Since Georgia flipped blue for President-elect Joe Biden, the gulf between the Old South and the New South has come into focus.
Come January, the state’s closely watched runoff elections will determine which party controls the U.S. Senate. In one race, Republican Senator David Perdue will face Democrat Jon Ossoff. In the other race, Republican Senator Kelly Loeffler, who was appointed to her seat last year by Governor Brian Kemp, faces Democrat Rev. Raphael Warnock, the senior pastor at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta.
We are in the final weeks of a campaign that has, not surprisingly, turned ugly and expensive.
To better understand the final weeks of the race and the role that religion plays in Georgia politics, host Amy Walter spoke with Rev. Dr. Robert M. Franklin Jr., professor of moral leadership at Emory University’s Candler School of Theology, and Jim Galloway, a political columnist at the Atlanta Journal Constitution.
Read the 1963 "Letter from a Birmingham Jail" here.
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How Ruth Bader Ginsburg's Death will Affect the Battle for the White House
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How North Carolina's Electoral Process Is Unfolding
The Role of Political Disinformation in the Race for the White House
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A Virtual Democratic Convention
Processing a New Kind of Election Night
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In Pursuit of a Coronavirus Vaccine
The Path to November
Diagnosing Georgia's Primary Problems
An Unexpected Battle for the Senate
Remembering John Lewis
A Look at the Next Stimulus Package
North Carolina, Up For Grabs
How Cities Across the U.S. are Responding to Demands for Police Reform
What it's Like To Start A Career During The Coronavirus Pandemic
What a Surge in Absentee Ballots Means for November 2020
Politics with Amy Walter: A National Reckoning
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