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Oct 08 2016

Democratic Party of Georgia Statement on Donald Trump’s Vile Comments About Women

Release:  Saturday, October 8, 2016      

Atlanta, GA – Democratic Party of Georgia Executive Director Rebecca DeHart issued the following statement on the latest revelations of Donald Trump’s treatment of women.

“Throughout the course of his campaign, we—as a nation—keep asking ourselves what Donald Trump could possibly do to sink lower. Anyone who denigrates and objectifies women, and brags about sexual assault, is completely and wholly unfit for elected office. How could any parent cast their vote for this vile, dangerous man and then come home and look their child in the eyes.

“Make no mistake. Young girls are paying attention to how we as a society respond to a man who boasts of forcibly groping a woman. Young boys are paying attention to our response to a man who calls women ‘pigs’ and ‘slobs.’

“Equally as shocking is the Georgia GOP’s silence and complacency. Where’s the leadership? Why haven’t Senators Johnny Isakson and David Perdue and the rest of their Party condemned their candidate and immediately withdrawn their support?

“In a year in which Democrats are finally shattering that glass ceiling, Georgians are left with a stark choice this November. But there is also a stark choice facing the Republican Party. As their nominee he is their standard bearer—representative of their party. And they have the choice to reject him. I hope, for the sake of women and girls everywhere, they send him packing.”

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Written by PNM Admin · Categorized: Georgia Democrats, Georgia Republicans, Press Releases · Tagged: David Perdue, Donald Trump, Georgia Democrats, Georgia GOP, gop, Johnny Isakson, Women

Oct 07 2016

DPG Statement on LGBTQ History Month & Atlanta Pride

Release:  Friday, October 7, 2016                                                                             

Atlanta, GA – Democratic Party of Georgia LGBTQ Caucus Chair Jim Taflinger and First Vice Chair Colton Griffin issued the following joint statement in honor of LGBTQ History Month and Atlanta Pride.

“As we celebrate LGBTQ History Month and the 46th year of Pride celebrations in Atlanta, the Democratic Party of Georgia LGBTQ Caucus extends a special thanks to our allies and friends who continue to stand with us in advancing our journey towards full equality.

“The stakes in this year’s elections are extremely high and the end result will impact all of us for years to come. We have a clear choice. As a country, we can give in to the politics of hate and fear and cynicism, and enable policies that would strip away the civil liberties of the LGBTQ community and many others. Or we can elect Hillary Clinton and Georgia Democrats, who will fight for the rights of us all. We can preserve and build on the progress made under President Obama’s leadership and push our county forward.

“This month, it’s important to remember that Georgia remains a state that provides zero basic protections for LGBTQ individuals. We can be fired from work, discriminated in housing, and denied basic benefits based solely on whom we love. However, with the support of our allies and the leadership of Georgia Democrats in the state legislature, our march towards full equality and fairness and justice is just over the horizon.

“We welcome all Democrats and friends to join us this weekend at the Atlanta Pride celebration, with a special invitation to march with us in the Pride Parade. The parade kicks off at the Civic Center Marta Station at noon this Sunday, October 9th.

“A key value of the Democratic Party of Georgia is the belief that we are not identified by labels or our differences. We support each other as one family. We fight for each other’s rights. And we lift each other up because we are stronger together.”

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Details for marching in the Atlanta Pride Parade with Georgia Democrats can be found here.

Written by PNM Admin · Categorized: Georgia Democrats, Press Releases · Tagged: Atlanta Pride, Georgia Democrats, LGBTQ Caucus

Oct 03 2016

Watch Tuesday’s VP Debate with GA Dems!

VICE PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE WATCH PARTIES

 

Kaine ATL

 

Dekalb County Watch Party
WHEN: Tuesday 10/4, 8 pm
WHERE: The Corner Pub (inside East Decatur Station), 619 E College Ave, Decatur, GA 30030
CONTACT: Prescott at [email protected]

Fulton County Watch Party
WHEN: Tuesday 10/4, 8 pm
WHERE: 2797 Campbellton Rd Suite A,  Atlanta, GA 30311
CONTACT: Alaina at [email protected]

Cobb County Watch Party
WHEN: Tuesday 10/4, 8 pm
WHERE: 3824 Austell Rd. Marietta, GA 30008
CONTACT: Anderia at [email protected]

Gwinnett County Watch Party
WHEN: Tuesday 10/4, 8 pm
WHERE: 535 Indian Trail Lilburn Rd NW Suite I, Lilburn, GA 30047
CONTACT: Max at [email protected]

