Posted on 11/07/2020 6:30:58 PM PST by SeekAndFind
After an arduous 2020 election, its looking like well have to wait until 2021 to learn which party is in control of the U.S. Senate. With incumbent Senator David Perdue having just failed to cross the 50 percent barrier necessary in the State of Georgia to claim victory, leadership of the Senate looks to be in limbo until January 5, when the run-off election will take place.
The current Senate sits at 53 Republican and 47 Democrat. In the November elections, Democrats were able to gain seats in Colorado, where Bilderberger John Hickenlooper defeated Republican incumbent Cory Gardner, and in Arizona, where GOP Senator Martha McSally was ousted by Democrat Mark Kelly. Republicans did pick up a seat in Alabama, where former football coach Tommy Tuberville defeated Democrat placeholder Doug Jones by a wide margin.
Thus far, for the new Senate convening next year, the GOP has claimed 48 seats to the Democrats 46. However, two independent senators Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Angus King of Maine caucus with the Democrats, making the current count 48-48 with four races still to be decided.
In North Carolina, Republican Thom Tillis looks to be in good position, with a 96,000-vote lead over Democrat Cal Cunningham with 98-percent reporting. In Alaska, the Senate race pitting Republican incumbent Dan Sullivan against Democrat challenger looks to go the GOP as well, with Sullivan holding a 30-point advantage, although only 50 percent of precincts have reported as of this writing.
So control of the U.S. Senate and the advise and consent role that comes along with it would seem to depend of the State of Georgia. With 99 percent of the vote counted, Perdue maintains a nearly 2 percentage point lead over Democrat challenger Jon Ossoff. But Perdues percentage falls a mere two-tenths of a point under the 50-percent threshold needed to claim victory in the State of Georgia. Libertarian candidate Shane Hazel seems to have spoiled a Perdue victory party by garnering 2.3 percent of the vote.
There is one thing we know for sure: Senator David Perdue will be reelected to the US Senate and Republicans will defend the majority. Perdue will finish this election in first place with substantially more votes than his Democratic opponent, said Perdues campaign manager Ben Fry in a statement.
Its clear that more Georgians believe that David Perdues positive vision for the future direction of our country is better than Chuck Schumers radical, socialist agenda, Fry continued. Theres only one candidate in this race who has ever lost a run-off, and it isnt David Perdue.
In 2018, Ossoff lost the most expensive race for a House seat in history when he was narrowly defeated by Republican Karen Handel.
Yet, the Ossoff campaign was optimistic that the far-left Democrat would ultimately be victorious. We are confident that Jon Ossoffs historic performance in Georgia has forced Senator David Perdue to continue defending his indefensible of unemployment, disease and corruption, said a statement from Ossoffs campaign manager Ellen Foster.
The other Senate race in Georgia is a special election and was long expected to go to a run-off as 19 candidates were running to fill the seat vacated by Johnny Isakson in 2019. Republican Kelly Loeffler was nominated as the placeholder by Governor Brian Kemp and was challenged by 18 others, most notably Democrat Raphael Warnock and Republican Rep. Doug Collins. Whoever ultimately wins this contest will need to run again for reelection in two years.
Although the Democrat Warnock came out on top in the contest with 32.9 percent of the vote so far, its worth noting that in the 19-person race, Republican candidates have garnered 49.3 percent of the vote with Loeffeler leading the way at 25.9 percent followed by Collins with 20 percent while Democrats could only manage 45.6 percent with 98 percent of precincts reporting. The remaining few percentage points were split among independents, Libertarians, and Green Party candidates.
Georgia has been reliably Republican for over a decade with the last Democrat senator being Zell Miller, who left office in 2005 after having supported Republican George W. Bush in the 2004 presidential election. But there are fears that changing demographics might put the GOPs stranglehold on the state in jeopardy.
Assuming the North Carolina and Alaska races go to the GOP, Republicans will control 50 seats, meaning that they will need to win at least one of the Georgia seats to insure that the gavel is kept in Republican Mitch McConnells hands. On the other hand, if Democrats succeed in their theft of the presidency, and somehow be able to win both Georgia Senate races, a 50-50 tie would occur, then the radical Democrat Kamala Harris would become the tie-breaking vote in the upper chamber.
If the Democrats, who already have majority control of the House, capture the White House and gain majority-control of the Senate, then they would control all both legislative chambers as well as the presidency, positioning them well for implementing their radical agenda not just policy proposals such as the Green New Deal but also changes in the system such as packing the Supreme Court. So the stakes in the Peach State have never been higher.
Yawn.
RE: Yawn.
I take it you’re indifferent to the results either way.
Give them to the democrats. That is what our useless GOP is going to do as they watch the Dems kick them in the balls and fight back with a wet noodle.
Thank you lukewarm churches.
The riggers in Atlanta will be out in full force. Governor Kemp, are you going to step up? If my vote doesn’t matter, I might not make the 3 minute drive to the polls. Sorry, Gov, but they already call you bad names. Man up.
Let the cheating begin.
I have soooo much encouragement! /s
One would have thought a Republican run state would have clean elections.
Georgia proved they do not this year, although the last Governor race should have been a wake up call.
The same woman who still claims she won is running part of this election, Stacy Abrams.
if Trump’s election is not thoroughly investigated, I’m not wasting my time voting again
Theres so many bad GOP senators that Biden will get any legislation he wants even with very narrow house and senate chambers face Washington without trump just one big circle jerk for red China
Have all the votes been counted? I thought there were still military ballots yet to be counted. Could that help Perdue reach the threshhold?
I am confused as I thought Georgia was going to be a recount. Wouldnt they wait for the results before announcing a run-off?
In the spirit of trying to be original:
ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ!
I commented months before it happened. No need for comment now.
There is a recount and a runoff wont be official until that happens
The Georgia Republican party allowed the cheating to happen even they dominate all the elected offices in Georgia and along with the legislatures.
Do they really think Trump voters will show at the special elections considering their votes don’t matter.
I’ve been wondering the same.
I know I’ve been receiving TONS of emails, from the GOP, asking to donate to the GA Senate runoff.
Not just NO, but h3ll no.
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