Monday, May 11, 2026

Dar’shun Kendrick: The Quiet Power Player Sitting One Election Away From the Big Table

Every election cycle, folks get caught up in the noise who’s trending, who’s tweeting, who’s throwing elbows. But under the Gold Dome, real power comes from something far rarer: political intelligence, institutional memory, and the ability to count votes in your head before you ever walk into the chamber.



That’s why Dar’shun Kendrick stands out.


She’s in a real reelection fight this year, but make no mistake: she’s one of the most politically savvy Democrats in the entire legislature. Not loud. Not flashy. But strategic in a way that actually matters when the doors close and the votes get tight.


If Democrats Close the Gap or Flip the House Kendrick Moves Up the Board

Let’s be clear: nobody is crowning anybody. Georgia voters decide everything, and nothing is guaranteed. But if Democrats can close ranks, tighten the margins, and seriously contest the majority, Kendrick is positioned to be in the conversation for Speaker Pro Tem.


Why?


Because she brings what leadership positions actually require:


- Legislative experience that isn’t performative  

- A deep understanding of House procedure  

- Relationships across caucus lines  

- A reputation for being prepared, not reactive  

- The ability to navigate policy, not just politics


In a chamber that could shift with the right coalition and the right map, that kind of experience becomes currency.


A Party in Transition Needs Steady Hands

Georgia Democrats are in a moment where the bench is growing, the coalition is diversifying, and the path back to power runs through discipline, not drama. Kendrick fits that mold.


She’s not chasing headlines.  

She’s building leverage.  

And people under the Gold Dome know it.


If she wins reelection and if Democrats can tighten the margins or flip the House, Dar’shun Kendrick isn’t just another returning member.  

She’s a potential Speaker Pro Tem in waiting.


Georgia politics has its loud voices.  

But it’s the quiet strategists who end up holding the gavel.

Perdue Switched Parties and Got a Crown. Duncan Switches and Gets a Crossfire.

Georgia politics


has seen party‑switchers before, but the reaction hasn’t always looked like what we’re watching now. When Sonny Perdue left the Democratic Party in 1998 and crossed over to the GOP, he didn’t get anything close to the firestorm Geoff Duncan is taking after moving from Republican to Democrat and entering the Democratic primary for governor. At least if you go by what you see on social media, the temperature today is hotter, harsher, and far more personal.



And the difference isn’t just the men,  it’s the moment.


Perdue Switched in a Different Georgia

When Perdue made his move, Georgia was still in the middle of its political realignment. Democrats were losing their grip, Republicans were rising, and a lot of conservative Democrats were quietly drifting right anyway. Perdue didn’t shock the system, he reflected it. His switch fit the trend lines of the time.


The blowback was mild because the ground was already shifting beneath everyone’s feet.


Duncan Switched in a Hyper‑Polarized, Social‑Media‑Fueled Era

Duncan’s move is happening in a completely different environment.  

Today:


- Party identity is treated like a blood oath.  

- Social media amplifies outrage instantly.  

- Every switch is framed as betrayal instead of evolution.  

- Both parties have hardened their lines since the 1990s.


So when Duncan crossed over, the reaction wasn’t quiet or curious, it was explosive. Not because Georgia hasn’t seen a party switch before, but because the political climate now punishes deviation instead of absorbing it.


Two Party Switches, Two Different Worlds

Perdue moved during a slow‑motion realignment.  

Duncan moved during a culture‑war hurricane.


Perdue’s switch was seen as practical.  

Duncan’s is being treated as ideological treason.


That’s why the blowback looks so different.  

Not because the act changed, but because the era did.

Sunday, May 10, 2026

GA‑1 Is Headed for Overtime: Why McCord and Griggs Look Like the Last Two Standing

Georgia’s 1st Congressional District is doing what it always does in a crowded Democratic primary: splitting itself into pieces and daring somebody to clear 50%. And right now, the two names with the clearest lanes and the most durable bases are Michael McCord and Joyce Griggs.


Not because anybody crowned them.  

Not because anybody’s guaranteed anything.  

But because the math, the map, and the mood of the electorate are all pointing in the same direction.


A Crowded Field With No Clear Breakaway

When you pack multiple Democrats into a primary, you don’t get a winner, you get fragments.  

Everybody grabs their slice, nobody gets a majority, and the top two live to fight another day.


That’s the shape of GA‑1 right now.


Griggs: The Known Quantity

Joyce Griggs has run this race more than once, and that matters.  

