christian, then you must be opposed to gay marriage and that s not actually true a. lot has changed since 2005 in that quote that you just played. i wonder if we will see a turning point here that now business is going to be the driver of freedom? i mean, i would like to think that arizona would have done the right thing with or without the super bowl. but the pushback, dillon, was so strong fwra the business community. there was going to be an economic impact. that s the last thing any governor wants to have in his or her state. was this a game changer, this veto? and what s the future of it? i think so. i thif you saw the way the business community rallied against the bill in arizona and for republican governors, conservative, moderate, wherever they call, the business community is somebody they have to pay heed to. when you have them united in the way that they were. you see what the result was in arizona and already, i ve spoke with the atlanta chamber of commerce. there is a b
michelle nunn, daughter of sam nunn, one of those backing nunn told bloomberg, the vast majority of americans say they don t want the government to shut down, they want middle ground. this is the dynamic that could reshape democratic politics in georgia and provide democrats a firewall. joining me now is goldie taylor. thanks for joining us tonight. and you are a resident georgia expert tonight, coming to us from georgia. and i just wondered if you could talk a little bit about what is going on in the state. we see this story today about republican donors moving the to the democratic candidate down there. where is this coming from and how serious is this republican split that we re suggesting? first, i ll tell you where it s coming from. michelle nunn founded a organization called hands-on atlanta. it was built on volunteerism and they did a lot of partnerships with ceos around the state of georgia in terms of their community outreach and, you know, sort of investing in communities t
firewall. joining me now is goldie taylor. thanks for joining us tonight. and you are a resident georgia expert tonight, coming to us from georgia. and i just wondered if you could talk a little bit about what is going on in the state. we see this story today about republican donors moving the to the democratic candidate down there. where is this coming from and how serious is this republican split that we re suggesting? first, i ll tell you where it s coming from. michelle nunn founded a organization called hands-on atlanta. it was built on volunteerism and they did a lot of partnerships with ceos around the state of georgia in terms of their community outreach and, you know, sort of investing in communities that they served. so she has a lot of one-to-one relationships with the georgia chamber of commerce, the atlanta chamber of commerce, and some of the more conservative establishment business leaders in the state. so that s where the money is really coming from. a candidate asked
don t want the government to shut down, they want middle ground. this is the dynamic that could reshape democratic politics in georgia and provide democrats a firewall. joining me now is goldie taylor. thanks for joining us tonight. and you are a resident georgia expert tonight, coming to us from georgia. and i just wondered if you could talk a little bit about what is going on in the state. we see this story today about republican donors moving the to the democratic candidate down there. where is this coming from and how serious is this republican split that we re suggesting? first, i ll tell you where it s coming from. michelle nunn founded a organization called hands-on atlanta. it was built on volunteerism and they did a lot of partnerships with ceos around the state of georgia in terms of their community outreach and, you know, sort of investing in communities that they served. so she has a lot of one-to-one relationships with the georgia chamber of commerce, the atlanta chamber