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Tag: Raphael Warnock

  • Georgia Sen. Warnock to visit Alex Pretti memorial, meet with faith leaders after Minneapolis shooting

    Georgia Sen. Raphael Warnock plans to travel to Minneapolis Tuesday to visit a memorial for Alex Pretti and meet with faith leaders, CBS News has confirmed. The trip comes days after Pretti, a 37-year-old intensive care nurse at the Department of Veterans Affairs, was shot and killed Saturday in south Minneapolis by a U.S. Border Patrol agent.

    The Department of Homeland Security said the agent acted in self-defense while attempting to disarm Pretti. Local officials have disputed that account, pointing to bystander video that appears to show Pretti holding a cellphone, not a gun, in the moments before he was shot.

    Pretti was a U.S. citizen born in Illinois. Court records show he had no criminal history, and his family said he had no prior encounters with law enforcement beyond minor traffic tickets.

    The shooting occurred less than three weeks after another fatal incident in Minneapolis involving a federal immigration agent. Renee Good was killed earlier this month, raising concerns among city leaders about what they describe as an expanded federal immigration presence and the lack of transparency surrounding enforcement operations.

    An image of Alex Pretti is seen at a makeshift memorial in the area where Alex Pretti was shot dead by federal immigration agents in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on January 26, 2026. On January 24, federal agents shot and killed Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old ICU nurse, while scuffling with him on an icy roadway in Minneapolis, less than three weeks after an immigration officer fired on Renee Good, also 37, killing her in her car. US President Donald Trump blamed their deaths on Democratic “chaos,” as his administration faced intensifying pressure over its mass immigration crackdown in Minneapolis.

    ROBERTO SCHMIDT /AFP via Getty Images


    Warnock has responded with sharp criticism of Immigration and Customs Enforcement in a series of posts on X, calling the agency a threat to American freedoms. He accused ICE of operating without sufficient oversight and violating constitutional rights.

    “I can’t think of something more un-American than a federal law enforcement agency that can enter homes without a judicial warrant, patrol our streets in unmarked vehicles and demand papers at random,” Warnock wrote.

    In additional posts, Warnock said he plans to vote against funding for ICE, accusing the agency of killing Americans, detaining children and tearing families apart. 

    “We are losing our humanity,” he wrote. “This is a defining moment for our nation. A moment for moral courage. We must stand together and say no … Trump has turned our streets into a war zone.”

    Georgia Sen. Jon Ossoff also weighed in, issuing a statement condemning what he called civil liberties abuses by the Trump administration. Ossoff cited reports of masked federal agents detaining U.S. citizens, conducting warrantless raids and setting up identification checkpoints.

    “Americans left, right and center are shocked by these abuses of civil liberties,” Ossoff said. “My opponents have a clear choice: stand with Trump or stand with Americans’ constitutional rights.”

    California Congressman Ro Khanna also visited the city of Minneapolis on Monday, and stopped by the Pretti vigil. The shooting remains under investigation. 

    Christopher Harris

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  • ‘I see the future of Georgia’: VP Vance visits Peachtree City to take potshots at Atlanta, Ossoff, big cities

    “People that built Atlanta did not build it so you could not walk the streets safely at night,” Vance said.
    Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    PEACHTREE CITY, GA. – During a week in which both Georgia Senators Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff addressed the media about the toll tariffs are taking on small businesses in Georgia and healthcare cuts are having on Georgians, United States Vice President JD Vance returned to the Peach State to talk about the tax cuts within President Donald Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill.”

    The Vice President also took verbal jabs at the City of Atlanta and Georgia Senator Jon Ossoff while he was in Fayette County.

    “I haven’t been to Atlanta in a little while, but I bet there are places in Atlanta you wouldn’t take your family,” Vance, a native of Middletown, Ohio, said. 

    That comment was followed by a large round of applause. Peachtree City is 30 miles from Atlanta. He wasn’t done. He mentioned crime in Atlanta at least a half-dozen times during his speech. 

    “People that built Atlanta did not build it so you could not walk the streets safely at night,” Vance said.

    On Ossoff, who is currently campaigning for a second term to represent the state of Georgia in the United States Senate, Vance said he wasn’t doing a good job in Washington and needs to be replaced in next year’s election.

    “I see the future of the state of Georgia,” Vance said. 

    A long lined form outside one of the buildings on the Alta Refrigeration to see and hear the Vice President speak.
    Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    Black SUVs with tinted windows and the workers at Alta Refrigeration, Inc. on forklifts crosscrossed the large parking lot hours before Vance arrived. Alta Refrigeration, an industrial equipment supplier, employs hundreds of people who live in Fayette County, a Republican stronghold for decades.

    The image of the SUVs being driven by men and women in dark suits and sunglasses and the forklifts being driven by men in Dickies overalls with t-shirts underneath and work boots on blended what the Republican Party has been preaching ever since Trump became the face of the party: We are all on the same page. 

    An hour before Vance took the stage, Alta employees lined up on stage under a navy blue banner that read, “JOBS! JOBS!, JOBS!, JOBS!” 

    The entire event was an opportunity for republican politicians to champion Trump’s bill, while propping up Republican candidates for governor and Senate in this state.

    The tax cuts Vance came to Georgia to talk about are being used in opposite ways depending on what political parties deliver the message. Senatorial candidates Derek Dooley and Buddy Carter both took shots at Ossoff during their time on stage. 

