to the margins, and that alone makes his candidacy worth paying attention to.

Rowe isn’t the most polished speaker, and he doesn’t pretend to be. What he brings instead is lived experience: a first‑generation farmer who has dealt with land access, credit barriers, and the realities young producers face. That authenticity resonates with people who rarely see themselves reflected in statewide agriculture politics.

And that’s where his potential impact shows up.

He Speaks to First‑Generation Farmers. Georgia has a growing number of new and beginning farmers , many of them young, many of them operating outside traditional commodity structures. They don’t usually have a candidate who talks about their challenges directly. Rowe does.

He Connects With Younger Voters. Younger voters don’t think much about the Agriculture Commissioner’s office, but they respond to candidates who look like the future of the industry rather than its past. Rowe’s story hits that note.

He Reaches Suburban Voters Who Don’t Track Ag Politics. Suburban voters often skip past this race entirely. But when a candidate talks about food access, environmental health, and the real‑world impact of agriculture policy, it gives those voters a reason to pay attention. Rowe’s message crosses that line in a way most Ag candidates don’t attempt.

Sedrick Rowe isn’t running a traditional Agriculture Commissioner campaign a


nd that’s exactly why people should take him seriously. He’s bringing new voices into a race that usually flies under the radar, and that alone changes the conversation. 

The Hidden Mike Thurmond Vote Everyone Is Missing

Every election cycle, we get a fresh round of polling that claims to show where the Democratic primary for Governor stands. And right now, those early numbers have Keisha Lance Bottoms sitting on a comfortable lead. But if you’ve watched Georgia Democratic primaries long enough, especially outside the Atlanta media bubble you know those toplines rarely tell the whole story.

There’s a quiet factor in this race that isn’t being measured yet: the Mike Thurmond vote.

Not the loud, online, hyper-engaged crowd. Not the folks who answer every poll. I’m talking about the voters who actually decide May primaries in this state, the ones who don’t show up in early surveys but absolutely show up at the ballot box.

And that gap between what polls capture and who actually votes may end up being the difference.

Rural and Small County Democrats Are Underrepresented in Early Polling

Anyone who has worked a rural county meeting or knocked doors in small towns knows this: these voters don’t always pick up the phone for pollsters, but they vote with consistency. They’re older, they’re loyal to the party, and they value a long record of public service. That’s a lane where Thurmond has historically performed well.

Name Recognition Isn’t the Same as Primary Strength

Bottoms’ early lead is driven heavily by name ID  something any former mayor of Atlanta


naturally carries. But name ID doesn’t automatically translate into:

- Trust  

- Coalition reach  

- Or the ability to win outside Metro Atlanta 

Primary voters, especially in May, tend to be more pragmatic and less swayed by celebrity or headlines.

Undecided Voters Are Shrinking and They aren’t Breaking Evenly

As undecided voters start making choices, they often gravitate toward candidates with broader appeal across regions and demographics. That’s where a candidate like Thurmond historically gains ground. Early polls rarely capture that late movement.

Primary Electorates Are Unique

The May Democratic primary electorate is not the same as the November general electorate. It skews:

- Older  

- More consistent  

- More policy‑focused  

- Less online  

These voters show up rain or shine, and they tend to reward candidates with long-standing relationships in their communities.

A Quiet Coalition Is Forming

Talk to Democrats across the state, rural organizers, suburban pragmatists, older Black voters, labor folks, education advocates and you’ll hear a similar theme: there’s interest in a candidate with a governing record, not just name recognition.

That coalition doesn’t make noise on social media, but it shows up when it counts.

The Bottom Line I'm trying to make is polls are a snapshot, not a prediction. And right now, they’re missing a key piece of the picture: the quiet but very real Mike Thurmond vote that doesn’t show up in early surveys but does show up in May.

As we move closer to the Democratic Primary, that undercounted coalition may be the factor that reshapes this race.

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.


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