Early vote totals suggested close contests were unfolding in two U.S. Senate races in Georgia that will decide which party controls the chamber and the possible fate of Democratic President-elect Joe Biden’s legislative agenda.
Republican incumbents David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler faced Democratic challengers Jon Ossoff, a documentary filmmaker, and the Rev. Raphael Warnock, a pastor at a historic Black church in Atlanta.
About an hour after polls closed at 7 p.m. (0000 GMT), Warnock led Loeffler by 6.2 percentage points, while Ossoff was ahead of Perdue by 5.6 percentage points, with 20 per cent of the estimated vote counted, according to Edison Research.
An Edison exit poll of more than 5,200 voters found half had voted for Republican President Donald Trump in November and half for Biden. The voters were also evenly split on whether Democrats or Republicans should control the Senate.
The survey included both early voters and voters who cast ballots on Tuesday.
Democrats must win both contests in Georgia to take control of the Senate. A double win for the Democrats would create a 50-50 split in the Senate, giving Vice President-elect Kamala Harris the tie-breaking vote after she and Biden take office on Jan. 20. The party already has a majority in the House of Representatives.
If Republicans hold onto the Senate, they would effectively wield veto power over Biden’s political and judicial appointees as well as many of his policy initiatives in areas such as economic relief, climate change, healthcare and criminal justice.
The results could be known by Wednesday, Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger told CNN, although the outcome may remain in doubt for days if the margins are razor-thin.
Both Biden and Trump campaigned in the state on Monday, underscoring the stakes.
No Democrat has won a U.S. Senate race in Georgia in 20 years, but opinion surveys show both races as exceedingly close. The head-to-head runoff elections, a quirk of state law, became necessary when no candidate in either race exceeded 50 per cent of the vote in November.
Biden’s narrow statewide win in the Nov. 3 election – the first for a Democratic presidential candidate since 1992 – has given the party reason for optimism in a state dominated by Republicans for decades.
More than three million Georgians voted early by mail or in person, shattering the record for runoff elections even before Election Day arrived. The two races drew nearly half a billion dollars in advertising spending since Nov. 3, a staggering total that fueled a tsunami of television commercials.
In Smyrna, about 16 miles (26 km) northwest of Atlanta, Terry Deuel said he voted Republican to ensure a check on Democratic power.
“The Democrats are going to raise taxes,” the 58-year-old handyman said. “And Biden wants to give everyone free money – $2,000 each or something like that for COVID stimulus? Where are we going to get the money?”Ann Henderson, 46, cast ballots at the same location for Ossoff and Warnock, saying she wanted to break Washington’s gridlock by delivering the Senate to Democrats. “It’s the social issues – civil rights, racial equality, voting rights, pandemic response,” she said. “If we take it, maybe we can get something done for a change.”
TRUMP RAGES
The campaign’s final days were overshadowed by Trump’s continued efforts to subvert the presidential election results.
On Saturday, Trump pressured Raffensperger, a fellow Republican, on a phone call to “find” enough votes to reverse Biden’s victory, falsely claiming massive fraud.
Trump’s efforts to undo his loss – with some Republicans planning to object to the certification of Biden’s win when Congress meets on Wednesday to formally count the presidential vote – have caused a split in his party and condemnation from critics who accuse him of undermining democracy.
At Monday’s rally in Georgia, Trump again declared the November vote “rigged,” an assertion some Republicans worried would dissuade his supporters from voting on Tuesday.
His attacks appear to have undermined public confidence in the electoral system. Edison’s exit poll found more than seven in 10 were very or somewhat confident their votes would be counted accurately, down from 85 per cent who said the same in a Nov. 3 exit poll.
Wall Street’s main indexes finished higher after a weak start on Tuesday as investors awaited the outcome in Georgia.
If elected, Warnock would become Georgia’s first Black U.S. senator and Ossoff, at 33, the Senate’s youngest member. Perdue is a former Fortune 500 executive who has served one Senate term. Loeffler, one of the wealthiest members of Congress, was appointed a year ago to fill the seat of a retiring senator. (Reuters)
Photo saved as elections
Caption: Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Raphael Warnock holds a small rally with young campaign volunteers on election day in Georgia’s U.S. Senate runoff election, in Marietta, Georgia, U.S., January 5, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Segar
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Jamaica: More students turn up at Clarendon school
As predicted by principal of Alston High School in Clarendon, Adrian Sinclair, more students showed up for face-to-face classes on Tuesday than the 84 who came in on Monday when the new school year began. On Tuesday, 130 of the 540 students enrolled came out for classes and he expects the numbers to increase in the weeks ahead.
Sinclair’s confidence that the numbers will grow is influenced by the turnout last year when the school was among 17 in a pilot programme that saw them opening their doors for face-to-face classes.
“Of the 540 students enrolled at the school, as much as 335 came out on [November 10],” he said. “[Our checks showed that] others were out of the parish with family members, some [had damaged] their uniforms and could not afford new ones, the rest were employed and some still are [employed].”
He added that some parents kept their children at home because of fear they would contract COVID-19. There were other reports of students being asked to stay home to care for family members suffering from co-morbidities. Students stuck at home but unable to join online classes, Sinclair explained, “were provided with a special learning kit to ensure they are not missing out on the schoolwork”.
To keep students and teachers safe now that the new school year has started, efforts are visibly being made to follow the safety protocols that come with attending face-to-face classes during a pandemic. Desks are placed the required six feet apart while helpful signs and sanitisation stations are seen at various locations on the school compound.
There is also a contingency plan in place if the number of students who turn out for the upper school, made up of grades 10 and 11, increases. There are two extra classrooms that can be used. Students are encouraged to have at least two masks in their possession when coming to school, and to wear them especially when travelling on public transportation.
“For those students who sometimes forget their masks, they are provided with disposable masks at the school gate,” Sinclair told OBSERVER ONLINE. (Jamaica Observer)