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Tag: Ken Martin

  • Here’s what DNC Chair Martin says about Georgia Politics, voter turnout, and rebuilding trust

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    Friday began the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day holiday weekend in Atlanta, but the political season in Georgia, and around the country, is already in full bloom. The Georgia Legislature got back to work earlier this week, and campaign rallies and forums for upcoming elections and special elections for Georgia governor, Lt. governor, one of the state’s two Senate seats, and Marjorie Greene’s seat representing Georgia’s 14th District are picking up. That includes the first gubernatorial forum of the year, which took place in Savannah last week and included all seven Democratic candidates. 

    It may be a midterm election year, but the stakes are high in the Peach State, according to Democratic National Committee (DNC) Chair Ken Martin.

    Martin was in town on Friday for an MLK Day breakfast in Savanna Hall at Zoo Atlanta. The speakers at the event included union leaders, labor leaders, local preachers, and local politicians, such as U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath (GA-D) and Stockbridge Mayor Jayden Williams. When it was Martin’s turn to speak to the large crowd in attendance, the majority of which was Black, he thanked Senator Jon Ossoff, who was also in attendance, and other Georgia politicians, including Public Service Commissioner Alicia M. Johnson, for holding the line for the South’s most crucial battleground state.

    Johnson is the first Black woman to hold a seat on the statewide Public Safety Commission. Martin told the crowd that Georgia has the opportunity to have a historic midterm election this year, but it will take a concerted effort long before the fourth quarter.

    “We cannot keep showing up three months before an election and ask people to vote for us,” Martin said.

    Martin (above) said the DNC will make voter registration a priority this election cycle. Young voter turnout has fallen over the past couple of elections. According to data from Your Voice Matters, only 23% of 18-29-year-olds registered to vote and cast ballots in the 2022 midterms. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    The Atlanta Voice sat down with Martin after he left the stage to talk about what he and the DNC are working on next. The District 14 special election will take place on Tuesday, March 10. When asked how important that election was to the Democratic mission heading into November 2026, Martin said it was very important.

    “This is an excellent opportunity to pick up a Congressional District,” Martin said, who added that Democratic candidate Shawn Harris, one of three Democrats running in the 22-person election, was a good candidate. There are 17 Republicans running for the seat. 

     “If you look at last year as an example, we had our most historic off-year election in the history of the Democratic Party,” he said.

    The DNC Chair said people need to look even deeper into the political success of 2026, like in Mississippi, where three Legislative seats were turned blue. “Every inch of ground we gain adds up,” he said. “We know if we carry that forward, we can put this [Georgia] seat in play. We have a good candidate in Shawn, and a district that’s ripe for the taking, and so I say you can’t ignore any race and you can’t ignore any part of this country.”

    Martin said the DNC will make voter registration a priority this election cycle. Young voter turnout has fallen in recent elections. According to data from Your Voice Matters, only 23% of 18-29-year-olds registered to vote and cast ballots in the 2022 midterms. That was four years ago, and registration and turnout of the youngest age group (18-19) is even lower.

    “Young voters are the largest voting bloc in the country, but they vote at such low numbers,” Martin, a native Minnesotan and father of two sons, ages 23 and 21, said. “That is part of what our voter registration push is really focusing on, registering young voters, in particular young Black and brown voters.” 

    Martin said he understands why young people are becoming more disenchanted with voting. “I sort of get it, they’re looking around at what is happening right now, they don’t see anything good happening in politics. They don’t see anything passing that is going to make a difference in their lives.”

    He said there is a sense of despair in the air.

    “We have to give young people some hope,” Martin said. “We have to give them hope that there are better days ahead.”

    “We have to give young people some hope,” Martin (above, center) said. “We have to give them hope that there are better days ahead.” Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    The DNC recently announced that it is launching a new voter registration effort, When We Count. The youth fellowship will aim to train hundreds of young people to register new voters, hopefully closing the voter registration gap that has grown over the past four years. 

    Before he left the stage on Friday, Martin repeated a favorite line and said it again before he was done with this interview.

    He said with a bright smile, “When we organize everywhere, we can win anywhere.” 

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    Donnell Suggs

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  • ‘You Can’t Give Up Local Races’: DNC Chair visits Georgia on eve of special election

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    Debra Shigley and Jason T. Dickerson will face off in another special election on Tuesday, Sept. 23. This will be the second election the two State Senate candidates have been involved in a month. A Democrat, Shigley, has received support from the Democratic National Committee in the past, but on Saturday, Sept. 20, she got that helping hand on the ground. 

    Debra Shigley (center) delivers a speech at the Canton Square on Thursday, May 1, 2025 in Canton, Georgia. Shigley is running for the open seat in the Georgia State Senate, District 21. Photo by Itoro N. Umontuen/The Atlanta Voice

    Democratic National Committee Chair Ken Martic was in Alpharetta and stumped alongside Shigley and others in District 21 on Saturday. The district includes parts of Fulton County (Alpharetta) and Cherokee County (Canton), and though Shigley is popular among voters in both parts of the district (she won 62% of the Fulton County votes, for example), she has to gear up for another election. Winning this special election may not seem like a big deal on the national level, but Martin thinks otherwise. Wins are wins, he says.

