President-elect Joe BidenJoe BidenGeorgia’s signature audit found no fraud in the presidential election. Pence refused to sign the plan to revoke the election, say lawyers for the New Lincoln Project showing Trump’s border wall built from tombstones of COVID-19 victims. MORE and elected vice president Kamala Harris
Kamala HarrisBiden praises Christie for wearing a mask 2.3 million people voted in the second round of the Georgia Senate the following week. they are due to start the campaign in Georgia, ahead of the state’s runoff elections to the Senate next week.
Harris and Biden will arrive in the state on Sunday and Monday, respectively, where they will campaign for Rev. Raphael Warnock (D) and Jon Ossoff (D). Democrats need to win both seats on Jan. 5 to get a 50-50 split in the upper house, which would make Harris the potential tiebreaker in any vote.
Your trips to Georgia will coincide with an event President TrumpDonald Trump Georgia’s signature audit found no fraud in the presidential election. Pompeo calls for the release of a Chinese journalist arrested because of coronavirus coverage Pence refused to sign a plan to overturn the election, lawyers say MORE is having Monday night in the state while trying to protect the majority of the Republican Party in the Senate as one of his last acts before Biden took office on January 20.
A campaign official familiar with the fundraising figures told CNN that Biden was also involved in direct fundraising for the two candidates and raised about $ 10 million.
The dispute for the Georgia Senate remained extremely fierce, according to the polls, and the current Sens. David PerdueDavid PerduePush for $ 1,000 stimulus checks hit in the Senate that 2.3 million people voted in the second rounds of the Georgia Senate with a week for the head of DC’s Intercept branch: McConnell was “very well” with Trump losing re-election MORE (R) and Kelly Loeffler
Kelly LoefflerPush for $ 000 stimulus checks hit in the Senate saw that 2.3 million people voted in the second round of the Georgia Senate with a week for the head of the DC branch of Intercept: McConnell was “very well” with Trump losing his reelection MORE (R) faced pressure on the Senate’s reluctance to support increased direct aid payments to millions of Americans amid the coronavirus pandemic.
An offer to increase payments from $ 600 to $ 2,000, supported by both senators, seems likely to die in the Senate, where the majority leader Mitch McConnellAddison (Mitch) Mitchell McConnell GOP Senator says he will block consent for $ 1,000 stimulus checks Head of DC branch of Intercept: McConnell was “doing very well” with Trump losing re-election Trump targets Congressional Republicans on several fronts (R-Ky.) He linked the proposal to increase payments with a package that would establish a commission on electoral fraud and repeal Section 230, a provision of the law that provides liability protection for sites like Twitter and Facebook. Both measures would likely break the agreement for Democrats.
Georgia’s runoff participation is expected to rival presidential election levels, with some experts pointing to increased voting in Democratic strongholds as a positive sign for Democrats in the state.
Biden won the state in November, becoming the first Democratic presidential candidate to win there since President Clinton in 1992.