News from the South - Georgia News Feed
Bookman: Some likely suspects who knifed MTG’s U.S. Senate run
by Jay Bookman, Georgia Recorder
May 15, 2025
Through most of last week, U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene sounded pretty much committed to a run for the U.S. Senate seat now held by Jon Ossoff. She made it clear how eager she was to run, how much she wanted to be the one to reclaim the seat that in her mind Democrats had stolen. She wanted to wait and think about it over the weekend, she said, but her intention seemed obvious.
Then suddenly, everything changed.
On Friday, before the weekend even arrived, Greene announced that she no longer had any interest in the Senate. In a long, embittered bitter rant on social media, she explained that “the Senate doesn’t work” and that the Republican elite has lost touch with the American people.
“I won’t fight for a team that refuses to win, that protects its weakest players and that undermines the very people it’s supposed to serve,” she wrote.
“Can I deliver for the people of Georgia in the Senate?” she went on to ask. “Can I fulfill my promises? Can I actually save this country from the inside?” The answer, she concluded, was that she could not because her fellow Republicans would not help her.
Greene is nothing if not stubborn, so why the sudden change of heart? My theory is that the only person who could have forced such a change was Donald Trump, and that directly or indirectly, he sent down word to Greene that she would not have her hero’s support.
The bitterness of Greene’s rant, and the language she chose, provide supporting evidence for that theory. She complains about the GOP elites, sucking down booze “at the country clubs and Mar-a-Lago,” and lashes out at what she calls “the political consultants embedded in the White House,” who allegedly manufacture polls reflecting what the elites want to see.
I suspect another set of fingerprints would also be on the knife that found Greene’s back. That would be those of Gov. Brian Kemp. He acknowledged speaking with Trump early last week about his own decision not to run for Senate and about the need for Republicans to come together to support a candidate who could unite the party and succeed statewide.
That does not sound like a description of Marjorie Greene.
Greene seems to have similar suspicions. In her diatribe, she attacks “the ultra-rich Kemp donors gathering last weekend at their elite retreat on luxurious Sea Island to anoint their candidate to run against Jon Ossoff…They’re trying to carefully select someone who can dress up in MAGA just enough to trick the grassroots into thinking they’re one of us.”
“These are the Republicans who see Trump as a speed bump, one they believe they can carefully roll over now that he won’t be on the ballot again,” she said.
Frankly, there’s some truth to that analysis. Kemp’s greatest success as a two-term governor, his most important legacy, is not policy-based. Instead, it has been his ability to keep the Georgia Republican Party largely within the broad bounds of reason, logic and responsibility, a party that is still capable of governing. In the Trump era, it’s a trick that Republican leaders in other states have been unable or unwilling to accomplish, and the GOP has suffered in those states as a result. You can get away with outrageous stuff in Texas and Alabama that you cannot in Arizona and Georgia.
Kemp, to his credit, recognizes that. He has talked of wanting to leave the state and party as he inherited it from predecessors such as Nathan Deal and Sonny Perdue, one-time conservative Democrats who found success as conservative Republican governors. Kemp understands that if Georgia is now a purple state, as attested by its two Democratic senators, it would be much closer to outright blue today had GOP leadership succumbed to the mindless Trumpite populism that we’re now seeing play out at the national level.
Will Kemp, as a lameduck governor, be able to enforce that discipline through the 2026 election cycle? For the moment he seems to have an important ally in Trump himself, but the president is nothing if not fickle.
Just ask Marjorie.
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Georgia Recorder is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Georgia Recorder maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor John McCosh for questions: info@georgiarecorder.com.
The post Bookman: Some likely suspects who knifed MTG’s U.S. Senate run appeared first on georgiarecorder.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Center-Right
This content primarily presents a critical yet measured examination of intra-party dynamics within the Republican Party, focusing on figures like Marjorie Taylor Greene and Brian Kemp. It portrays Greene as a populist outsider frustrated with party elites, while Kemp is depicted as a more traditional, pragmatic Republican attempting to maintain party discipline and governance capabilities in a competitive state. The tone is critical of extreme factions without veering into strong partisan attacks, reflecting a center-right perspective that favors party cohesion and responsible conservatism over populist insurgency.
News from the South - Georgia News Feed
Kemp’s push to reshape Georgia Senate race comes into focus as King exits
by Niles Francis, Georgia Recorder
July 27, 2025
Georgia Insurance Commissioner John King on Thursday suspended his bid to challenge Democratic U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff after a private phone call with Gov. Brian Kemp, who told King and other candidates he would not support their campaigns as he works behind the scenes to anoint a preferred candidate.
“I got into the U.S. Senate race to beat Jon Ossoff, not distract from the mission,” King said in a statement shared on X. “Right now it’s clear there’s little path forward to the nomination, so today I’m suspending my campaign.”
He said he now plans to run for a second full term as insurance commissioner.
King, a Spanish-fluent native of Mexico, was appointed to his post by Kemp in 2019 and became the state’s first elected Hispanic statewide official when he secured a full term in 2022. He was previously a street cop before working his way up to police chief in Doraville, a majority-Hispanic suburb of Atlanta.