Henry County Watch Party
WHEN: Tuesday 10/4, 8 pm
WHERE: 147 Jonesboro Rd, McDonough, GA 30253
CONTACT: El at [email protected]

Athens County Watch Party
WHEN: Tuesday 10/4, 8 pm
WHERE: 1063 Baxter St Suite B,  Athens, GA 30606
CONTACT: Steven at [email protected]

Columbus County Watch Party
WHEN: Tuesday 10/4, 8 pm
WHERE: 3740 Macon Rd Suite 1A, Columbus, GA 31907
CONTACT: Patricia at [email protected]

Augusta County Watch Party
WHEN: Tuesday 10/4, 8 pm
WHERE: 1054 Claussen Rd Suite 305, Augusta, GA 30907
CONTACT: Joey at [email protected]

Macon County Watch Party
WHEN: Tuesday 10/4, 8 pm
WHERE: 439 3rd St Suite 101, Macon, GA 31201
CONTACT:Monica at [email protected]

Savannah County Watch Party
WHEN:  Tuesday 10/4, 8 pm
WHERE: 105 Wheeler Ct Suite 200, Savannah, GA 31405
CONTACT: Justin at [email protected]

Albany County Watch Party
WHEN:  Tuesday 10/4, 8 pm
WHERE: 407 South Slappey Blvd, Albany, GA 31701
CONTACT: Bryan at [email protected]

 

RSVP at the link >>> http://georgiadems.bsd.net/page/s/vice-presidential-debate-watch-parties

Written by PNM Admin · Categorized: National Democrats · Tagged: debate watch party, Georgia Democrats, Tim Kaine, Vice Presidential Debates

Sep 27 2016

DPG Statement on First Presidential Debate

Release:  Monday, September 26, 2016                                                                  

Atlanta, GA – Democratic Party of Georgia Chair DuBose Porter issued the following statement on tonight’s presidential debate.

“Tonight was a tale of two visions for our country. The Republican candidate offered to take us down a path paved with fear and division and hate to a truly dark and dangerous destination. A place where lies and insults are used to divide communities and tear people down.

“Hillary Clinton challenged the American people to take a higher road tonight. A road that we travel together, leaving no one behind. Her vision for our great country is based on the simple yet powerful belief that we are stronger together when we lift each other up.

“There was only one Commander-in-Chief on that debate stage, and Georgia will join the rest of the nation in sending her to the White House.”

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Written by PNM Admin · Categorized: Georgia Democrats, National Democrats, Press Releases · Tagged: Donald Trump, DuBose Porter, Georgia Democrats, Hillary Clinton, presidential debate

Sep 08 2016

Georgia GOP’s Silence Becomes Seal of Approval for Trump’s Lies and Insults

Release:  Thursday, September 8, 2016    

Atlanta, GA – Donald Trump not only failed last night’s Commander-in-Chief test—he doubled down on his reckless foreign policy ideas and offensive rhetoric. Among the lowlights of the evening…

On his plan to defeat Isis:  “If we’re going to get out, take the oil.”

On Vladimir Putin: “If he says great things about me, I’m going to say great things about him. I’ve already said, he is really very much of a leader. I mean, you can say, oh, isn’t that a terrible thing — the man has very strong control over a country. Now, it’s a very different system, and I don’t happen to like the system. But certainly, in that system, he’s been a leader, far more than our president has been a leader.”

On American generals: “I think under the leadership of Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, the generals have been reduced to rubble. They have been reduced to a point where it’s embarrassing for our country.”

On his offensive tweet about rape in the military: “It’s a correct tweet.”

At a press conference this morning, Hillary Clinton called on all Republicans to respond to Donald Trump’s offensive remarks.

Today, Democratic Party of Georgia Chair DuBose Porter echoed Clinton’s challenge, calling on Georgia Republicans—including Senator Johnny Isakson—to either support or disavow Trump’s lies and insults.

“The Georgia GOP can’t keep straddling the fence. Their silence has become a seal of approval. If the top of your ticket praises foreign dictators yet insults our own military, push politics aside and do the right thing. They should denounce Donald Trump now.” – DuBose Porter, Chair

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Written by PNM Admin · Categorized: Georgia Democrats, Georgia Republicans, Press Releases · Tagged: Donald Trump, DuBose Porter, Georgia Democrats, Georgia GOP, Johnny Isakson

Aug 31 2016

Trump’s Immigration Plan: Tearing Apart Families and Dividing our Country

Trump’s Immigration Plan: Tearing Apart Families and Dividing our Country

 

Atlanta, GA – Democratic Party of Georgia Latino Caucus Chair Antonio Molina issued the following statement on Donald Trump’s immigration speech.