    “He is a typical politician. He looks good, he talks good, but we have an old saying in football: “Your film is your resume,” said Dooley, 57, who opened his remarks by saying he is new to politics and that was why he was selected to speak first.

    “Jon Ossoff doesn’t represent the values of Georgians,” Carter said. “He does not work for you. I’m running for United States Senate and I’m working my ass off to get rid of Ossoff.

    Georgia Congressman Mike Collins and Lt. Governor Burt Jones also took the stage to make comments about the ‘Big Beautiful Bill” and the 2026 Senate election. 

    Collins also attacked Ossoff during his speech, calling Ossoff a “trust fun kid” and saying that he doesn’t believe in the state of Georgia.

    “He is California’s third senator,” Collins said. “Come November, we are going to fire Jon Ossoff.”

    Alta Refrigeration President Eric Brown introduced Georgia Congressman Brian Jack.

    “This is a monumental moment for Alta Refrigeration,” Brown said. “In my book, guys, this man is a rock star.” 

    Jack said it was an honor to welcome Vance to his hometown in Fayette County and credited Trump for “delivering on his promises.” 

    Mayors from Peachtree City, Tyrone, Woolsey, local politicians, city council members, and former Georgia Senator Kelly Loeffler, United States Administrator of the Small Business Administration were also in attendance on Thursday. 

    Donnell Suggs

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  • Libertarian presidential candidate Chase Oliver returns to Atlanta Pride 

    Libertarian presidential candidate Chase Oliver returns to Atlanta Pride 

    Atlanta streets were filled with bright, vibrant colors, and smiling faces while everyone was getting ready to walk the Atlanta Pride annual parade route. Photo by Kerri Phox/The Atlanta Voice

    Libertarian Chase Oliver, 39, came home to Atlanta Pride this weekend, but this time as a presidential candidate.

    Atlanta streets were filled with bright, vibrant colors, and smiling faces while everyone was getting ready to walk the annual parade route.

    Before the parade started, Oliver said he was feeling great to be involved and back home in Atlanta. 

    “The weather’s beautiful and we’re having a great turnout of libertarians who had voted in from out of state to come support this campaign, even so having people driving hundreds of miles to come and be with us today,” he said. “I just love Atlanta Pride every year.”

    Photo by Kerri Phox/The Atlanta Voice

    Oliver said he first discovered the Libertarian Party at Atlanta Pride in 2010, when John Monds, who was running for Governor, talked to Oliver who at the time was a politically displaced pacifist who was frustrated that neither Republicans or Democrats fought for peace.

    He’s been home in the party ever since, running for Congress in 2020, then U.S. Senate in 2022, debating incumbent Sen. Raphael Warnock and Herschel Walker’s empty podium. Oliver was widely credited with causing the runoff election between Warnock and Walker. 

    Photo by Kerri Phox/The Atlanta Voice

    When Oliver ran for Senate in 2022, he said they got a ton of attention when they forced the runoff in the race and libertarians across the country asked if he ever thought about running for president.

    “I thought they were crazy at first, but we explored the idea and we got the support we needed. The reason why I’m doing this is because I want to make sure there’s a better future for not just myself, but for my nephews and nieces,” he said.

    Additionally, Oliver became the first openly LGBTQ candidate to be nominated by a political party and it’s a full circle moment. 

    “I’m excited to be the first candidate for president to ever march in the Atlanta Pride Parade,” he said. “I think it is important that we recognize the LGBTQ community and our inherent right to live as free individuals. As the first LGBTQ candidate for president across the nation, I’m proud to represent Atlanta and our community on the national stage.”

    Photo by Kerri Phox/The Atlanta Voice

    If elected, Oliver says he would get our economy under control by “balancing our federal budget”.

    “I would address the immigration crisis we see at our southern border by implementing the 21st century Ellis Island. I would also defend each person’s individual liberty to live as they see fit, so long as you’re not harming another person,” he said. “If you’re living your life in peace, your life’s your life, your body’s your body, and your business is your business, it’s not mine and it’s not the government’s.”

    Also, Oliver says there’s a couple of things that make him the best candidate for the next POTUS including being the first millennial candidate to run for president.

    “I have a generational perspective and I’m an average working person. I’ve worked 40 hours a week. I see the pinch of inflation because I’m the one who does the grocery shopping in my family,” he said. For me, I’m seeing the effects of our economy in real-time, and we need to have somebody with that perspective in the White House.”

    Photo by Kerri Phox/The Atlanta Voice

    As far as the upcoming election, Oliver says it’s the most important election of our lifetime. He also says this election could be a real-time history-making moment and he’s glad to be a part of it.

    “Every election cycle it’s important, but I think this has been the most unique election cycle of our lifetime,” he said. “We’ve seen candidates stepping down, we’ve seen all sorts of awful things happening in terms of violence.

    Furthermore, Oliver urges voters to check out his platform and to vote as early as possible.

    “Do a blind taste test, so to speak with myself and the other candidates and see who you think is going to be the best voice for you,” he said. “I encourage you to get out and vote, and also, let’s change the way we vote to things like ranked choice voting, so we have more options on the ballot, more choices, and more voices.”

    Isaiah Singleton

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  • Guest lineups for the Sunday news shows

    Guest lineups for the Sunday news shows

    WASHINGTON (AP) — ABC’s “This Week” — Former Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo.; Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders, R-Ark.

