Wednesday, May 6, 2026

South of the Gnat Line: Where Thurmond’s Quiet Ground Game Starts Talking

Political observers who only watch Atlanta and Savannah are missing the quieter story unfolding across rural Georgia. While most campaigns chase metro media hits, Michael Thurmond has been logging miles in places that rarely see statewide candidates unless it’s election season..... Coffee County, Ware County, Baldwin County, Carroll County, and a long list of small towns that don’t make the evening news.



These visits aren’t flashy. They aren’t headline‑driven. They’re the kind of slow, methodical, relationship‑heavy stops that usually tell you more about a candidate’s strategy than any press release.


Some folks see a photo‑op.  

Rural Georgia sees something different: a candidate who actually showed up.


Why the Gnat Line Still Matters


Georgia’s political class loves to talk about “the gnat line” like it’s a relic of the past. Anyone who’s spent time south of it knows better. The line still marks a cultural shift, rural Black Belt counties, agricultural communities, small‑town economies, and voters who expect you to earn trust the old‑fashioned way.


Campaigns that ignore these places usually pay for it.  

Campaigns that invest early sometimes change the map.


Thurmond’s travel pattern suggests he understands that. It’s not about predicting outcomes, it’s about recognizing that rural Georgia still carries weight inside Democratic primaries, especially in communities where turnout is built on relationships, not billboards.


The Strategy Behind the Stops


From the outside, the visits look simple. But the pattern is clear:


- Counties with deep rural roots  

- Counties where personal relationships still drive turnout  

- Counties where statewide candidates rarely spend real time  


Whether this approach “bears fruit” depends on many factors... turnout, messaging, competition, and how voters respond in the final stretch. But the intent is unmistakable: Thurmond is positioning himself as the candidate who didn’t treat rural Georgia like an afterthought.


What Rural Voters Are Watching


Rural communities don’t expect perfection. They expect presence. They expect respect. They expect someone who understands that the state doesn’t end at I‑285.


Some candidates talk about rural Georgia.  

Others test the theory by actually going there.


Thurmond’s bet is simple: if you want credibility south of the gnat line, you have to earn it in person. Whether that strategy reshapes the race remains to be seen, but it’s a reminder that rural Georgia still has a voice and candidates ignore it at their own risk.

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

The Fault Line Georgia Democrats Avoid Naming

There’s a conversation sitting in the middle of the Democratic Party that most folks would rather walk around than deal with. It’s not new. It’s not subtle. It’s just uncomfortable.

(D) Bob Trammell,  candidate for Attorney General 



You’ve got Democrats who come out of the Blue Dog, moderate, pragmatic lane. They’re credentialed. They’re experienced. They’re serious about governing. And they’re white.


And in a party where identity politics shapes a lot of the internal energy, that creates a collision nobody wants to say out loud.


So here’s the cold question:  

Can Democratic primary voters look past race and gender and judge candidates strictly on qualifications and ideas when the candidates come from inside their own party?


Not who’s better.  

Not who should win.  

Just whether voters can separate identity from evaluation.


Because the party talks a lot about representation and for good reason. But it also talks about experience, competence, and governing ability. Those values don’t always point in the same direction, and when they don’t, the room gets quiet.


Some voters lead with identity.  

Some lead with ideology.  

Some lead with resume.  

Some lead with electability.  

Some lead with who they trust to handle the job.


Those instincts don’t always line up. And when they don’t, the party has to decide which value actually comes first.


That’s the part nobody wants to say out loud.


Not because it’s complicated.  

But because it forces Democrats to confront the gap between what they preach and how they vote.


This cycle isn’t creating the tension.  

It’s just exposing it.

The Geoff Duncan Lane That’s There Whether People Admit It or Not

Every election cycle, Georgia Democrats find a new way to underestimate their own voters. And right now, the latest example is the knee‑jerk reaction some rank‑and‑file Democrats and party activists have toward the idea of Geoff Duncan becoming the nominee. You’d think the sky was falling the way some folks talk.



But here’s the part nobody wants to say out loud:  

It’s crazy to act like he can’t win the nomination.


Not because of polls. Not because of headlines.  

But because there’s a quiet lane of voters out there that nobody is accounting for and they’re not talking, posting, or raising their hands in public.


They’re watching.


They’re listening.


And they’re not interested in getting dragged by their friends, their group chats, or their county party Facebook warriors for saying Duncan’s name out loud.


That’s the part the activists keep missing.


Georgia has always had a “hidden vote” people who don’t show their cards until the last minute. People who don’t want the noise. People who don’t want the backlash. People who don’t want to argue with folks who think they speak for the entire party.


And this year, that quiet lane is bigger than folks want to admit.


Especially among Black men.


Not the loud ones. Not the ones who live on Twitter.  On Facebook. On any social media site. 

