Polls close in Georgia vote, US Senate in balance

ATLANTA, Jan 6, 2021 – Polls closed Tuesday evening in a pair of
critical election runoffs in Georgia, whose outcome will decide who controls
the US Senate and shape the early course of Joe Biden’s presidency.

The hard-fought races have brought the international spotlight onto this
southern state, nine weeks after the most tumultuous US election in two
decades.

Democrats need both their candidates, Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock, to
prevail in order to snatch the Senate from the Republicans. Outgoing
President Donald Trump’s party needs either Kelly Loeffler or David Perdue to
hold their seat to preserve its majority.

US media declared both races too close to call following the close of
polls at 7:00 pm (0000 GMT), and Georgia officials have said results may not
be known until Wednesday or later.

“Georgia — The nation is looking to you to lead us forward,” tweeted
President-elect Biden, who like Trump visited the Peach State to rally
supporters on the eve of the vote.

“The power is in your hands,” wrote the 78-year-old Democrat.

Georgia was voting during a week of high political tensions in the United
States, with Trump desperately scheming to reverse his election loss.

On Wednesday, Vice President Mike Pence is to preside over a joint session
of Congress to certify the Electoral College vote that confirmed Biden as the
winner of the White House.

Trump, who refuses to concede, is planning to address a rally called in
protest at the certification, and he urged Pence to “reject fraudulently
chosen electors” — a move the vice president has no legal authority to make.

Hundreds of Trump supporters wearing red “Make America Great Again” caps
were already gathered in downtown Washington Tuesday amid a heavy police
presence as shop owners, fearing unrest, boarded up windows.

– ‘Continued obstruction’ –

Biden beat Trump in Georgia by nearly 12,000 votes in November, but the
runoff odds are not in Democrats’ favor: Republicans have won all eight
statewide runoffs since 1992.

Democrats led the early voting in Georgia and nationwide in November, and
the expectation is that they did so again in the runoffs, in which a record
three million-plus people voted early amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Voting figures show Republicans more than Democrats tend to prefer casting
ballots in person on election day.

With the election on a knife edge, Robert Lowe, a 74-year-old retired
improv comedian, called it “the most important election in my lifetime,”
after casting his ballot at an Atlanta church for the Democrats.

If Republicans retain control of the Senate there will be “continued
obstruction” in Washington, Lowe told AFP.

– High tensions, high stakes –

Republicans hold 50 seats in the 100-seat Senate and a victory in just one
of the runoff races would give them a majority and the ability to thwart
Biden’s agenda.

Ossoff, 33 and a documentary producer, is running against Perdue, a 71-
year-old business executive who was elected to the Senate in 2014.

Warnock, a 51-year-old Black pastor, is taking on Loeffler, 50, a
businesswoman appointed to the Senate in December 2019.

– ‘Find 11,780 votes’ –

Trump’s rally came a day after The Washington Post published a recording
of a phone call in which the 74-year-old president pressured Georgia
officials to reverse the certified vote of November’s election and hand him
victory in the state.

On the tape, Trump is heard telling Georgia Secretary of State Brad
Raffensperger he wants to “find 11,780 votes” — one more than Biden’s margin
of victory.

Certification of the Electoral College vote is usually just a formality
but dozens of House Republicans and 12 Senate Republicans loyal to Trump have
said they will raise objections on Wednesday.

The move is doomed to fail, as they are far short of the votes needed to
block final validation of the vote.

 

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