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Voter registration for the 2020 general elections ended on October 5 in Georgia, with a final total of 7,233,584 active registered voters, [119] an increase of 1,790,538 new voters since the 2016 election and 805,003 new voters since the 2018 gubernatorial election. Absentee mail ballots were first sent out on September 15.
The general election was held on November 3, 2020, and the runoff on January 5, 2021. A combined partisan primary for president and all other offices on the ballot was held on June 9, 2020, with a primary runoff held on August 11. To vote by mail, registered Georgia voters must have requested a ballot by October 30, 2020. [1]
Alice O’Lenick, a Gwinnett County election board member who voted against certifying the 2020 election but was outnumbered, later told a group of Republicans it was her mission to get the ...
After the 2020 election for the Georgia Public Service Commission, in which African-American Democrat Daniel Blackman was defeated in a run-off by District 4 incumbent Lauren "Bubba" McDonald (who won the most total votes of all three Republican statewide candidates on the runoff ballot, while both David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler lost their ...
Early voting kicked off in Georgia on Monday with hourslong waits at some polling locations amid what election officials said was a record high turnout. Kathleen Campbell, 31, was at her polling ...
In light of the ruling, the Trump campaign drops their challenges seeking to stop the Clark County ballot counting. [142] November 11: Raffensperger officially announces Georgia's hand recount. [143] November 12: Deadline for mail-in ballots to be received by election officials in the too-close-to call state of North Carolina. [144]
Activists in Gwinnett County, which stretches across the increasingly Democratic northern Atlanta suburbs, spent 10 months comparing change-of-address and other databases with the county’s voter ...
After beating Jay Trevari in the Democratic primary, Lopez Romero won 100% of the vote in the general election and became the first Latina elected to the state's legislature. In 2018, Lopez Romero ran for re-election to the State House; she handily beat her primary opponent, Shawn Allen, winning 77% of the vote.