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    NBC’s “Meet the Press” — Sens. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and Raphael Warnock, D-Ga.; Gov. Doug Burgum, R-N.D.

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    CBS’ “Face the Nation” — Nikki Haley, a former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations; Gov. Roy Cooper, D-N.C.; Reps. Michael McCaul, R-Texas, and Jim Himes, D-Conn.

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    CNN’s “State of the Union” — Sens. John Fetterman, D-Pa., and Tom Cotton, R-Ark.; Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg.

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    “Fox News Sunday” — Sens. John Cornyn, R-Texas, and Chris Murphy, D-Conn.

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  • Dem Lawmakers Speak Out Against Cop City Arrests

    Dem Lawmakers Speak Out Against Cop City Arrests

    Several Democrat lawmakers spoke out on the arrests of people connected to the Stop Cop City movement on Sunday, the day before the Atlanta City Council is set to vote on a controversial public safety training facility.

    The three arrested individuals, board members of the Atlanta Solidarity Fund, an organization that supports activists who are arrested, were charged with money laundering and charity fraud. During their arrests on Wednesday, they were faced with helicopters and a SWAT team.

    At the time, state Rep. Saira Draper called the arrests “grossly excessive” and said, “weaponizing the powers of the state for political gain is abuse of power.”

    Organizers have told HuffPost on multiple occasions over the past few months that the state is using political persecution to intimidate opponents of the Atlanta Public Safety Training Center, also known as Cop City. The facility would train law enforcement and firefighters and is set to be at least 85 acres large in the South River Forest.

    A diverse movement of organizers and community members have condemned the center for a variety of reasons — including claims that the facility will lead to harm Black and Brown people, that the money would be better spent on community resources, and that the forest is vital land.

    Since Wednesday, state Sens. Rev. Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff, and Rep. Jamaal Bowman (D-N.Y.) have spoken out following the board members’ arrests and ahead of a Monday city council meeting.

    Warnock said he’s concerned about the arrest of three board members.

    “These tactics, coupled with the limited public information provided so far, can have a chilling effect on nonviolent, constitutionally-protected free speech activities those of us in the fight for justice have been engaged in for years,” he wrote.

    Warnock argued that the arrests illustrate the fears and concerns that organizers and community members have voiced on the topic of overpolicing and the militarization of police in Georgia.

    Ossoff’s statement was much shorter than Warnock’s. He mentioned that there has been an “extremist” minority that has engaged in violence.

    “It is imperative that the response of government to the violent few not intimidate or infringe on the Constitutional rights of those engaged in nonviolent protest and civil disobedience,” he wrote.

    Both Warnock and Ossoff condemned violent protests, as they have previously in a report by Axios, and maintained that they don’t know all the details related to the investigation of the ASF members.

    Mariah Parker, a labor organizer and former Clark County commissioner who uses they/them pronouns, told HuffPost Sunday that statements from Warnock and Ossoff were necessary, but only just a start.

    “I do maintain concerns myself that they are not taking this situation seriously enough given that repression of activists has been long-standing and ongoing, that the facility is planned within their constituency, within their geographic constituency and that this is going to impact their constituents,” Parker said. “So I hope that they will take a stronger stance on this issue in the future as what they did today was a good start, but not good enough.”

    The commentary extended beyond state lines with Bowman also weighing in on the topic on Sunday from New York.

    “What we’re seeing in Atlanta is the suppression of the right to organize and the right to free speech,” Bowman said. “We cannot let this happen.”

    None of the lawmakers mentioned the Georgia State Troopers’ killing of Manuel Esteban Paez Terán, also known as Tortuguita, in January during a peaceful protest in the forest. Terán’s death marked the first time an environmental activist was killed by police in the U.S., according to The Guardian.

    Since the start of the movement, over 40 people have been charged with domestic terrorism in relation to the Stop Cop City movement — some of which had attended a music festival. Three more who had been accused of putting out flyers to intimidate an officer were charged with felonies.

    The Atlanta City Council is set to vote on funding for the facility on Monday.

    “No matter what happens tomorrow, this facility is not going to be built,” Parker told HuffPost. “The people are willing to exhaust every civic avenue that we can come up with in order to make sure that they are heard. And so I feel confident that that is the ultimate result whether or not they approve the funding for the facility tomorrow.”

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  • Why Black voters are more important in Georgia than in any other state | CNN Politics

    Why Black voters are more important in Georgia than in any other state | CNN Politics



    CNN
     — 

    President Joe Biden is heading back to Georgia. On the eve of Martin Luther King Jr. Day, he’s visiting Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, where the civil rights pioneer once preached. The trip makes a lot of sense, not just to pay tribute to King, but also because King helped lead the drive for equal voting rights for Black Americans.

    The Peach State is in many ways the place where the political importance of Black voters is clearest. They are one of the biggest reasons Georgia has swung from a red state to a purple one.

    The current list of swing states in American politics mostly features places where Black voters don’t play an outsize role – states such as Arizona, Nevada and Wisconsin. Even in swing states where Black voters make up at least 10% of the voting public (e.g., Michigan and Pennsylvania), the Black portion of the electorate in the 2020 election was comparable to what it was nationwide (12%).

    Georgia is the big exception. According to US Census data, 33% of 2020 presidential election voters in the state were Black. That ranked second nationally behind deep-red Mississippi. Georgia’s own records show that a slightly smaller 29% of 2020 voters whose race was known were Black (or 27% when we include voters for whom race was unknown). That’s still the highest percentage in any swing state by far.