Her name is familiar to long‑time Democratic voters, especially in Chatham County.  

In a low‑turnout primary, familiarity is currency.


She’s got a loyal base.  

She’s got staying power.  

And she’s got voters who don’t need an introduction.


McCord: The Working‑Class Messenger

Michael McCord has carved out a different lane — the blue‑collar, cost‑of‑living, “I’m talking to the folks who feel forgotten” lane.  

That message hits in rural counties where Democrats still exist but rarely get courted.


He’s not running on polish.  

He’s running on pain points... groceries, gas, wages, and the sense that Washington doesn’t see people like his voters.


That resonates.


Two Lanes, Minimal Overlap

This is the part people miss.


Griggs and McCord aren’t fighting over the same voters.  

They’re drawing from different wells:


- Griggs: older, loyal, urban‑leaning Democratic base  

- McCord: rural, working‑class, moderate‑leaning Democrats  


When two candidates have distinct coalitions, they don’t cannibalize each other.  

They climb.


Ground Game Matters in a Low‑Turnout Primary

Primaries aren’t about enthusiasm online, they’re about who actually shows up.


Candidates with:


- volunteers  

- early‑vote presence  

- rural reach  

- and a clear, repeatable message tend to outperform their poll numbers.


Both McCord and Griggs have that kind of identifiable support.


The Bottom Line

GA‑1 isn’t handing out easy wins.  

It’s a district where you earn every vote, and you earn them twice if the race goes to overtime.


A McCord–Griggs runoff isn’t a prediction,


it’s simply the most plausible outcome when:


- the field is crowded,  

- the vote is fractured,  

- and two candidates have the clearest, strongest lanes.


That’s the story right now.  

And unless something dramatic shifts, GA‑1 looks like it’s setting the table for a second round.

The I-16 Corridor: The Stretch of Highway That Tells the Truth About Democratic Strategy in Georgia

There’s a stretch of Georgia that political insiders love to overlook until they need it.  


A stretch that decides turnout, shapes margins, and tells you whether a statewide candidate actually understands this state beyond the perimeter.


I’m talking about the I‑16 corridor:


- Jefferson County  

- Dublin / Laurens County  

- Swainsboro / Emanuel County  

- Soperton / Treutlen County  

- Statesboro / Bulloch County


This is the spine of Middle Georgia rural Black communities, small‑town moderates, working‑class families, and voters who still expect a candidate to show up in person, not just on a mailer.


And here’s the Sunday morning truth:


Only two statewide Democratic candidates have bothered to show up in one or more of these places:  

Jason Moon (Labor Commissioner) and Tanya Miller (Attorney General).


That says something about them, and about the rest of the field.


---


Why the I‑16 Corridor Matters


This corridor is the heartbeat of rural Black Georgia and the gateway to the South Georgia vote.  

It’s where Democrats don’t win outright they survive.  

And survival is what keeps statewide races competitive.


These counties are:


- majority‑Black or Black‑influenced  

- economically stressed  

- hospital‑dependent  

- agriculture‑anchored  

- church‑organized  

- relationship‑driven  


You don’t win these places with TV ads.  

You win them by showing up, shaking hands, and listening.


And right now, only two candidates have done that.


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Jason Moon: The Only Candidate Who Treats These Counties Like They Matter


Jason Moon has been in:


- Dublin  

- Vidalia

- Statesboro  

- and the surrounding rural counties  


Not for photo ops, for conversations.


He talks:


- jobs  

- workforce  

- agriculture  

- small business  

- rural labor access  

- and the Department of Labor’s role in all of it  


Whether folks agree with him or not, they respect that he shows up.


In rural Georgia, that’s half the battle.


---


Tanya Miller: The Only Other Democrat Who’s Walked This Ground


Tanya Miller has visited parts of the corridor as well and that matters.


Attorney General races don’t usually touch rural Georgia, but she has.  

And voters notice when a statewide candidate steps off the metro circuit and into their counties.


She talks:


- public safety  

- justice  

- community stability  

- and the legal issues that hit rural families hardest  


Again showing up matters.


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Where Is Everybody Else?


That’s the uncomfortable question.


Because if Democrats want to be competitive statewide, they can’t treat the I‑16 corridor like political flyover country.


These counties are:


- the turnout engine for rural Black voters  

- the margin‑shrinkers in GOP‑leaning areas  

- the cultural bridge between Middle and South Georgia  

- the difference between losing by 5 points and losing by 2  


And yet, most statewide candidates haven’t set foot there.


Not once.


