What we've learned so far from the Georgia Senate runoffs

Despite that, a few interesting trends began to emerge via a look at the votes already counted and the exit polling. My thoughts are below.

1) All of the votes have not been counted. The exit polls may be adjusted. So, take all of this cum grano salis.

2) Because the race between Sen. David Perdue (R) and Democrat Jon Ossoff was at the top of the ticket, I am using the exit poll from that race to make comparisons to the 2020 presidential exit polling in the state.

OK, here we go!

* Black voters may be the difference: In November, Black voters made up 29% of the Georgia electorate and President-elect Joe Biden beat President Donald Trump among those voters by 77 points. According to exit polling Tuesday night, Black voters again comprised 29% of the electorate, almost exactly approximating their turnout in November, which is frankly unheard of for a January runoff. And it’s not just that. Ossoff was beating Perdue 93% to 7% among Black voters, nearly a double-digit improvement on Biden’s performance.

What explains the Black turnout? One factor may well be Rev. Raphael Warnock’s candidacy. Warnock, the head of Ebenezer Baptist Church, took considerable incoming from Sen. Kelly Loeffler (R) during the runoff for his ties to the Black church community — including controversial Rev. Jeremiah Wright. It’s uniquely possible those attacks backfired on Loeffler (and Perdue) — serving as an impetus for the Black community to turn out in droves to vote for the two Democrats.

* Suburbs stayed tight: Republicans were hoping that without Trump on the ballot in January, some of their under-performance in the Atlanta suburbs (which were once the key to their victory margins statewide) would be lessened. That didn’t happen. Trump won suburban Georgia voters by 3 points in November; Perdue is ahead of Ossoff by just 2 points. And perhaps as importantly, suburban voters turned out in similar numbers in the Senate runoffs as they did in the November general election. In November, suburbanites were 61% of the overall electorate, while on Tuesday they were also 61%.

Assuming those numbers hold, it suggests that Trump has done damage to the Republican brand among suburban voters that goes well beyond just races where he is on the ballot. And extrapolating further, if the suburbs are now a pure toss-up across the country, that would be, generally speaking, scary news for Republicans.

* The Trump effect: In recent days, Trump has started to take credit for Republican success down-ballot in November — particularly in the Senate. “In fact, they were expecting to lose and then they ended up winning by a lot because of the coattails,” Trump told Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger (R) on their now-infamous phone call January 2. There’s scant evidence that claim is accurate. But if Democrats wind up winning both Senate seats in Georgia — and with it the majority — Trump’s narrative of how he dragged all sorts of Republicans across the line will be blown out of the water. Trump campaigned in Georgia as recently as Monday night and made the stakes of the races very clear: “The whole world is watching the people of Georgia tomorrow and you’ve got to swamp them because everything’s so crooked around.”

Losses in both Senate seats in a state that, until Biden’s victory in 2020, hadn’t voted for a Democrat since Bill Clinton in 1992, would be hard to blame on anyone but Trump. He not only transformed the Republican Party over the past four years into a cult of personality, but in the final days of the runoffs he made the story all about him, with his conspiracy-ridden phone call with Raffensperger.

source: cnn.com