    Not only that, but the Black portion of the electorate is growing in Georgia as their percentage of the population has risen. State records show that Black adults made up 23% of voters in the 2000 election – which indicates a 6-point increase in the Black portion of the presidential electorate (whose race was known) from 2000 to 2020. There was an uptick of 1 point nationally over the same time span.

    To put into perspective how important this shift has been to Democratic fortunes, consider this math of the 2020 election results. Black voters in Georgia favored Biden by 77 points, according to the exit polls. Non-Black voters as a group (led by White voters) backed then-President Donald Trump by about 30 points. If Black voters had made up the same 23% of presidential election voters they did in 2000, Trump would have won the state by 6 points.

    Instead, Biden won Georgia by less than a point and became the first Democrat to carry the state in a presidential election since Bill Clinton in 1992.

    (Keep in mind, other datasets suggest that Biden won Georgia’s Black voters by an even larger margin, so this math may, in fact, underestimate how important Black voters were to Biden’s win.)

    There are other factors as to why Biden won Georgia when Democrats before him had failed. The state’s Asian and Hispanic populations are also way up from where they were 20 years ago. At the same time, White voters with a college degree in Georgia have shifted well to the left, matching recent national trends.

    All that said, Black voters are a huge reason why only a handful of states have swung more Democratic in presidential elections since 2004 than Georgia, which has moved 17 points more Democratic. None of the seven states with bigger Democratic swings had elections that were anywhere as close as Georgia’s was in 2020.

    Of course, it’s not just in presidential elections where the voting power of Black Georgians is felt.

    Both of Georgia’s US senators are Democrats, including the senior pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church himself, Raphael Warnock. Without Warnock and Sen. Jon Ossoff, Democrats would be in the Senate minority instead of holding 51 out of 100 seats.

    Neither Warnock nor Ossoff would be in the Senate without Black voters. I’m not only talking about the fact that Black Georgians overwhelmingly cast their ballots for Ossoff and Warnock in twin Senate runoffs in 2021 or about the rise in the percentage of Black voters in the state since the beginning of the century.

    I’m talking about factors unique to the 2021 runoffs. Historically, Black turnout had dropped in general election runoffs in Georgia. That was not the case in 2021, when both Ossoff and Warnock scored narrow wins.

    Black voter turnout (relative to voters as a whole) was actually up in the 2021 runoffs compared with the November 2020 general election. Moreover, those who turned out were more Democratic-leaning than Black voters who had voted in the general election.

    Many of these same Black voters backed Warnock in huge numbers again in his victorious bid for a full six-year term in December’s Senate runoff.

    With the 2024 election around the corner, Georgia’s electoral fate depends on Black voter turnout and whether Democrats continue to win them in large numbers more than any other state. Expect Biden to be back in the Peach State rallying Black voters, if he runs for a second term.

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  • Sen. Raphael Warnock responds to Brad Raffensperger’s op-ed calling him an “election denier”

    Sen. Raphael Warnock responds to Brad Raffensperger’s op-ed calling him an “election denier”

    Sen.Warnock on Jan. 6 criminal referrals


    Sen. Raphael Warnock on Jan. 6 criminal referrals, Title 42 and cryptocurrency

    08:29

    Sen. Raphael Warnock responded Monday to an op-ed by Georgia’s secretary of state that called him an “election denier” over his remarks on voter suppression.

    “I have to spend a lot of time shooting down false claims about our elections in Georgia,” Brad Raffensperger wrote in The Wall Street Journal Sunday. “Usually they come from losers. But sometimes even victorious candidates make false claims about our elections.”

    Raffensperger referred in part to Warnock’s victory speech after winning a runoff for Georgia’s Senate seat earlier this month, in which Warnock said, “Just because people endured long lines that wrapped around buildings some blocks long, just because they endured the rain and the cold and all kinds of tricks in order to vote, doesn’t mean that voter suppression does not exist.”

    Raffensperger wrote, “I thought I had heard every conspiracy theory there was after the 2020 election, but the idea that Republicans control the weather to make it harder for Democrats to vote is a new one. … And I don’t even know what Mr. Warnock means by ‘all kinds of other tricks.’”

    In an exclusive interview with “CBS Mornings” on Monday, Warnock responded, saying, “The fact that people have had to overcome barriers doesn’t mean those barriers don’t exist.”

    “We literally saw college students and seniors in lines that were hours and hours and hours long,” he said. “Maybe [Raffensperger is] happy with that. I’m not. I think we can do better than that.”

    Warnock’s runoff election victory this month gave Democrats their 51st seat in the Senate and gave him his first full six-year term, after having previously won a special election for the seat in 2021. He is the first Black American to represent Georgia in the Senate and the first Black Democrat elected to the chamber from a southern state. 

    His win came amid what he and other Democrats viewed as voter suppression efforts from Republicans, who have pointed to the state’s high voter turnout to rebut those claims.

    Republicans in the state said after Warnock’s win that concerns over a 2021 law imposing new restrictions on voting were overblown. Democrats, however, believe voters made their voices known despite those obstacles.

    The Associated Press contributed to this article.