 

“Donald Trump isn’t fooling anyone. He began his campaign by labeling immigrants as ‘rapists’ and criminals. Trump wants to deport 16 million people from this country—including Americans whose parents are undocumented. He wants to end birthright citizenship. These plans aren’t just dangerous—they’re a betrayal of American values. Democrats will continue to champion policies that keep Latino families together and guarantee a fair path to citizenship.” – Antonio Molina, Latino Caucus Chair

 

Information on Hillary Clinton’s plan for comprehensive immigration reform can be found here.

 

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Written by PNM Admin · Categorized: Georgia Democrats, Press Releases · Tagged: Antonio Molina, Donald Trump, DPG Latino Caucus, Georgia Democrats, immigration

Aug 26 2016

Georgia Democrats Celebrate Women’s Equality Day

Release:  Friday, August 26, 2016  

Atlanta, GA – Democratic Party of Georgia First Vice Chair Nikema Williams released the following statement to celebrate Women’s Equality Day.

“Today, we commemorate the 96th anniversary of the certification of the 19th amendment by celebrating Women’s Equality Day. Milestones like this serve as a testament to the mountains that can be moved by dedicated advocates who believe in the best of this country.

“While great strides have been made in the fight for women’s rights, so much work is left to be done. Year after year, Georgia Republicans push legislation designed to restrict access to reproductive healthcare. Efforts to close the wage gap or expand paid family leave are stonewalled. And the divisive rhetoric of the extreme right continues to marginalize women, building barriers on the path to true equality.

“As Democrats, we believe in lifting women up. We believe women have the right to chart their own destiny without the interference of small-minded lawmakers. And we will continue to work toward a future where every little girl grows up knowing that, with hard work, anything is possible.” – Nikema Williams, First Vice Chair

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Written by PNM Admin · Categorized: Georgia Democrats, Press Releases · Tagged: Georgia Democrats, Nikema Williams, Women's Equality Day

Aug 18 2016

On the Ground: Jocelyn

FullSizeRender

“I support Hillary because she’s spent her entire career fighting for women and children’s rights.”

– Jocelyn Marcus, Volunteer at New Day GA Athens Field Office

Join Jocelyn and thousands of volunteers across the state by signing up here.

Written by PNM Admin · Categorized: Georgia Democrats, On The Ground · Tagged: Democratic Party of Georgia, Georgia Democrats, New Day GA

Aug 12 2016

DPG Executive Director Rebecca DeHart on CNN

Written by PNM Admin · Categorized: DPG in the News, Georgia Democrats, Video · Tagged: Georgia Democrats, Rebecca DeHart

Aug 05 2016

Battleground Georgia: Latest Polling Proves GA is in Play

“Numbers don’t lie—Georgia is a battleground state. We’re not taking a single vote for granted, and we’re leaving no stone unturned to use this momentum to mobilize voters on an unprecedented scale. All I can say is that I wouldn’t want to be a Republican on November 8th.” –DuBose Porter, Chair of the Democratic Party of Georgia

Nate Silver’s FiveThirtyEight –

Nate

AJC 8/5/16 – AJC poll: Hillary Clinton has slim lead over Donald Trump in Georgia

Democrat Hillary Clinton has built a slim lead over Donald Trump in Georgia after one of the worst weeks of the Republican’s campaign, and the Libertarian presidential ticket cracked double-digits, according to a new Atlanta Journal-Constitution poll.

The poll released Friday shows Clinton at 44 percent and Trump at 40 percent in a head-to-head matchup, within the poll’s margin of error. It is the latest showing a close race between the two candidates in Georgia, a state that has voted for the GOP nominee since 1996.

Politico 8/5/2016 – Poll: Clinton leads Trump in Georgia

Hillary Clinton holds a four-point lead over Donald Trump in Georgia, a state that has not voted for a Democratic presidential nominee in nearly a quarter century, according to the results of an Atlanta Journal-Constitution poll out Friday.

