Second ('Third') Trump Presidency Thread

Mike Nellis


9h
Endless Urgency with Mike Nellis

Exit polls say Abigail Spanberger won young men 56–42 today. Talk about a narrative buster.
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In an Upset, Democrats Oust Two Republicans on Georgia’s Utility Board​

The races for two of the five seats on the Georgia Public Service Commission are seen as a bellwether for the midterms.

Alicia Johnson wears a blue business suit and stands facing the camera.

David W. Chen
By David W. Chen
Nov. 4, 2025
In an upset, Democrats ousted two Republican members of Georgia’s utility board on Tuesday, according to preliminary results from secretary of state's office.

The closely watched races for two of the five seats on the Georgia Public Service Commission had been viewed not only as a referendum on rising electric bills but also as a bellwether for next year’s contests for governor and U.S. Senate.

Since 2007, no Democrat has served on the commission, whose members have six-year terms. But the two Democratic candidates tapped into anger over rising electric bills at a time when prices have risen sharply across the country. Over the last two years, the commission has approved six rate increases for Georgia Power, the state’s largest electric provider.

The obscure but powerful commission is ordinarily an electoral afterthought. In 2020, however, a federal lawsuit contended that the statewide elections for commission seats, which represent geographic districts, were unfair to Black voters. An appeals court eventually ruled against the plaintiffs, but the legal battle delayed elections for the commission. That set the stage for Tuesday’s races, the only statewide elections in Georgia this year.



According to the Georgia secretary of state’s office, Peter Hubbard, a Democrat, defeated Fitz Johnson, the Republican incumbent who was appointed by Gov. Brian Kemp, in the race for the seat representing greater Atlanta.

In the other contest, between candidates from northeastern Georgia, Alicia Johnson, a Democrat, defeated Tim Echols, the Republican incumbent who has held office since 2011.

Mr. Hubbard is a clean energy consultant; Ms. Johnson is a health management and community development executive.

Energy costs rose sharply around the country in 2022, driven by a spike in natural gas prices when Russia invaded Ukraine. In Georgia, additional factors in the state’s high utility bills have included $17 billion in cost overruns from nuclear generators and new infrastructure to support an anticipated surge in electricity demand from data centers.

Mr. Kemp and the utility commission praised a deal this year with Georgia Power to freeze base rates for three years. Critics, though, contended that ratepayers would still have to cover hundreds of millions of dollars in fuel and storm-damage costs
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/29/well/midday-yoga-routine.html
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/30/travel/air-france-lost-luggage-fencing.html

Democrats criticized Republicans for embracing fossil fuels to generate electricity for data centers, as well as for backing away from clean energy, in lock step with the Trump administration.

Heading into Tuesday, Republicans had fretted over turnout, given that municipal elections in Atlanta and other Democratic strongholds were also being held.

Republicans were also anxious that a Democratic victory in even one of the utility races could be a harbinger for 2026, when elections will be held for governor; the U.S. Senate seat held by Jon Ossoff, a Democrat; the Republican-controlled state legislature; and two more seats on the utility commission. Those anxieties prompted attempts by Mr. Kemp and other Republican officials to rally the party faithful.
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David W. Chen is a Times reporter focused on state legislatures, state level policymaking and the political forces behind them.
 
Virginia electing Jay Jones after that scandal is amazing stuff.

Just a new low by democrats. Really impressive stuff.
He still ran behind the swing toward the left in VA by quite a bit. Sorry that the Republican brand is so toxic right now that even that couldn’t save this race for them.
 
He still ran behind the swing toward the left in VA by quite a bit. Sorry that the Republican brand is so toxic right now that even that couldn’t save this race for them.
lol. Yeah the incumbent was super toxic.

Apparently not even death threats to kids is too much for the dem party cult
 
lol. Yeah the incumbent was super toxic.

Apparently not even death threats to kids is too much for the dem party cult
My point was that Dems won by such high margins in VA that Jones was carried across the finish line and that Republicans pushing this as a sign that voters are simply rewarding political violence might want to take a step back and ponder why they also lost all those other races.
 
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