I’m talking about the men who work, raise families, mind their business, and vote their own mind, not the party line someone tries to hand them.


These voters don’t show up in early polling.  

They don’t show up in activist circles.  

They don’t show up in the “who’s trending” conversations.


But they show up on Election Day.


So when people dismiss Duncan like he’s a non‑factor, that’s not analysis, that’s wishful thinking. It’s easier to pretend the race is already decided than to acknowledge that Georgia voters don’t move the way party insiders think they do.



The truth is simple:  

There’s more happening under the surface than folks want to admit.


And ignoring that hidden vote has burned Democrats before.


It might burn them again.

Sunday, May 3, 2026

The Cleland Way: The Quiet Leadership Guiding Jason Moon

If you’ve followed Georgia politics long enough, you know Max Cleland wasn’t just another name on a ballot. He was a walking lesson in service, sacrifice, and the kind of grit you can’t fake. Folks remember him as the Vietnam veteran who came home without three limbs but never lost his purpose. They remember the Secretary of State who modernized the office, the U.S. Senator who fought for veterans and working people, and the public servant who believed government ought to lift folks up, not weigh them down.



So when Jason Moon, Cleland’s first cousin and longtime aide steps into public life, it’s impossible not to see the fingerprints of that legacy on the way he carries himself.


Moon didn’t learn politics from a distance. He learned it in the trenches, watching Cleland work rooms from Bainbridge to Blue Ridge, always with the same message: service first, ego last. Cleland’s leadership style was steady, disciplined, and people‑centered. He didn’t chase headlines. He chased solutions. And he expected the folks around him to do the same.


That’s the environment Moon grew up in politically. Not the loud, cable‑news version of politics, the real kind. The kind where you sit with veterans who feel forgotten. The kind where you talk to workers who’ve been pushed aside. The kind where you learn that leadership isn’t about who talks the most, but who listens the hardest.


Cleland believed in resilience, not theatrics. He believed in dignity, not division. And he believed that public service was a calling, not a career ladder. Those values shaped the staffers who worked for him, and Moon was one of them.


You can see that influence in the way Moon approaches public work today. The tone is quieter, steadier, more grounded. The focus leans toward workers, veterans, and the folks who don’t usually get a microphone. That’s classic Cleland, the belief that the measure of a leader is how many people they help, not how many people they impress.



In a political era full of noise, that old‑school Cleland style stands out. It’s not flashy. It’s not performative. It’s the kind of leadership Georgia used to be known for and the kind that still resonates with people who remember what public service looked like before everything turned into a show.


Cleland left a mark on Georgia. And whether you’re for Moon, against him, or still figuring him out, there’s no denying this: he’s walking into public life carrying a legacy that was built on service, sacrifice, and the belief that leadership means showing up for people when it counts.


That’s the Cleland stamp. And it doesn’t fade.

Saturday, May 2, 2026

Big Lead, Little Footprint: What Keisha’s Poll Numbers Really Say About Georgia Democrats

Every election cycle, Georgia voters get hit with a fresh round of polls that claim to show who’s “leading” long before most folks have even tuned in. This year is no different. Several recent surveys show Keisha Lance Bottoms sitting on a sizable lead in the Democratic primary for governor. And for a lot of people especially outside metro Atlanta that raises eyebrows.



After all, how does a candidate with limited visibility in many parts of the state suddenly appear to be lapping the field?


To understand that, you have to look past the headlines and into what these polls are actually measuring.


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The Power of Name Recognition. Not Statewide Strength


According to reporting from the Atlanta Journal-Constitution and other outlets, Bottoms’ early advantage is driven largely by one thing: name recognition. She’s a former Atlanta mayor and a former member of the Biden administration. Voters know her name, even if they haven’t seen her in their county, their region, or their local news.


Pollsters quoted in these stories note that early surveys often reward the candidate with the most familiar name, not the one with the deepest support. That’s especially true when the rest of the field is still introducing themselves to voters.


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The Undecided Voter Problem


One AJC/UGA poll reported that roughly four out of ten Democratic voters were undecided. That’s a massive share of the electorate still sitting on the fence. When undecided voters make up that much of the pie, any “lead” is softer than it looks.


Some polls also show that when voters are given short bios of each candidate — what’s called an “informed ballot” — Bottoms’ numbers drop while other candidates gain ground. That suggests her early advantage isn’t locked in; it’s simply the default choice for voters who haven’t heard much about anyone else.


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The Rural Puzzle: High Numbers Without High Visibility


One poll cited in news coverage showed Bottoms pulling more than 50 percent in regions like Central, Southeast, and Southwest Georgia areas where she has had little to no visible presence so far.


That doesn’t mean she’s secretly running a stealth campaign. It means voters in those regions recognize her name more than they recognize the others. Pollsters and political analysts often point out that this is a common pattern in early statewide polling.


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Are the Polls Being Manipulated?