Politico 8/4/2016 – Reid: Clinton could win Georgia and Arizona

“If you look at Georgia — Georgia, last re-elect for President Obama, he never stepped foot in Georgia, but yet he lost by about three percent. Georgia’s Hillary Clinton’s, and I’m glad she’s going to be campaigning there,” the Nevada senator told reporters here…

WSBTV 8/1/2016 – Clinton, Trump deadlocked in latest Georgia poll

The exclusive Channel 2 Action News poll conducted by Landmark/Rosetta Stone polled nearly 800 likely Georgia voters. The poll, conducted over the weekend, found Trump and Clinton deadlocked with 45 percent of the vote. 

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Written by PNM Admin · Categorized: Georgia Democrats, Party News, Press Releases · Tagged: Battleground State, Democratic Party of Georgia, Georgia Democrats, Hillary Clinton

Aug 04 2016

Georgians’ Right to Vote Under Attack… AGAIN

“This brazen attack on our fundamental right to vote is yet another example of the Republican Party bending the rule of law to fit their partisan agenda. Using our voice at the ballot box is one of the most important things we do as citizens. If the GOP wishes to win elections, then they should win on the issues, not restrict access to the polls. Georgia Democrats are more committed than ever to not only fight these brazen attacks on our liberties, but expand access and ensure that every eligible voter in this state plays a key role in our democracy.” –Pinney Allen, Chair of the DPG Voter Protection Committee

 

 

From the NYT:

When the deputy sheriff’s patrol cruiser pulled up beside him as he walked down Broad Street at sunset last August, Martee Flournoy, a 32-year-old black man, was both confused and rattled. He had reason: In this corner of rural Georgia, African-Americans are arrested at a rate far higher than that of whites.

But the deputy had not come to arrest Mr. Flournoy. Rather, he had come to challenge Mr. Flournoy’s right to vote.

The majority-white Hancock County Board of Elections and Registration was systematically questioning the registrations of more than 180 black Sparta citizens — a fifth of the city’s registered voters — by dispatching deputies with summonses commanding them to appear in person to prove their residence or lose their voting rights. “When I read that letter, I was kind of nervous,” Mr. Flournoy said in an interview. “I didn’t know what to do.”

The board’s aim, a lawsuit later claimed, was to give an edge to white candidates in Sparta’s municipal elections — and that November, a white mayoral candidate won a narrow victory.

“A lot of those people that was challenged probably didn’t vote, even though they weren’t proven to be wrong,” said Marion Warren, a Sparta elections official who documented the purges and raised an alarm with voting-rights advocates. “People just do not understand why a sheriff is coming to their house to bring them a subpoena, especially if they haven’t committed any crime.”

The county attorney, Barry A. Fleming, a Republican state representative, said in an interview that the elections board was only trying to restore order to an electoral process tainted earlier by corruption and incompetence. The lawsuit is overblown, he suggested, because only a fraction of the targeted voters were ultimately scratched from the rolls.

“The allegations that people were denied the right to vote are the opposite of the truth,” he said. “This is probably more about politics and power than race.”

But the purge of Sparta voters is precisely the sort of electoral maneuver that once would have needed Justice Department approval before it could be put in effect. In Georgia and all or part of 14 other states, the 1965 Voting Rights Act required jurisdictions with histories of voter discrimination to receive so-called preclearance before changing the way voter registration and elections were conducted.

Three years ago, the Supreme Court declared the preclearance mandate unconstitutional, saying the blatant discrimination it was meant to prevent was largely a thing of the past.

But since the Supreme Court’s 5-to-4 ruling in the voting-rights case, Shelby County v. Holder, critics argue, the blatant efforts to keep minorities from voting have been supplanted by a blizzard of more subtle changes. Most conspicuous have been state efforts like voter ID laws or cutbacks in early voting periods, which critics say disproportionately affect minorities and the poor. Less apparent, but often just as contentious, have been numerous voting changes enacted in counties and towns across the South and elsewhere around the country.

They appear as Republican legislatures and election officials in the South and elsewhere have imposed statewide restrictions on voting that could depress turnout by minorities and other Democrat-leaning groups in a crucial presidential election year. Georgia and North Carolina, two states whose campaigns against so-called voter fraud have been cast by critics as aimed at black voters, could both be contested states in autumn’s presidential election.

Kristen Clarke, the president of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, a leading voting-rights advocacy group, said that before the Supreme Court’s Shelby County ruling, discriminatory laws and procedures had been blocked by the preclearance provisions.

Now, she said, “We’re seeing widespread proliferation of these laws. And we are left only with the ability to mount slow, costly case-by-case challenges” to their legality.