He also came into the race with an extensive military background, having spent a combined four decades in the U.S. Army and the National Guard. His missions included deployments to the Middle East, building pop-up hospitals during the coronavirus pandemic and cracking down on illegal immigration at the U.S. border with Mexico, according to his campaign website.
Despite his impressive resume, his campaign left a lot to be desired. He lacked the financial resources of his rivals and wasn’t able to unite the party’s competing factions: MAGA diehards who prioritize loyalty to President Donald Trump and establishment-minded conservatives who would much rather talk about things like tax cuts.
His exit comes as the governor is said to be working the phones in support of Derek Dooley, a former coach at Tennessee and the son of the late Georgia coaching legend Vince Dooley. It’s not clear when or if the younger Dooley will join the contest, but he is lining up a political team full of staunch Kemp allies and has been sounding a lot more political in interviews despite having never run for office before.
Kemp might have nudged King out of the race, but his involvement doesn’t seem to be deterring other candidates — at least not yet. U.S. Rep. Earl “Buddy” Carter, a wealthy pharmacist, was the first to enter the contest in an effort to try and lock up the MAGA lane, even switching a lot of his social media photos to pictures of himself sharing a thumbs-up with the president.
The St. Simons Island Republican’s campaign did not hold back when asked about Kemp’s involvement: “Politicians don’t elect our Senators,” his campaign said. “The people of Georgia do.”
After announcing that he wouldn’t run himself, Kemp had committed to working with the White House toward a consensus candidate. But his moves behind the scenes to elevate the former Volunteers coach have “frustrated and p—d off” those close to the president, as one advisor said to Fox News.
And U.S. Rep. Mike Collins, who has been hinting at a Senate run for months, seems likely to enter the race within days. A trucking company owner from Butts County, Collins’ father Mac spent most of the 1990s representing the same northeast Georgia district his son now holds.
Collins’ support for immigration crackdowns and his bombastic presence on social media have made him something of a celebrity in MAGA world, which means the party could be headed for the proxy war it wanted to avoid. The conservative congressman was also an early supporter of Trump’s 2016 bid for the White House, while Dooley doesn’t appear to have much of a voting history.
“When Mike Collins enters the race, he will likely become the frontrunner,” says Martha Zoller, a radio host who is close with the governor. “His work on the Laken Riley Act cannot be underestimated regarding how that resonates with Republican primary voters.”
Zoller added that the candidates are only speaking to primary voters right now and suggested that whoever wins the primary will need to recalibrate before going toe-to-toe with the well-funded Ossoff.
“The general election is a whole different ball game.”
GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.
Georgia Recorder is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Georgia Recorder maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jill Nolin for questions: info@georgiarecorder.com.
The post Kemp’s push to reshape Georgia Senate race comes into focus as King exits appeared first on georgiarecorder.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Center-Right
This article presents a mostly factual account of Republican primary dynamics in Georgia, focusing on internal party conflicts and Gov. Brian Kemp’s influence in the Senate race. It discusses MAGA-aligned candidates, establishment conservatives, and GOP power struggles without overt editorializing. The language is generally neutral but leans slightly toward a center-right perspective by emphasizing traditional Republican factions and conservative issues like immigration crackdowns and tax cuts. The article reports on the GOP’s internal divisions while providing context on candidate backgrounds and endorsements, maintaining a balanced tone with no strong partisan framing favoring either side.
News from the South - Georgia News Feed
Dangerous heat wave continues | VIPIR 6 ALERT DAYS Sunday & Monday
SUMMARY: The CSRA is experiencing intense heat due to a strong high-pressure system, with temperatures not dropping below the upper 70s overnight. A Heat Advisory is in effect Sunday into Monday morning, with highs reaching the low 100s and heat index near 112°, posing risks of heat-related illnesses. An Extreme Heat Watch continues Monday, with heat index values approaching 113°, though isolated storms may occur. Residents are urged to stay hydrated, limit outdoor activities, and watch for heat exhaustion symptoms. Relief is expected midweek with increased rain and storms, lowering temperatures to the 90s, and cooler air arriving next weekend with highs in the mid-80s.
The post Dangerous heat wave continues | VIPIR 6 ALERT DAYS Sunday & Monday appeared first on www.wjbf.com
News from the South - Georgia News Feed
Southwest Airlines flight headed to Las Vegas takes dramatic plunge in response to nearby aircraft
SUMMARY: A Southwest Airlines flight from Southern California to Las Vegas plunged about 300 feet shortly after takeoff Friday due to an onboard alert of a nearby plane, injuring two flight attendants and causing panic among passengers. The plane abruptly jolted and dropped in response to collision warnings, with the pilot reportedly maneuvering to avoid another aircraft, a British fighter plane called a Hawker Hunter Mk. 58. The flight departed Hollywood Burbank Airport and landed safely in Las Vegas. The FAA is investigating, and Southwest is cooperating. This incident adds to recent concerns about aviation safety following a deadly midair collision in January.
The post Southwest Airlines flight headed to Las Vegas takes dramatic plunge in response to nearby aircraft appeared first on www.wsav.com
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