There is no reporting from the AJC, national outlets, or polling firms suggesting manipulation. What the articles do highlight are the usual early‑cycle issues:


- Name ID dominates when voters aren’t engaged  

- Online and phone polls can undercount rural and older voters  

- Some ballot tests exclude undecided voters, inflating the top line  

- Early polls measure familiarity, not enthusiasm  


These are methodological quirks, not evidence of tampering.


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The Bottom Line


The polls are real in the sense that they were conducted and published. But the “lead” they show is built on:


- Familiarity  

- Early timing  

- Low voter engagement  

- A huge undecided bloc  


As more voters learn about the full field, the numbers are likely to shift and some polls already show that happening when voters get more information.


In Georgia politics, early polls tell you who people have heard of. They don’t tell you who they’ll vote for once the race actually starts.


Friday, May 1, 2026

In a Three‑Way Scramble, a Thurmond–Duncan Runoff Is on the Table.

Every election cycle, folks act shocked when Georgia politics throws a curveball. But if you’ve watched this state long enough from courthouse steps to farm‑bureau meetings you know the unexpected is usually hiding in plain sight. And the idea floating around political circles right now is one of those “sounds wild until you look at the numbers” situations: a Michael Thurmond–Geoff Duncan runoff.



On paper, it doesn’t look far‑fetched. Polling shows a crowded field with no one close to a majority and a mountain of undecided voters big enough to swing the whole race sideways. When nearly half the electorate is still sitting on the fence, anything can happen once folks finally tune in.


Some folks point out that both men have something that plays well in a fractured primary: long‑term familiarity with Georgia voters. Thurmond has decades of public service under his belt, and Duncan is known statewide from his time in office. In a three‑way race where name recognition and trust matter, that kind of resume can carry weight with undecided voters who are still kicking the tires.


Others note that each candidate speaks to a different slice of the electorate.... suburban moderates, longtime Democrats, rural voters who want steady hands, and people tired of political noise. When those lanes overlap in a crowded field, it’s not hard to imagine both men pulling enough support to land in the top two.


And then there’s the simple math: if no one hits 50%, Georgia sends the top two to a runoff. With the field as split as it is, a runoff isn’t just likely — it’s almost guaranteed. The only question is which two names rise above the pile once the undecideds break.


So when people say a Thurmond–Duncan runoff “doesn’t sound too crazy,” they’re not wrong. Georgia politics has a way of reminding everyone that nothing is locked in until the votes are counted. And with this many voters still making up their minds, the path to the final two is wide open.


Georgia Agriculture Is Changing — Are Rural Voters Willing to Hear Someone New?


Here in rural Georgia, folks love to talk about the rural vote like it’s one big block. But anybody who’s spent time in farm country knows better. The backbone of Georgia agriculture, overwhelmingly rural white men isn’t some monolith. They’re a mix of small producers, multi‑generation families, young farmers trying to modernize, and men who’ve watched the cost of staying on the land climb higher every year.



So the question floating around political circles is simple:  

Can Sedrick Rowe make inroads with this group?


Some observers say he has a lane, not because of party labels, but because of something rarer in politics: lived experience that lines up with the people he’s trying to reach.


Rowe isn’t coming at agriculture from a think‑tank podium or a city office tower. He’s a first‑generation farmer from Albany who built his operation from the ground up. That story hits different in rural Georgia, where respect is earned through sweat, not slogans. Farmers, especially white male farmers may not agree with every policy position they hear, but they do respect someone who knows what it’s like to fight for land, credit, equipment, and a harvest.


And that’s where Rowe’s potential inroads begin.


Georgia’s agriculture sector is dominated by rural white men who’ve been dealing with the same pressures for years: rising input costs, unpredictable disaster relief, consolidation squeezing out small producers, and markets that feel rigged toward the biggest players. When someone talks about crop insurance, USDA bureaucracy, or the grind of keeping a farm afloat, they expect the speaker to know what they’re talking about. Rowe’s background on federal agriculture advisory committees gives him credibility in those conversations.


But credibility alone doesn’t flip votes. What it can do is open the door.


Younger white farmers, the ones experimenting with ag‑tech, direct‑to‑market models, and diversified crops tend to be more open to new voices. Mid‑size producers who feel ignored by both parties are willing to listen to anyone who shows up consistently and talks about survival instead of ideology. And rural independents, the quiet swing voters in counties most people write off, care less about party and more about who will answer the phone when a storm wipes out a field.


No one expects a Democrat to win the rural white male vote outright. That’s not the point. The real question is whether a candidate can cut margins, earn respect, and show up in places where Democrats haven’t bothered to knock in years.


Some say Rowe has a shot at that  not because he’s trying to “convert” anybody, but because he’s speaking to the economic realities that cross party lines. Agriculture isn’t red or blue. It’s survival.


And in rural Georgia, survival still speaks louder than politics.

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