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The Sunday Morning Truth


If Democrats want to rebuild a statewide coalition, it won’t happen on Twitter.  

It won’t happen in Buckhead.  

It won’t happen in Decatur coffee shops.


It will happen on Highway 1, Highway 80, and the backroads between Dublin and Statesboro.


It will happen in:


- Black churches  

- VFW halls  

- barber shops  

- school board rooms  

- and county courthouses  


And right now, only Jason Moon and Tanya Miller are treating these places like they matter.


That’s not an endorsement.  

That’s not a prediction.  

That’s just the geography talking.

The Party That Preaches Inclusion… Until a White Moderate Walks In

Georgia Democrats keep preaching ‘big tent’ while shrinking the damn doorway.





It’s a quiet Sunday morning here in Georgia, coffee rainy and politics humming just beneath the surface like it always does in this state. And as I sit here thinking about where this party is headed, one question keeps circling back like a stubborn June bug:



What happened to the white male moderate in the Democratic Party?


Not the old Dixiecrat.  

Not the segregationist relic.  

I’m talking about the modern white moderate Democrat, the working‑class welder, the small‑town teacher, the union man, the courthouse‑square Democrat who used to be the backbone of this party from Rabun Gap to Bainbridge.


Today, that man is treated like the red‑headed stepchild of Georgia Democratic politics. And that’s not just strange, it’s strategically reckless.


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A Party That Shifted While Nobody Was Watching


Let’s start with the truth:


The Democratic Party in Georgia is now dominated numerically, culturally, and politically  by Black voters.


Black voters are the most loyal, most consistent, most dependable base the party has.  

Black women, especially, are the engine that keeps the whole operation running.


And in the Legislature, over 90% of Democratic members are Black, representing urban and suburban districts. That’s where the votes are. That’s where the donors are. That’s where the party’s identity now lives.


But here’s the part folks don’t want to say out loud:


The party’s culture changed faster than its strategy.


And the white moderate once a central piece of the Old Tom Murphy coalition now feels like a guest in a house he helped build.


---


The Red‑Headed Stepchild Effect


So when a moderate or conservative white Democrat steps up to run someone like David Dillie or Joe Powers the reaction inside the party apparatus is… muted.


Not hostile.  

Not hateful.  

Just indifferent.


And indifference is a slow death in politics.


These candidates get:


- half‑hearted support  

- lukewarm enthusiasm  

- quiet skepticism  

- and a whole lot of “we’ll see”  


Meanwhile, Republicans are running up 20‑ and 30‑point margins in rural districts that Democrats could be competitive in with the right candidate.


But the right candidate doesn’t fit the party’s current cultural mold so he gets ignored.


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The Math the Party Keeps Forgetting


Here’s the cold arithmetic of Georgia politics:


- Democrats are 11 seats away from a House majority.  

- Those 11 seats are not in Atlanta, DeKalb, or Gwinnett.  

- They’re in places like:  

  - Houston  

  - Lowndes  

  - Troup  

  - Paulding  

  - Bulloch  

  - Columbia  

  - McIntosh


And the candidates who can win there don’t sound like the candidates who win in metro Atlanta.


A welder like David Dillie of Effingham County can walk into a rural diner and talk jobs, schools, and stability in a way that lands.  

A community‑rooted moderate like Joe Powers of Dublin can talk to independents and soft Republicans without triggering partisan reflexes.


These are the candidates who shrink GOP margins.  

These are the candidates who flip the 2–4% that decide statewide races.  

These are the candidates who make a House majority possible.


And yet, they’re treated like afterthoughts.


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The Cultural Drift


The Democratic Party didn’t lose white moderates because they all turned conservative.  

It lost them because the party’s messaging, priorities, and internal culture shifted toward:


- urban issues  

- nationalized narratives  

- identity‑driven politics  

- progressive litmus tests  


Again — not wrong.  

Not immoral.  

Just incomplete.


The party built a new identity but never built a bridge back to the voters who don’t live inside that identity.


So when a white male moderate steps up to run, the party reacts like:


“Where did he come from”  

instead of  

“Thank God he showed up, we need him in that district.”


---


If Democrats Want Power, They Need a Big Tent Again


This isn’t about nostalgia.  

It’s about strategy.


You don’t win a majority by doubling down on the districts you already have.  

You win it by expanding into the districts you’ve been losing for 20 years.


And the candidates who can win those districts don’t fit the party’s current cultural mold, but they fit the state’s political reality.


Black voters are the backbone.  

White moderates are the bridge.  