Conservative critics of the Voting Rights Act say that is as it should be — that the federal government has no business usurping the role of elections monitor that citizen advocates have long and effectively played in other states. “Now every jurisdiction in the country must be treated equally in our courts when election issues are at stake,” said Edward Blum, the director of the Project on Fair Representation, a nonprofit legal program.

The local voting changes have often gone unnoticed and unchallenged. A June survey by the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund found that governments in six former preclearance states have closed registration or polling places, making it harder for minorities to vote. Local jurisdictions in six more redrew districts or changed election rules in ways that diluted minorities’ votes.

Alabama moved last year to close 31 driver’s license offices, almost all in rural areas with large African-American populations, as a cost-saving measure. After lawsuit threats and complaints that the closings would severely curtail local voter registration, the state chose to open the offices at least one day a month. Gov. Robert J. Bentley, a Republican, has strongly denied that the closings were racially motivated.

In Hernando County, Fla.; Cleveland and Watauga Counties in North Carolina; Baldwin County, Ala.; and elsewhere, elections officials eliminated or moved polling places in largely minority districts; a state court overturned the Watauga County closure.

The Republican majority in North Carolina’s General Assembly redrew the political districts last year in Wake County, whose main city is Raleigh, concentrating black voters in the city center into a single voting district. (A three-judge panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit ruled that map unconstitutional.) In Pasadena, Tex., officials eliminated two District Council seats in largely Hispanic areas in 2014 and replaced them with at-large seats chosen largely by white voters. Hispanic voters have filed a federal lawsuit seeking to undo the change.

In Macon-Bibb County, Ga., in February, the elections board moved a polling place in a predominantly black neighborhood from a gymnasium that was being renovated to the county sheriff’s office. Officials changed the location to a church after a petition drive legally forced a reversal.

While those changes took place in states that once were wholly or partly under Justice Department supervision, other restrictions have been adopted by mostly Republican legislatures and election officials in states never cited for voting discrimination. Wisconsin’s unusually stringent photo ID law is the object of a federal lawsuit. A South Dakota county is in litigation over equal access to its polling places for Native Americans.

The effect on voter turnout is impossible to measure, but Ms. Clarke of the Lawyers’ Committee offers one barometer: So far in the 2016 primary election cycle, an election hotline run by the committee and others has fielded more than 22,000 questions and complaints from voters.

That is more than 10 times the number received by this point in 2012, although those presidential primary contests were considerably less pitched than the current ones.

Georgia has seen a litany of changes in — and challenges to — voting procedures since the Shelby County decision. A federal lawsuit accuses that state of illegally purging its voter rolls; in a recent two-year period, the 372,000 voters scrubbed from the rolls exceeded the number of new voters who were added. The chief elections official, Secretary of State Brian P. Kemp, has called the suit frivolous.

Mr. Kemp, a Republican who has crusaded against what he called the threat of voter fraud, has investigated voter-registration drives by Asian-American and predominantly black groups. A 2014 criminal inquiry into a group that had registered 85,000 new voters, many of them minorities, found problems with only 25 of the registrants, and no charges were filed.

Several counties have been sued over redistricting plans that dilute minority voting influence.

But perhaps none of the battles is more striking than the one in Hancock County, about 100 miles southeast of Atlanta, where three in four of the roughly 10,000 residents are black. The racial divide here is deep and prolonged; the white mayor of the county seat, Sparta, made headlines in 1970 after responding to black citizens’ school-desegregation protests by equipping the town’s six-member police force with submachine guns.

By the 1990s, the Justice Department had invoked its preclearance authority to block measures that it said would weaken minority representation on the Sparta City Council, but political control of the county was frequently split. By last year, black politicians ran Sparta, a white majority controlled the Hancock County commission, and a furious contest was underway between black and white slates to control the next Sparta administration.

The five-member Hancock County Board of Elections and Registration was controlled by three white members — the chairwoman, appointed by a local judge, and two members appointed by the Hancock County Republican Committee — one of whom, curiously, is a Democrat. According to documents filed in a federal lawsuit in nearby Macon, the board began taking steps last August that seemed destined to tilt the playing field to the white slate’s advantage.

The board first proposed to close all but one of the county’s 10 polling places, a move the N.A.A.C.P. and other minority advocates argued would disenfranchise rural blacks who could not travel long distances to vote. Board members eventually chose to eliminate just one predominantly black precinct. But around the same time, they began to winnow the county’s roll of registered voters, ordering an aide to compare the registrants’ stated addresses with those on their driver’s licenses to spot voters who had moved after registering to vote.