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  • Strong midterm turnout in Georgia sparks new debate about a controversial election law | CNN Politics

    Strong midterm turnout in Georgia sparks new debate about a controversial election law | CNN Politics



    CNN
     — 

    The strong turnout in Georgia’s runoff election that cemented Democrats’ control of the US Senate is sparking fresh debate about the impact of the state’s controversial 2021 election law and could trigger a new round of election rule changes next year in the Republican-led state legislature.

    Voters showed up in droves for the midterms, with more than 3.5 million casting ballots in the December 6 runoff – or some 90% of the general election turnout, a far higher rate than typical runoffs. And top Republicans in Georgia, including Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, argued those numbers refute claims that the 2021 law was designed to suppress votes in this increasingly competitive state.

    “There’s no truth to voter suppression,” Raffensperger said in an interview this week with CNN’s Kaitlan Collins, a day after Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock secured reelection in the first federal election cycle since Georgia voting law took effect.

    Georgia Democrats and voting rights groups, however, continue to criticize the 2021 law – enacted in the wake of Democratic gains two years ago – as erecting multiple barriers to voting. And the surging turnout, they said, masked extraordinary efforts by voters and activists to overcome both new and longstanding obstacles to the franchise in this once deep-red state.

    “Just because people endured long lines that wrapped around buildings, some blocks long … doesn’t mean that voter suppression does not exist,” Warnock said during his victory speech Tuesday – echoing a theme he made repeatedly on the campaign trail. “It simply means that you, the people, have decided that your voices will not be silenced.”

    Warnock’s victory Tuesday solidified Georgia’s standing as a battleground state and comes after Warnock and fellow Democratic Sen. Jon Ossoff won runoffs in the 2020 election cycle. In that election, President Joe Biden became the first Democratic presidential nominee to win the Peach State in nearly three decades.

    Voting rights activists said the 2021 law made it harder to cast a ballot in myriad ways: It limited the number and location of ballot drop boxes, instituted new ID requirements to vote by mail and shortened the window for a runoff from the nine weeks in the 2020 election to four weeks, contributing to long lines during the early voting period.

    Additionally, the voter registration deadline fell on November 7 – the day before the general election and before Georgians knew for certain that the contest would advance to a runoff because neither Warnock nor his Republican challenger Herschel Walker had surpassed the 50% threshold to win outright in the general election.

    In the 2020 election cycle, at least 23,000 people who registered after Election Day went on to vote in the Senate runoff in January 2021, according to an analysis of Georgia’s Secretary of State data by Catalist, a company that provides data, analytics and other services to Democrats, academics and nonprofit issue-advocacy organizations.

    And only an 11th hour court victory for Warnock and Democrats paved the way for counties to hold early in-person voting on the Saturday after Thanksgiving. State election officials had opposed casting ballots on that date, saying Georgia law prohibited voting on a Saturday if there is a state holiday on the Thursday or Friday before.

    “It’s death by a thousand cuts,” Kendra Cotton, CEO of the voting rights group New Georgia Project Action Fund, said of the new restrictions. “They are not trying to hit the jugular, so you bleed out at once. It’s these little nicks, so you slowly become anemic before you pass out.”

    “It’s a margins game,” she added. “I wish folks would stop acting like the purpose of SB202 was to disenfranchise the masses. Joe Biden won this state by a little less than 12,000 votes. I can guarantee you that there are more than 12,000 people across this state who were eligible to vote in this election and they could not.”

    Even Cotton’s 21-year-old daughter, Jarah Cotton, became ensnared.

    The younger Cotton, a Harvard University senior, said she had planned to vote absentee in November’s general election – but misunderstood a new requirement of Georgia’s law: that she print out her online application for absentee ballot, sign it “with a pen and ink” and then upload it.

    In the runoff, Jarah Cotton said she successfully completed her application for an absentee ballot but did not receive it before she returned home to Powder Springs, Georgia, for the Thanksgiving holiday.

    The court ruling permitting voting the Saturday after Thanksgiving allowed her to cast an in-person ballot in the runoff – but only after her family paid $180 to delay her return flight to Boston by a day.

    “I don’t think it should be this hard,” Jarah Cotton said of her experience. “It should be more straightforward, but I think that’s reflective of the voting process in Georgia.”

    Gabriel Sterling, the chief operating officer in the secretary of state’s office, said too many critics of the state’s voting process are comparing the 2022 election with the ease of voting during the height of the pandemic in the 2020 election cycle when election officials across the state “moved heaven and earth” to guarantee the franchise.

    That so many people voted in a four-week runoff shows “the system works really well,” he told CNN in an interview Friday. “The problem now is that it that is has become so politicized. I’ve been saying now, for 24 months, that both sides have to stop weaponizing election administration.”

    Voting rights activists say the state’s runoff system, first enacted in 1964, itself is a vestige of voter-suppression efforts from the state’s dark past. Its original sponsor sought to guarantee that candidates backed by Black Georgians could not win outright with a plurality of the vote.

    Most states decide general election winners based on which candidate gets the most votes, unlike Georgia, where candidates must win more than 50% of the votes cast to avoid a runoff.

    Runoffs also are costly affairs.

    A recent study by researchers at Kennesaw State University estimated that the Senate runoffs in the 2020 election cycle had a $75 million price tag for taxpayers.

    In the CNN interview earlier this week, Raffensperger suggested that the Republican-controlled General Assembly might revisit some of the state’s election rules, including potentially lowering to 45% the threshold needed to win a general election outright.

