As Democrats celebrated Sen. Raphael Warnockโs win over Herschel Walker in the U.S. Senate runoff race last night, my phone lit up with a text that perfectly summarized the outcome:
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โIt took $500 million to have Raphael Warnock win GA by less than half a percentage point. Absolute madness.โ
The text came from a former exec in one of Georgiaโs largest local governments, someone infinitely familiar with the stateโs politics and demographics. But you donโt need to be a creature of Peach State politicking to have drawn the same conclusion. The race did ultimately end up being not quite as tight as it was at the time I got the textโfinal tallies showed Warnock holding onto his seat for the next six years by three percentage pointsโbut the fact that this particular race was so close, that it came down to the wire, that it was even a contest at all, was, in fact, madness. And it tells us all we need to know about the electorate in Georgia and how cynical we still are nationally.
Iโll spare you a paragraph-long treatise on how bad Walker was as a candidate; if youโve read this space over the last year you already know about his lies, his history of domestic violence, his hypocrisy and his various scandals. Theyโre not what needs examining here. What does is why so many peopleโone-million-seven-hundred-nineteen-thousand-eight-hundred-seventy-nine of themโthought Walker was the best person to have a vote on who sits on the Supreme Court or whether the country goes to war.
The answer to that has a lot to do with race. Reading that, Iโm sure, will make the guy (troll) who emailed me this morning to say, without further commentary, โAMERICA is tired of the VICTIM-RACE CARD BULLSHIT!โ meltdown. But only in his America could a candidate like Walker have had a shot. Walker offered nothing by way of competence or qualifications for the job he ran for. What he did offer to conservatives was a Blackfaced pass for their regressive politics, someone willing to not only be an apologist but an advocate, even if not a very articulate one, for their attempts to drag women and nonwhite people backwards from the social, economic and political progress of the past 60 years.
Georgia was a fantastic testing ground for that approach because perhaps no other state sits more at the tipping point between progress and regress. Georgia was once the heart of the Confederacy, a home to staunch segregationists and the state that gave us Newt Gingrich and his โContract With America,โ a policy platform that relied on racist tropes about Black immorality and violence to sweep his party into control of Congress. Itโs currently a state where twice in the last four years, a Black woman ran competitive races for the governorship, where Atlantaโs suburbs, not just Atlanta itself, have browned beyond comfortability for those who fled under the white flight of a generation ago, and where the lineal successor to Martin Luther King Jr.โs pulpit now represents the state in Congressโ upper chamber.
Walker, as much as anything else, was a test balloon floated to see whether the politics of the Old South could get one more run, as long as it was dressed up as a washed up ex-football star who helped make white folks in red counties like Forsyth, Paulding, Cherokee and Walton feel OK.It failed this time around, but that shouldnโt make it any less of a reminder that the New Georgia ainโt that much different than the old.
Straight From
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