By October, a month before the city election, the board and a private citizen who appears to have worked with its white members had challenged the legality of 187 registered voters in Sparta. The board removed 53 of them, virtually all African-Americans — roughly one of every 20 voters. As a “courtesy,” court papers state, county sheriff’s deputies served summonses on the targeted voters, commanding them to defend themselves at election board meetings.

Some did, and were restored to the rolls. Others reacted differently to a police officer’s knock on their door.

“A lot of voters are actually calling to say they no longer wish to be on the list, so now we have people coming off the list who no longer want to vote,” Tiffany Medlock, the elections supervisor for the Hancock County elections board, told a Macon television reporter in late September. “It’ll probably affect the City of Sparta’s election in a major way.”

Mr. Warren, an African-American who is Sparta’s elections registrar, bought a hand-held video camera and began videotaping the county elections board’s meetings. His evidence helped lead the Georgia N.A.A.C.P., the Lawyers’ Committee and other advocacy groups to sue the county elections board, demanding that voters struck from the rolls be restored unless the county could prove they were ineligible.

A federal judge agreed. So far, 27 of Sparta’s 53 disenfranchised voters have been reinstated; the rest have yet to be located. Hancock County officials insist they did nothing wrong. In depositions this summer, the three white elections board members said their purge of Sparta’s voter rolls not only was correct, but that they would do it again.

But Julie Houk, an attorney handling the case for the Lawyers’ Committee, said the plaintiffs were determined to ensure that they do not. She said they plan to seek an injunction against future purges — and their lawsuit demands that the Justice Department reimpose preclearance reviews in the county until bias-free elections are a reality.

 

 

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Written by PNM Admin · Categorized: Georgia Democrats, Georgia Republicans, Georgia Voter Protection Hotline, Party News, Press Releases · Tagged: Democratic Party of Georgia, GAGOP, Georgia Democrats, Georgia Republicans, Voter Suppression, Voting Rights

Aug 04 2016

On the Ground: Embri

Alec Field Moment

“Embri B. went to high school in Stockbridge, and has come home after working on President Obama’s 2008 and 2012 campaigns. She currently organizes neighborhood community groups, and works with them to draft legislation to be introduced at all levels of government in Georgia. Embri volunteers with New Day GA to identify Georgia Democrats, get them to the polls, and ensure that we go blue this year!” – Alec Barnes, DPG New Day GA Field Organizer

Join Embri and thousands of volunteers across the state by signing up here.

Written by PNM Admin · Categorized: Georgia Democrats, On The Ground · Tagged: Democratic Party of Georgia, Georgia Democrats, New Day GA

Aug 03 2016

DPG Seeking Fall Interns

The Democratic Party of Georgia is seeking interns who are passionate about politics and want to gain experience in an intensive campaign setting. The DPG’s interns will contribute to a diverse, hard-working team committed to turning Georgia blue in 2016 and beyond.

Job functions will include research, writing, direct outreach to voters and donors, coordinating logistics for events, administrative support, and so much more. All interns will perform a variety of tasks, but the experience will be tailored to each intern’s skills and interests (finance, development, fieldwork, etc).

To apply, email your resume to [email protected] with the subject line “DPG Internship.”

Written by PNM Admin · Categorized: Georgia Democrats, Party News · Tagged: Democratic Party of Georgia, Georgia Democrats, Internships

Jun 25 2016

Georgia Moved From “Likely Republican” to “Leans Republican”

 

Atlanta, GA – As the election cycle progresses, Georgia continues to emerge on the national stage as a battleground state. Renowned political analyst Larry Sabato has moved Georgia from “Likely Republican” to “Leans Republican” in the Crystal Ball Electoral College ratings. This development reinforces recent polling that shows Georgia is in play.

 

Crystal Ball GA

 

“Georgia has a clear path to victory in November. We’re already a competitive state. The votes are there for the taking—but we will not take a single county, precinct, or vote for granted. Georgia Democrats will not let this moment pass us by.

“Our field program has expanded our presence across the state, placing dozens of boots on the ground and recruiting over 1,000 new volunteers ready to support our efforts. Some of the strongest talent from traditional battleground states has signed on to help us build the field program. It’s just the perfect storm. Our party infrastructure is in place, Trump’s campaign is an unmitigated disaster, and a majority of Georgians are seeing that it takes a Democrat to move our state in the right direction.” – Michael Smith, Communications Director.