    He also said he wanted to work with counties to guarantee more polling places are available to ease the long lines voters endured during the early voting window in the runoff.

    And Raffensperger said lawmakers might weigh a ranked-choice instant runoff system. In so-called instant runoffs, voters rank candidates by order of preference. If one candidate doesn’t receive more than 50% of the vote, voters’ second choices would be used to determine the winner, without the need to hold a second election.

    Given the shortened runoff schedule in Georgia, state lawmakers instituted the instant runoff for a narrow slice of voters – those in the military and overseas – in this year’s midterms.

    “There will be a push for this in the upcoming legislative session,” said Daniel Baggerman, president of Better Ballot Georgia, a group advocating for the instant runoff.

    “It’s asking a lot from voters” to show up again for a runoff “when there’s a simple way that achieves the same outcome,” he said.

    Sterling agreed that there “needs to be a discussion about general election runoffs,” but he said he worries that moving to an instant runoff system risks disenfranchising a wide swath of Georgians who might not understand the process without “a tremendous amount of voter education.”

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  • 12/7: CBS News Prime Time

    12/7: CBS News Prime Time

    12/7: CBS News Prime Time – CBS News


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    John Dickerson discusses artificial intelligence used in ChatGPT, why JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon is warning of a “mild recession,” and what fueled an alleged plot to overthrow the German government.

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  • Raphael Warnock’s win in Georgia runoff extends Democrats’ Senate majority

    Raphael Warnock’s win in Georgia runoff extends Democrats’ Senate majority

    Raphael Warnock’s win in Georgia runoff extends Democrats’ Senate majority – CBS News


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    Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock locked in a six-year term by defeating Republican challenger Herschel Walker in Georgia’s runoff. The win gives Democrats have 51 seats in the Senate. Nikole Killion has more.

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  • The difference a 51-49 Senate majority makes to Democrats

    The difference a 51-49 Senate majority makes to Democrats

    Democrats were going to control the Senate in January regardless of the outcome of Tuesday night’s runoff election between Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock and Republican candidate Herschel Walker, since a Democrat occupies the White House. 

    CBS News projects Warnock will keep his seat in the Senate, meaning Democrats will have a 51-49 majority — one more seat than they currently have. That one seat will make some difference to the party, even though they’re far short of the 60 votes necessary to pass most legislation, since 60 votes are required to end debate on measures being considered. 

    “After one year, 10 months and 17 days of the longest 50-50 Senate in history, 51 — a slim majority. That is great. And we are so happy about it,” a gleeful Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said Wednesday morning. 

    In January, in the 118th Congress, the composition of Senate committees will be determined by an organizing resolution, which the Senate needs to pass with each new Congress. Committees will have more Democrats than Republicans, likely just by one member because of the narrow split. 

    With more Democrats than Republicans on committees, it’ll be easier for Democrats to move the president’s nominees, including judicial nominations, out of committee and to the Senate floor. And that one-vote advantage will help them win approval more quickly. 

    With a majority on committees, Democrats will also be able to issue subpoenas without Republican approval. In most committees, subpoenas can be issued by a majority vote in the committee or subcommittee. Subpoenas are governed by committee rules, which still need to be approved. But the rules related to subpoenas are relatively standard.

    A 51-49 Senate also means Vice President Kamala Harris, a former senator herself and the president of the Senate, will have less influence on the floor. Harris has taken pride in breaking more ties than nearly every other vice president. She broke ties on key votes including climate and health care legislation and the American Rescue Plan, which provided financial help to individuals and companies during the pandemic. 

    — John Nolen contributed to this report 

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  • Warnock honored 5 civil rights ‘martyrs’ in his victory speech. Here are their stories | CNN

    Warnock honored 5 civil rights ‘martyrs’ in his victory speech. Here are their stories | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    Sen. Raphael Warnock’s re-election is being celebrated by supporters across the nation with many political observers crediting the work of voting rights groups for the consequential win.

    Warnock delivered a victory speech to a fiery crowd in Atlanta on Tuesday night that touched on the power of faith, his deep Georgia roots and the perseverance of voters in the face of Republican-led voter suppression efforts. Election officials said a record number of voters showed up for early voting last week. And Black voters have been largely credited for Warnock’s win, signaling that Georgia is no longer a reliably red state.

    In his speech, Warnock also honored the Black and White unsung heroes of the civil rights movement who died fighting for equal voting rights, making wins like his possible.

    “Tonight, I want to pay tribute to all those, over so many years, who have put their voices, and their lives on the line, to defend that right,” Warnock said. “Martyrs of the movement like (Michael) Schwerner, (James) Chaney and (Andrew) Goodman, Viola Luizzo, James Reeb. And those who stood up and spoke up like Fannie Lou Hamer. John Lewis, who walked across a bridge knowing that there were police waiting to brutalize him on the other side. Yet, by some stroke of destiny mingled with human determination he walked across that bridge in order to build a bridge to a more just future.”

    While Hamer and Lewis have been widely discussed by historians and journalists, Schwerner, Chaney, Goodman, Luizzo and Reeb are lesser known. But that doesn’t negate the significance of their work toward equality. All of them were killed by white supremacists or Ku Klux Klan members.

    Here is what you should know about five “martyrs” of the movement:

    Liuzzo was a 39-year-old wife and mother of five of from Detroit who was killed by Ku Klux Klansmen in Selma on March 25, 1965.

