The Commercial Appeal

USA TODAY

- Aaron Morrison

Georgia Democrats face a turnout test in the first week of early voting for the state’s Senate runoff election.

ATLANTA – In the first week of early voting for Georgia’s Senate runoff election, Casie Yoder parked at a polling location in Cobb County and loaded miniature hand sanitizer bottles, knitted hats, hand warmers and face masks into a collapsibl­e wagon cart.

Her goal: to help voters stay in line in frigid temperatur­es and cast their ballots in a pair of high-stakes runoff contests that will determine which political party controls the Senate next year. The runoffs will also test whether Democrats can again pull together the diverse coalition that propelled President-elect Joe Biden to victory in Georgia in November and cemented the state’s status as a political battlegrou­nd.

“We’ve never had an election happen like this in December,” said Yoder, the Georgia state captain for the Frontline, a nonpartisa­n electoral justice project of the Movement for Black Lives and other partner organizati­ons.

For Democrats to win control of the Senate, Georgia’s Black communitie­s, as well as the state’s smaller Hispanic and Asian communitie­s, likely need to vote in the Jan. 5 runoff election by history-making margins. There is hope that the candidacy of the Rev. Raphael Warnock, the Black senior pastor of the church where Martin Luther King Jr. once preached, might help spur Black votes for both him and fellow Democratic candidate Jon Ossoff over the Republican incumbents, Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue.

An Associated Press Votecast survey of Georgia voters in November found that 22% of white voters chose Warnock and 28% chose Ossoff, compared to the 90% of Black voters who chose Ossoff and 73% who chose Warnock. Democrats also have an opportunit­y to capture the 15% of Black voters who chose Matt Lieberman, another Democratic candidate who competed against Warnock in last month’s race.

There are signs that turnout in Georgia could indeed be high in the runoffs. Through Wednesday, early voting data released by the office of Georgia’s secretary of state show nearly 1.9 million voters have already cast in-person or mailin ballots since voting opened last week. That’s almost half of the total early votes cast in the November general election, with less than two weeks left before the Senate runoff concludes.

Black, Hispanic and Asian American Georgians make up increasing segments of the state’s registered voters rolls. According to a new Pew Research Center analysis, Black registered voters here increased by about 130,000 between the 2016 presidenti­al election and last month’s contest, which was the largest increase of all major racial and ethnic groups in the state. Although far fewer in number, Hispanic and Asian American residents have increased their registrati­on every year for the last three presidenti­al cycles, the Pew analysis shows.

The Rev. James Woodall, the Georgia NAACP president, said he appreciate­s the resources pouring in from outside of the state. However, he believes victory would come down to homegrown turnout efforts.

“Georgians are organizing Georgians,” Woodall said.

In a statement to the AP, Abigail Sigler, spokeswoma­n for the Georgia Republican Party, said the party was “working tirelessly to ensure all Georgians understand they have a clear choice” in the runoff.

 ?? TAMI CHAPPELL/AP ?? Graco Hernandez Valenzuela speaks to voter Tyrone Vereen, at door, while canvassing the area for the Working Families Party regarding the U.S. Senate races in Lawrencevi­lle, Ga.
TAMI CHAPPELL/AP Graco Hernandez Valenzuela speaks to voter Tyrone Vereen, at door, while canvassing the area for the Working Families Party regarding the U.S. Senate races in Lawrencevi­lle, Ga.

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