You cannot win Georgia without both.


The party doesn’t need to choose between them.  

It needs to stop acting like it has to.


---


Sunday Morning Final Word


If Democrats want to get within striking distance of a House majority, just 11 seats away, they must stop treating white male moderates like political stepchildren.


Candidates like David Dillie and Joe Powers aren’t the problem.  

They’re part of the solution the party keeps ignoring.


And until Democrats embrace the full geography of Georgia not just the metro core they’ll keep leaving winnable seats on the table.

Racial Politics Is More Prevalent Than Ever — And That’s a Dangerous Thing for America’s Future

America has always had


race in its bloodstream. in its laws, its culture, its neighborhoods, its ballot boxes. But something has shifted in the last decade. What used to be a quiet undercurrent is now a roaring river. What used to be coded is now shouted. What used to be a political fault line is now the whole terrain.


And let’s be honest:  

Racial politics isn’t just back. It’s running the show.  

And that’s dangerous not because race shouldn’t be discussed, but because it’s being weaponized, monetized, and manipulated in ways that poison the future we claim to care about.


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We’re Not Talking About Race. We’re Fighting With It


There’s a difference between confronting racial realities and using race as a political crowbar.  

Right now, both parties in different ways are doing the latter.


- One side uses racial fear to mobilize resentment.  

- The other uses racial symbolism to avoid deeper structural failures.  

- And voters are stuck in the middle, exhausted, cynical, and increasingly tribal.


We’re not building bridges.  

We’re building bunkers.


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The Incentives Are All Wrong


Politicians don’t get rewarded for nuance.  

They get rewarded for outrage.


Cable news doesn’t profit from unity.  

It profits from conflict.


Social media doesn’t amplify understanding.  

It amplifies the loudest, angriest, most divisive voices in the room.


So here we are a country where racial tension isn’t just a byproduct of politics.  

It’s the business model.


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The Real Danger: We’re Losing the Ability to See Each Other


When racial politics becomes the default lens, everything gets flattened:


- Every disagreement becomes a racial grievance.  

- Every policy debate becomes a racial battlefield.  

- Every candidate becomes a racial symbol instead of a human being with strengths and flaws.  


And once people stop seeing each other as individuals, democracy becomes a zero‑sum game.  

If “your group” wins, “my group” loses.  

If “your group” gains power, “my group” gets pushed out.


That’s not a society.  

That’s a cold war with ballots instead of bullets.


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The Hard Truth: We Can’t Build a Future on Fear


America cannot survive much less thrive if every election is framed as an existential racial showdown.  

We cannot build a stable future if every political message is designed to trigger, divide, or inflame.


We need leaders who can talk about race without weaponizing it.  

We need voters who can hear about race without shutting down.  

We need a politics that treats people like citizens, not demographic chess pieces.


Because if we keep going down this road, we won’t just lose elections.  

We’ll lose the country we’re supposed to be building for the next generation.


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Final Word


Racial politics is more prevalent than ever and not in a healthy, honest, healing way.  

It’s being used as a shortcut, a shield, a hammer, and a distraction.


And unless we break that cycle, America’s future won’t be defined by progress.  

It’ll be defined by polarization.

Friday, May 8, 2026

Newby’s Name Riding Heavy Through Liberty County

Progressive Democrat Sabrina Newby isn’t running a protest campaign. She’s running a problem for longtime incumbent Al Williams, the biggest one he’s faced in his long political career.



Liberty County is shifting under everyone’s feet. Fort Stewart families, new residents with no ties to the old courthouse networks, and voters who aren’t impressed with “how it’s always been done” are reshaping the electorate. The political map that once protected incumbents is getting redrawn by population growth, frustration, and rising costs.


Newby has tapped straight into that frustration, affordability, cost of living, and the sense that local leadership hasn’t kept pace with the county’s growth. She’s speaking to voters who feel unheard, overlooked, or priced out. And they’re responding.


Some folks say she’s positioned to shock the system. Others think Williams’ deep roots and long resume will hold. Both sides have their arguments but neither can deny the ground is moving.


What happens next won’t be decided by tradition, seniority, or political nostalgia.  

It’ll be decided by Liberty County voters, and they’re not the same voters from ten years ago.


This race isn’t just a contest.  

It’s a temperature check on where Liberty County is headed and who gets to lead it there.

These Democratic Women Are Rising Stars and Their Futures are Bright

  Former State Senator and potential '26 gubernatorial candidate Jen Jordan Tift County Board of Education member Pat McKinnon State Rep...