    Historical records show Liuzzo, a White woman, had been committed to fighting for economic justice and civil rights.

    She was an active member of the Detroit NAACP chapter and the First Unitarian Universalist Church of Detroit. Family members say she decided to travel to Selma in 1965 after seeing televised news reports of peaceful protesters being beaten and tear-gassed by police on the Edmund Pettus Bridge.

    In Selma, Liuzzo marched and helped transport demonstrators in her car. She was ambushed and shot to death by KKK members while driving Leroy Moton, a Black man, to Montgomery. Within 24 hours of Liuzzo’s death, President Lyndon Johnson announced the arrests of the KKK members. They were all acquitted by Alabama courts, however a federal grand jury found them guilty of violating Liuzzo’s civil rights and they were sentenced to 10 years in prison.

    In 1991, a marker honoring Liuzzo was erected at the site where she was killed on U.S. Highway 80, about 20 miles east of Selma

    Rev. James J. Reeb, 38, was attacked by a White mob in Selma in 1965 and he died from his injuries days later.

    Reeb, a White Unitarian minister who lived in Boston, died after traveling to Selma, Alabama, in 1965 to answer Martin Luther King Jr’s call to clergy to join demonstrations for voting rights in the aftermath of “Bloody Sunday.”

    The 38-year-old minister was beaten by a group of White men on March 9, 1965 as he and two other White clergymen left an integrated Selma restaurant after having dinner. He was hit in the head and died two days later at a Birmingham hospital.

    His killing gained nationwide attention, prompted vigils in his honor and is believed to have contributed to the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

    “The world is aroused over the murder of James Reeb. For he symbolizes the forces of goodwill in our nation. He demonstrated the conscience of the nation. He was an attorney for the defense of the innocent in the court of world opinion. He was a witness to the truth that men of different races and classes might live, eat, and work together as brothers,” King said as he delivered a eulogy for Reeb in 1965.

    Three White men were indicted with murder in Reeb’s killing but their cases resulted in acquittals.

    Andrew Goodman, left, James Chaney, center, and Michael Shwerner, right, were killed in the summer of 1964.

    Chaney, Goodman and Schwerner were three civil rights workers murdered in Mississippi during the summer of 1964. The killings were among the most notorious of the civil rights era, and were the subject of the 1988 movie “Mississippi Burning.”

    The three men, who registered African Americans to vote, had just visited the victims of the burning of a Black church in Neshoba County when a sheriff’s deputy took them into custody for speeding. The men were driving a car with license plates registered to the Congress of Federated Organizations (COFO), one of the most active civil rights groups in Mississippi, according to an FBI file on the case.

    After their release from the county jail, a Ku Klux Klan mob tailed their car, forced it off the road and shot them to death. Their bodies were found 44 days later, buried in an earthen dam, after an extensive FBI investigation.

    Chaney was a 21-year-old Black volunteer with COFO. Goodman, a White 20-year-old, was a college student and new volunteer from New York. Schwerner, a White 24-year-old former social worker, was an established civil rights organizer who was “particularly reviled by the Klan for his work,” according to the FBI file.

    The killings fueled the passage of the Civil Rights Act in 1964 and the Voting Rights Act the next year.

    In 1967, prosecutors convicted eight defendants for violating the federal criminal civil rights conspiracy statute, namely the victims’ right to live. None served more than six years in prison.

    No murder charges were filed at the time but nearly 40 years later, Edgar Ray Killen, a part-time Baptist minister and the plot leader, was found guilty of manslaughter in 2005 and sentenced to three consecutive 20-year sentences. Killen died in 2018.

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  • CBS News projects Warnock defeats Herschel Walker in Georgia Senate runoff election

    CBS News projects Warnock defeats Herschel Walker in Georgia Senate runoff election

    CBS News projects Warnock defeats Herschel Walker in Georgia Senate runoff election – CBS News


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    Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock wins the Georgia runoff election, CBS News projects. He beat Republican challenger Herschel Walker, giving Democrats 51 seats in the Senate. Nikole Killion reports from Atlanta.

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  • The final Senate seat will be decided in high-stakes Georgia runoff: Inside today’s vote

    The final Senate seat will be decided in high-stakes Georgia runoff: Inside today’s vote

    The final Senate seat will be decided in high-stakes Georgia runoff: Inside today’s vote – CBS News


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    The Senate runoff in Georgia between Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock and Republican Herschel Walker is coming down to the wire. Nikole Killion has the latest.

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  • Early results suggest tight race in Georgia runoff

    Early results suggest tight race in Georgia runoff

    Early results suggest tight race in Georgia runoff – CBS News


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    Early results in the Senate runoff in Georgia show a tight race between Democratic Senator Raphael Warnock and his GOP challenger, Herschel Walker. CBS News elections and surveys director Anthony Salvanto, CBS News political correspondent Caitlin Huey-Burns and CBS News chief election and campaign correspondent Robert Costa join Ed O’Keefe on “Red and Blue” to discuss.

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  • Raphael Warnock beats Trump pick Herschel Walker in Georgia Senate runoff, NBC projects

    Raphael Warnock beats Trump pick Herschel Walker in Georgia Senate runoff, NBC projects

    Reverend Raphael Warnock, Democratic Senator for Georgia, gather with supporters during the midterm Senate runoff elections in Norcross, Georgia, December 6, 2022.

