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7,562 result(s) for "Ossoff, Jon"
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Ossoff: A Cross-Ideological 2028 Dark Horse
Why has Jon Ossoff emerged as a dark horse for the 2028 presidential race? The MS Now host Chris Hayes and the Opinion columnist Ezra Klein discuss how Ossoff is leveraging a unique “visual grammar” to build an almost mythic, Obama-like political brand.
Jon Ossoff’s Anti-Authoritarian Playbook
The Opinion columnist Michelle Goldberg returned from a recent trip to Hungary with an appreciation for Senator Jon Ossoff’s playbook. Viktor Orban’s stunning defeat demonstrates the power of an anticorruption message, she argues, and Ossoff offers a model for Democrats.
Schumer hails Warnock and Ossoff for helping Democrats regain Senate
Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) praised Democratic campaigns in the Georgia Senate runoff on Jan. 6, celebrating anticipated victories that will hand control of the Senate to Democrats for the first time in six years.
Pence: ‘We need Georgia to defend the majority’
Speaking in Canton, Ga., on Nov. 20, Vice President Pence campaigned for Georgia Sens. Kelly Loeffler (R) and David Perdue (R), who both face a runoff election on Jan. 5.
Social Justice Campaigns and Democratic Party Gains: How Georgia's Partisan Reformers Overtook North Carolina's Moral Advocates
How did Democrats running for federal office win in Georgia in 2020–21, but not in North Carolina, a state long regarded as more “flippable”? This article uses newly assembled organizational data to situate recent Democratic fortunes in the context of two long-running statewide campaigns for racial and economic justice—led by North Carolina's Reverend William Barber II and Georgia's Stacey Abrams. We track shifting political opportunity structures and the organizational and strategic evolution of both movements during the 2010s, with a special focus on outreach beyond major metropolitan areas. Our findings suggest that social justice campaigns aiming to increase government responsiveness to poor minority citizens do better if they engage in persistent, locally embedded voter outreach along partisan lines rather than heavily relying on morally framed, media-friendly protests. This research also demonstrates how data on organizational networks can be assembled and used to explore historical-institutional hypotheses about the development and impact of social movements.
With runoffs looming, Georgia has become the center of the political universe
Control of the Senate rests in the hands of Georgia voters in the Jan. 5 runoff election that will determine two seats. Democrats are optimistic about their chances following November’s election, which flipped Georgia blue for Joe Biden. Republicans have traditionally done well in runoffs, but President Trump’s false election claims have left many of his supporters wary about voting in January.