went everywhere in the state, as you said. went to really red counties hardly any democrats. they went to metro atlanta a lot obviously and ran up the vote there and did even better than i think they had done in previous elections. he s been on the ballot a number of times here, and really won them over. what they also did, i think, after the general election, just a month ago, they really probably met and said, where can we improve? what canbetter? the sign of a smart campaign. i do disagree. not just him. georgia democrats have beenars. this is not just last night or last month. remember, they flipped the georgia sixth seat just several years ago. flipped 40 municipal seats. flipped mayoral seats, won obviously two senate seats. first time a presidential candidate won in 28 years. so this is a state that s not quite blue but it s moving from deep red because they ve done the work. this cycle republicans won
herschel walker barely won it. he barely carried this county. compare that result in county in the governor s race, brian kemp won it by 14 race. in the senate race, walker by only three. you see a lot of these counties on the edge of the atlanta metro area, a little bit outside of atlanta here, where you saw this was most pronounced. voters who were comfortable going for kemp, but then were not comfortable voting for walker in the senate race. does that dynamic change? do those voters stay home tomorrow? do they turnout? if they turnout, do they end upholding their nose and voting for walker. they re hoping republicans that kemp campaigning with walker will make the difference. steve kornacki with anacki w critical questions. look who is just joining me now with what i hope are some of the
walker, totally different. an almost 2-1 margin voters in november said walker does not show good judgment and you break that down by party, voters who said walker does not show good judgment, it s almost all democrats, but it s nearly 30% of republicans and almost three our four independent voters. so that was what created the lag between walker and kemp and walker and the other republicans running statewide in georgia. are those republican voters, the voters who re-elected kemp easily, are they showing up tomorrow? are they staying home? if they show up, are they going to cast a ballot maybe reluctantly? for walker that they aren t willing to cast in november? some of the places we re going to be looking at here are sort of in the outer, atlanta metro area here. core republican areas. big republican vote producing counties where walker, look, walker did well in forsythe county.
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are they gonna show a big heavy turnout, that s a mega country, republicans need that. the second question, are democrats going to show the same kind of firepower that they showed in recent cycles where there really surge their own turnout. they re gonna need that to have a shot and both of those things happen. and to your question, it s going to be the suburban moderate college educated voters in places like where i am right now, atlanta metro area, who flip from republican to democrat who are crucial to joe biden carrying the state in 2020. and raphael warnock us as well senator john winning georgia at that point. the single biggest question here could be whether raphael warnock can hold on to that suburban moderate maybe center-right swing voter who doesn t like the direction of the republican party. raphael warnock has tried to appeal to them in paths where he tells testimonials from those types of voters. saying they re gonna support him not only is that gonna be important in ge