Georgia voters wait in line outside of a Fulton County polling location at 8:30 a.m. on Nov. 8, Election Day, ahead of casting their ballots in the crucial midterm election.

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Georgia voters wait in line outside of a Fulton County polling location at 8:30 a.m. on Nov. 8, Election Day, ahead of casting their ballots in the crucial midterm election.

Credit: Riley Bunch/GPB News

The panel

Andra Gillespie, @AndraGillespie, professor of political science, Emory University

Rick Dent, political ad expert and vice president, Matrix Communications

Stephen Fowler, @stphnfwlr, political reporter, GPB News

Tamar Hallerman, @TamarHallerman, senior reporter, Atlanta Journal-Constitution

 

The breakdown

1. Two and a half million Georgians voted early. Today's votes could bring that number up to 4 million.

LISTEN: Rick Dent on misplaced blame on Black voter turnout.

 

2. All eyes are on the race for U.S. Senate. Sen. Raphael Warnock and Herschel Walker are nearly tied in polling.

  • Georgia's election laws trigger a runoff if a candidate doesn't reach 50% of votes cast.
  • Overseas and military ballots are now ranked-choice ballots, meaning they can be tallied immediately for runoffs while Georgians go back to the polls.
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Stephen Fowler talks about how soon we could see results. 

Credit: GPB

 

3. Stacey Abrams has polled behind Gov. Brian Kemp for the past few weeks. Can she make up the difference today?

  • Abrams' 2018 campaign energized disenfranchised voters under a divisive Republican president. With an unpopular Democrat in office, Abrams' chances may have been slimmer.
  • Abrams' campaign team has also cut backtheir ad buys in the weeks before the election. She spent $355,000 in the same week that the Kemp campaign spent over $2 million. Both candidates for U.S. Senate spent nearly $13 million dollars.

LISTEN: Andra Gillespie looks at lessons to learn from Abrams' campaign.

 

Tune in to our 2 p.m. edition of Political Rewind on Facebook or at gpb.org.