Before she was indicted for taking part in Trump’s scheme to stay in power, Cathy Latham professed to hating politics for being a dirty business. Now she’s knee-deep in the mud.
With the Georgia Senate run-offs about two weeks away, the liberal media have continued to put their thumbs on the scale of the electorate in much the same fashion they did by hiding from voters negative stories about the Biden ticket.
After the cancelation of the 1st District GOP Convention, after infighting at the Chatham County convention, the state party has rescheduled the event.
Political influence has grown dramatically in recent years
Candidates, advocacy groups look to boost turnout on Jan. 5 December 31, 2020 10:30 AM By Emily Wilkins
The voters who were decisive in the only competitive congressional district Democrats flipped in November are set to play an integral role in Georgiaâs two Senate runoff elections next week.
With control of the chamber on the line, Democrats and Republicans have poured resources into targeting the booming Asian American population in Gwinnett and Forsyth counties, where their growing activism has created a force in statewide politics.
Their mobilization helped Rep.-elect Carolyn Bourdeaux (D) win the open 7th District seat last month and President-elect Joe Biden narrowly carry the state, and it will again be critical on Jan. 5.