    Carlos Barria | Reuters

    Sen. Raphael Warnock, the Democratic incumbent from Georgia, is projected to beat Republican challenger Herschel Walker in the state’s runoff election to win a full six-year term in the Senate, according to NBC News.

    Warnock’s projected victory over Walker will give Democrats a 51-49 majority in the Senate, a potentially crucial boost that caps much-better-than-expected midterm elections for the party in control of the White House.

    It also marks a major loss for former President Donald Trump, who had championed Walker and campaigned for him. Trump was already under fire from some Republicans after many of his handpicked candidates underperformed in key midterm races, helping Democrats keep majority control of the upper chamber of Congress.

    The outcome of Georgia’s protracted, bitterly competitive Senate contest could have a major impact on Congress, both for the remainder of President Joe Biden‘s first term and for the 2024 cycle, when Democrats again face a tough electoral map.

    The race went to a runoff after neither Warnock nor Walker won more than 50% of the vote in the Nov. 8 general election. While Warnock got more votes than Walker, third-party candidate Chase Oliver, a Libertarian, secured just over 2% of the vote, keeping either of the two main contenders from clinching a majority, according to NBC News’ count.

    But only Warnock and Walker were on the ballot for the runoff, eliminating any potential coattail effect that Walker might have benefited from in November, when Georgia’s GOP Gov. Brian Kemp handily won reelection.

    Instead, Walker’s gaffe- and scandal-plagued campaign was on full display, as more reports about the former NFL star’s personal life continued to come out in the runoff period.

    Republicans circled the wagons around the ex-NFL star after The Daily Beast and other news outlets reported that Walker, who expressed staunchly anti-abortion views on the campaign trail, had paid for an ex-girlfriend’s abortion years earlier. Walker denied the allegations, even as his adult son Christian Walker castigated his father on social media. Less than two weeks before the midterms, a second woman came forward to claim Walker had pushed her to get an abortion.

    Walker’s personal life had already been under scrutiny before those allegations came to light. Earlier in the campaign, Walker had acknowledged fathering multiple other children who were not previously known to be related to him. The Senate bid has also raised questions about Walker’s mental health, and accusations by Walker’s ex-wife, Cindy Grossman, resurfaced that he had been abusive and threatening toward her.

    Just last week, The Daily Beast reported allegations by Cheryl Parsa, an ex-girlfriend of Walker’s, accusing the Senate candidate of violent behavior and infidelity.

    This is breaking news. Please check back for updates.

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  • 12/5: Red and Blue

    12/5: Red and Blue

    12/5: Red and Blue – CBS News


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    Georgia runoff to decide high-stakes Senate race; Trump calls for “termination” of parts of Constitution.

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  • Candidates fight for every Georgia runoff vote

    Candidates fight for every Georgia runoff vote

    Candidates fight for every Georgia runoff vote – CBS News


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    The U.S. Senate runoff between Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock and GOP challenger Herschel Walker is being held Tuesday in Georgia. Nearly 2 million voters have already cast their ballots amid the frantic fight to the finish. Nikole Killion reports.

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  • 12/5: CBS News Prime Time

    12/5: CBS News Prime Time

    12/5: CBS News Prime Time – CBS News


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    John Dickerson reports on the attack on a North Carolina county’s power grid, hears from a former political prisoner in Iran, and discusses the Oxford Dictionary’s 2022 word of the year: “goblin mode.”

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  • How to watch the Georgia Senate runoff election results

    How to watch the Georgia Senate runoff election results

    Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock is defending his Senate seat against Republican challenger Herschel Walker in a runoff election in Georgia Tuesday, after days of record-breaking early voting in the state.

    Since Democrats flipped the seat in Pennsylvania and successfully defended the other seats in play in the November midterm elections, Democrats will retain control of the Senate, regardless of the outcome on Tuesday. But they will have more power if they control the chamber 51-49 since they will not have to work out a power-sharing agreement with Republicans. This will be the last election of the 2022 midterm cycle. 

    Polls close in Georgia at 7 p.m. ET on Tuesday. 

    Although Warnock held a narrow lead over Walker on Election Day, he did not win more than 50% of the vote, which is required to avoid a runoff in Georgia. 

    According to exit polls on Election Day, voters in Georgia were split in their views of the most important qualities in a candidate: 36% said it was most important that the candidate shared their values, while 32% said a candidate’s honesty and integrity were most important to them.

    Ahead of the general election, Walker’s campaign was rocked in October by allegations that he paid for at least one woman to have an abortion. He has denied the allegations, and national Republicans stuck by him. 

    A record-breaking number of early voters have turned out in the runoff, smashing all previous records. 

    Former President Barack Obama campaigned with Warnock last week, although President Biden, who flipped the state in 2020, has not visited the Peach State to stump for Warnock. Former President Donald Trump has not campaigned in person with Walker in the runoff but was scheduled to hold a tele-rally for Walker Monday night.

    Georgia played a key role in the 2020 elections, when the races for both Senate seats went into special runoff elections in January 2021, ultimately flipping both seats from Republican to Democratic. Republican incumbent Sen. David Perdue led Jon Ossoff after Election Night with 49.7% of the vote, but he ended up falling short in the runoff on Jan. 5, 2021. In the race for the other seat, Warnock led incumbent Sen. Kelly Loeffler in a 21-person race on Election Day, and he prevailed in the special election to fill the vacancy left when Sen. Johnny Isakson stepped down.

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