 

 

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Written by PNM Admin · Categorized: Georgia Democrats, Press Releases · Tagged: Georgia Democrats, New Day GA

Jun 07 2016

While Republicans in Other States Flee Trump and Party, Deal and Perdue Set to Host Fundraiser for Donald Trump

Release:  Tuesday, June 7, 2016                                                                                          

While Republicans in Other States Flee Trump and Party, Deal and Perdue Set to Host Fundraiser for Donald Trump

 

 

Atlanta, GA – Days after Donald Trump made shocking, racist remarks that Hispanic-American judges and Muslim-American judges were incapable of ruling without bias, Republican leaders in other states are fleeing both the candidate and the GOP.

But not here in Georgia.

Gov. Nathan Deal and Senator David Perdue are set to host a private fundraiser for Trump next week in Atlanta.

Worse yet, Senator Perdue and Senator Johnny Isakson both refuse to denounce Trump’s comments. From the AJC:

“I think the sooner we get this behind us and we can talk about the issues where he does have the high ground the better off we’d be,” Perdue said. “And I think you may see that coming out in the next day or two.”

Meanwhile, Johnny Isakson, Georgia’s senior U.S. senator, said he didn’t make much of Trump’s comments.

“I just think talking about a pending case in court if you’re a defendant or a plaintiff, the conversations ought to be in the courtroom and not outside,” he said.

 

“How much more will it take for Governor Deal and Senators Isakson and Perdue to place decency and civility above politics. This is pretty cut and dry. Even Republicans in other states have called out these comments for what they are—racist and divisive. Georgia GOP leaders should condemn these remarks and hold their new standard bearer accountable.” – Michael Smith, Communications Director.

 

Iowa GOP lawmaker dumps party to protest Trump

Des Moines Register

State Sen. David Johnson, one of the senior members of the Iowa Senate, says he has suspended his Republican Party membership to protest “the racist remarks and judicial jihad” by presumptive GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump.

… “I will not stand silent if the party of Lincoln and the end of slavery buckles under the racial bias of a bigot,” Johnson said, referring to Trump. His criticism was prompted by Trump’s comments that federal Judge Gonzalo P. Curiel, who is presiding over a lawsuit involving the now-closed Trump University, was biased because of his Mexican heritage.

Graham calls on Republicans to un-endorse Trump

Politico

If ever there were a moment for Republicans to jump off the Trump train, now would be as good of a time, according to South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham.

Graham wants fellow Republicans who have endorsed Donald Trump to take it all back in the wake of his repeated claims that Judge Gonzalo Curiel’s heritage make him unfit to preside over lawsuits against him.

“This is the most un-American thing from a politician since Joe McCarthy,” Graham told The New York Times. “If anybody was looking for an off-ramp, this is probably it,” he added.
Sen. Mark Kirk withdraws support for Trump

Chicago Sun-Times

Sen. Mark Kirk, R-Ill., facing a big challenge from Rep. Tammy Duckworth D-Ill., said Tuesday he will not support presumptive GOP nominee Donald Trump after earlier saying he will back him.

“I cannot and will not support my party’s nominee for President regardless of the political impact on my candidacy or the Republican Party,” Kirk said in a statement, where he also said Trump did not have the temperament to command the U.S. military or take control of nuclear weapons.

“After much consideration, I have concluded that Donald Trump has not demonstrated the temperament necessary to assume the greatest office in the world,” said Kirk…

 

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Written by PNM Admin · Categorized: Georgia Democrats, Georgia Republicans, Press Releases · Tagged: David Perdue, Donald Trump, Georgia Democrats, Johnny Isakson, Nathan Deal, racist

Apr 08 2016

AJC – How Democrats plan to turn Georgia into a battleground state

How Democrats plan to turn Georgia into a battleground state

AJC 4-8-2016

 

Georgia Democrats have long argued the state could be in play in November with Donald Trump or Ted Cruz at the top of the Republican ticket. Now the party’s leaders are putting their money where their mouth is.

The Democratic Party of Georgia unveiled a new statewide organizing field program on Friday helmed by a pair of veterans from battleground states. Democratic operatives describe it as a first-of-its kind organizing effort to identify voters, recruit volunteers, rally them around base-pleasing issues and corral them into votes in November.

It’s financed partly by an initial $100,000 donation from New York investor Philip Munger, whose contribution wasrevealed Thursday in the party’s latest financial disclosure. Munger, the son of billionaire Berkshire Hathaway partner Charles Munger, is a substantial donor to Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton and has written four checks totaling $1 million to Virginia’s Democratic party.

