some voters are resisting the complete polarization of the country, emphasizing candidate qualifications, personal attributes, and basic likability. sending a sharp message there are consequences for promoting people regarded as well outside the political mainstream. joining us now with a look at axios a.m., lachlan markay. what s today s one big thing. we re looking at the upcoming runoff in the georgia senate race. it s entirely possible that once again control of the senate is going to come down to a runoff in georgia. this has been an astronomically expensive race, a quarter of a billion dollars spent in georgia alone, and that s going to increase dramatically, whether or not senate control hangs in the balance, especially if it does. we contained a memo.
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As Virginia’s Democratic gubernatorial primary approached this spring, Josh Stanfield, campaign manager for Democratic Socialist Delegate Lee Carter, began to worry that state party officials and the Department of Elections weren’t treating all candidates equally. Among other worries, he’d heard that some establishment candidates got different (and more accurate) instructions for submitting their nominating petitions than Carter did. That matters, because the first to file is first on the ballot, which research shows can provide a slight advantage. As it turned out, front-runner and former governor Terry McAuliffe wound up at the top of the June 8 ballot; Carter is fourth of five.