    “It’s important for us to realize that we make sure we get Democrats elected on all levels,” Martin told The Atlanta Voice. “That’s where the rubber hits the road.”

    Martin took part in door-knocking in Alpharetta and met Shigley supporters and local voters. He told The Atlanta Voice that he came away impressed with the level of support and interest. The DNC Chair used the phrase “off the charts” to describe the energy around the Democratic candidate.

    “There was a lot of excitement and energy,” Martin said. “It seems like people in this district understand what’s at stake.”

    On August 26, Debra Shigley won nearly 40 percent of the vote during a special election for the District 21 State Senate seat. But that wasn’t enough to get the job done. Two of her opponents, Jason T. Dickerson, a Republican, and Steve West, also a Republican, brought home 17.36% and 17.04% of the votes, respectively. 

    Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens (above) is running for a second term in November. Photo by Kerri Phox/ The Atlanta Voice

    There are more than a half-dozen mayoral elections taking place in majority Black cities around the country in November. Along with Atlanta, Cleveland, Detroit, and Greensboro, North Carolina are holding elections. There are also mayoral elections taking place in Seattle, Jersey City, New Jersey, Charlotte, and in Martin’s hometown, Minneapolis. 

    Over the past 18 months, Democrats have won or overperformed in more than 40 elections. The phrase “overperform” can be misleading, but it is seen as a sign of momentum, according to Martin.

    “We really believe that when you organize everywhere, you can win anywhere,” Martin said. “We believe we have a shot at winning the election on Tuesday. We have to compete on all levels.” 

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    Donnell Suggs

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  • Democrat XP Lee wins Minnesota House special election to replace assassinated leader

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    Democrat Xp Lee won a special election Tuesday to fill the Minnesota House seat of a top Democratic leader who was assassinated.

    Rep. Melissa Hortman, of Brooklyn Park, held the seat until her death in June.

    Lee is a former Brooklyn Park City Council member. He defeated Republican real estate agent Ruth Bittner in the heavily Democratic district.

    Lee’s win restores a 67-67 tie in the House, and it preserves a power-sharing deal that existed for most of the 2025 legislative session, after the 2024 elections cost House Democrats their majority.

    Former House Speaker Hortman brokered that agreement, which ended Democrats’ three-week boycott. Under the deal, she agreed to end her six-year tenure as speaker and let Republican Lisa Demuth take the position. Hortman then took the title speaker emerita. Most legislative committees became evenly split between Republican and Democratic members, with co-chairs from each party.

    The tie in the House meant some level of bipartisan agreement was required to pass anything in this year’s session.

    In an indication of the national interest in the race, Democratic National Committee Chair Ken Martin said Lee’s “commitment to expanding access to education, affordable health care, and good-paying jobs honors the legacy” of Hortman.

    “Across Minnesota, our hearts are still broken by the horrific assassination that stole Melissa and her husband Mark,” Martin, who formerly chaired the state Democratic Party, said in a statement. “Political violence is a scourge that has taken far too many lives. Enough is enough. It must end now. And in every case, each of us has a responsibility to condemn and reject political violence wherever it rears its head.”

    The election to replace Hortman takes place about three months after she and her husband were gunned down in their home by a man impersonating a police officer in Brooklyn Park, a suburb northwest of Minneapolis. Another legislator and his wife also were shot but survived.

    Vance Boelter, 57, faces federal and state murder, attempted murder and other charges in the June 14 attacks.

    Tuesday’s special election also follows another act of political violence, the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk in Utah last Wednesday. The shootings have been a concern among voters in the district — and for both candidates.

    Lee said he wants to calm the “charged atmosphere” in the wake of Kirk’s death.

    Bittner said the violence briefly gave her pause about running for office, but she concluded that “there’s no way to solve this problem if we shrink back in fear.”

    Lee, a former Brooklyn Park City Council member, easily won a three-way Democratic primary in August. Bittner, a real estate agent, was the sole Republican on the primary ballot for the seat in the heavily Democratic district.

    Two more special elections will be held Nov. 4 in a pair of Minnesota Senate districts.

    One is to fill the seat vacated by Democratic Sen. Nicole Mitchell, of the St. Paul suburb of Woodbury. She resigned in July after she was convicted of burglarizing her estranged stepmother’s home. The other is for the seat of Republican Sen. Bruce Anderson, of the Minneapolis exurb of Buffalo, who died in July.

    Given that the districts are heavily Democratic and heavily Republican, respectively, control of the Senate isn’t expected to change. But the Democratic candidate for Mitchell’s seat is state Rep. Amanda Hemmingsen-Jaeger, of Woodbury. If she wins, the governor will have to call another special election to fill her House seat.

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