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LIVE FROM DALLAS TEXAS - All you need to know Radio - Thurs. 6pmcst Show executive sponsor Above and beyond design call today to change your life 210-264-2073
These increasingly powerful members of what former state House minority leader Stacey Abrams identified as key partners in her “New Georgia Project”—which is both the name of the voter education and mobilization group she founded in 2014 and a description of her vision of what Georgia is becoming—present an important opportunity for Democrats as they try to propel investigative journalist Jon Ossoff and Ebenezer Baptist Church pastor Raphael Warnock to victory in the January 5 Senate runoff election. But mobilizing them means doing things a little differently from how Democrats have always operated. Democrat Jon Ossoff is challenging GOP Senator David Perdue, who did not attend their scheduled debate earlier Sunday night.
Mr. Warnock, a pastor at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, where Martin Luther King Jr once preached, pitched himself as a champion of “ordinary people”. “I’m concerned that Washington is not focused about ordinary people,” said Mr Warnock in one of his first comments of Sunday’s debate. “You can’t tell the difference between Washington backrooms and corporate boardrooms. My opponent represents the worst of that kind of problem.”