Joyce Vance has reacted to emails that reportedly show how Georgia election officials hope to swing the election in Trump's favor.
The state election board was recently taken over by a conservative majority. Its latest proposals are dangerously late in the process and most likely illegal, according to the secretary of state.
According to an Atlanta Journal-Constitution poll, Trump now has 9.2 percent support among Black voters in Georgia.
Tate Fall, the election director in Georgia's Cobb County, recently organized a training session for security measures, the Associated Press reported. The session included election workers in the county and local law enforcement officials to discuss strategies for keeping employees safe ahead of the upcoming election.
Georgia’s Supreme Court is rejecting an appeal from a county Republican Party that tried to keep four candidates from running on the local GOP ballot.
Confidence in the election appears to be on the rise. An AJC survey in June found 57% of likely Georgia voters were confident the election would be fair and accurate; in the latest survey, about 64% of likely voters were confident.
The Faith & Freedom Coalition, led by evangelical political powerhouse Ralph Reed, brought Vance and Kemp to the same stage with a shared focus: advocating for Trump and criticizing Democratic nominee Kamala Harris.
Faced with election changes, activists in Georgia hope to turn out record numbers of voters of color so there's a decisive win on Election Day.
The race has tightened since the AJC’s poll in June when the former president held a 5-point lead over President Joe Biden in Georgia.
Democrats are intensifying their focus on GOP positions on abortion as November nears, as polls in Georgia and other battleground states show support for expanding access.
As the U.S. Postal Service faces delivery slowdowns, U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff, a Democrat from Georgia, has proposed legislation to impose stricter oversight on who leads the agency.