The Georgia party used Munger’s donation and contributions from other supporters – it reported a total of $476,000 in cash on hand with no debt – to help pay for two new hires to launch the program.

Amanda Ford, who was the top field director for the Ohio Democratic Party and organized for Obama in North Carolina during the 2008 campaign, will be the new program’s field director. And Kendra Cotton, formerly a senior political operative in North Carolina, was tapped as the party’s political director.

“To say that the Party is excited about this program is an understatement — the enthusiasm and electricity is tremendous,” said DuBose Porter, the party’s chair, in a statement. “Georgia’s ascendancy as a battleground state has only just begun. With this field program, and the talent we’ve been fortunate enough to assemble, Georgia Democrats have a clear path to ensuring that our state plays a key role in electing another Democrat to the White House.”

Georgia hasn’t awarded its electoral votes to a Democratic presidential candidate since Bill Clinton in 1992, and Republicans have swept every statewide office the last two election cycles. The GOP has overwhelming majorities in the state Legislature, and Democrats failed to find a big-name candidate to challenge Republican Sen. Johnny Isakson this year.

And Trump, the billionaire developer with a commanding lead in the GOP delegate race, earned sweepingsupport in Georgia’s GOP primary. He took all but four of Georgia’s counties and won nearly every demographic in the Republican electorate, complicating the case for his adversaries.

But Peach State Democrats have long pointed to changing demographics – a growing number of minorities and a rising tide of newcomers from more liberal northeast states – as a sign the state is veering from red to purple. And partisans contend that Trump’s nomination could hasten the change by turning off suburban women and independents who the Georgia GOP has long relied upon for its winning formula.

Some analysts agree. Larry Sabato, the University of Virginia political scientist, wrote last week that the Trump effect could mark Georgia and three other red states as possible pickups for Clinton. And Democrats have eagerly tried to paint Cruz, his closest rival in the hunt for the GOP nomination, as equally polarizing.

Clinton’s campaign, which has quietly made Georgia part of its general election plans, made clear Friday the Peach State was on its radar. Marlon Marshall, Clinton’s director of state campaigns, said he is excited about the field program the state party is building.

“With an incredibly diverse and growing electorate and a strong party infrastructure, Georgia is set to mobilize voters for Democrats up and down the ticket,” said Marshall.

Written by PNM Admin · Categorized: Georgia Democrats, Party News · Tagged: 2016, Battleground State, Georgia Democrats

Mar 01 2016

DPG Chair Statement on Georgia Primary Results

Release:  Tuesday, March 1, 2016                                                                                       

 

DPG Chair Statement on Georgia Primary Results

 

 

Atlanta, GA – Democratic Party of Georgia Chair DuBose Porter issued the following statement on the results of the Georgia Presidential Primary.

 

“First, I want to congratulate Secretary Clinton on her win in Georgia. Both she and Senator Sanders ran spirited campaigns and showcased the fact that our Party—the Democratic Party—has a substantive plan to build on the progress made over the last seven years under the Obama Administration.

 

“I’d imagine that Georgia Republicans—up and down the ballot—would rather have a wasp in their mouth than have Donald Trump at the top of the ticket. But he is a monster of their own creation. His victory is perfectly illustrative of just how extreme and out of touch the Republican Party has become. Whether or not he clinches the nomination, Trump and the stranglehold he has held on the GOP pose very serious problems for their Party in November.

 

“Georgia voters will have a clear choice in November, and we will join a majority of states in sending another Democrat to the White House.”

 

Written by PNM Admin · Categorized: Georgia Democrats, Georgia Republicans · Tagged: 2016 Presidential Primary, Bernie Sanders, Donald Trump, GAGOP, Georgia Democrats, gop, Hillary Clinton

Feb 25 2016

DPG Chair Statement on Passing of Rep. Bob Bryant

Release:  Thursday, February 25, 2016                                                                                          

 

DPG Chair Statement on Passing of Rep. Bob Bryant

 

 

Atlanta, GA – Democratic Party of Georgia Chair DuBose Porter issued the following statement on the passing of Rep. Bob Bryant.

 

“Across the state, Georgia Democrats are mourning the loss of Rep. Bryant. Bob was a dedicated public servant who loved his community and loved his constituents. His contributions to our state were immeasurable. Our thoughts and prayers are with his family.”

Written by PNM Admin · Categorized: Georgia Democrats, Press Releases · Tagged: Georgia Democrats, Rep. Bob Bryant

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