Democrats made some major gains outside of Georgia’s urban centers –such as Atlanta and Savannah –in the November presidential election and Georgia’s U.S. Senate runoffs. Experts with the Center for American Progress credit years of grassroots campaigning that targeted rural communities of color.
But as consultants, political scientists and the media continue deconstructing the latest elections, conversations are often framed in a rural versus urban context.
The story is deeper than just that, according to Gbenga Ajilore, who’s a senior economist with the Center for American Progress.
He spoke with WABE’s “All Things Considered” host Jim Burress as the races had just been called for Democratic challengers, Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock.
In his recent report for CAP, Ajilore found that south Georgia counties like Columbia, Houston and Bryan showed significant increases in Democratic voter turnout in November. Ajilore said that Democratic gains in Georgia’s Evangelical hubs, or in middle-class, diverse communities near military posts, also carried over to the Senate runoffs.