Georgia’s election integrity law, which the General Assembly passed in 2021 and strengthened in 2023, has been in the Democrats’ crosshairs for years. The Democrats have gone after Georgia even longer than that.
Let’s back up to before the 2021 law. In 2018, when now-Gov. Brian Kemp (R-Ga.) barely defeated Stacey “President of Earth” Abrams (D-I’m not a governor, but I play an elected leader on TV), the left went ballistic. Abrams refused to concede the race, and Democrats acted as if Kemp was an illegitimate governor. It was the Dems’ same old election-denial tune in a different key.
During the 2020 election, Democrats set up snack tables and handed out candidate-branded bottles of water to people waiting in long voting lines. The embarrassingly long lines combined with other shenanigans helped tint the Peach State blue in that election. Gun-shy Republican voters, affected in part by billboards from left-wing PACs suggesting that Democrats were out to steal the election, stayed home from the Jan. 2021 Senate runoff, further adding to the narrative that Georgia was a purple state ripe for Democrats to seize.
What happened in 2020 and early 2021 prompted the General Assembly to enact legislation to make it “easier to vote and harder to cheat,” in Kemp’s words. And on cue, the Democrats screamed to the rafters because the Peach State enacted a law that didn’t hand elections to the Dems on a silver platter.
Sore loser Abrams penned an op-ed in USA Today that led to Major League Baseball moving the 2021 All-Star Game from Atlanta. Of course, the Atlanta Braves got the best revenge by winning the World Series, and USA Today stealth-edited Abrams’ op-ed to remove the suggestion that MLB should punish Georgia and the businesses around Atlanta, many of which are minority-owned. […]
— Read More: pjmedia.com
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