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Discussion Thread: Primary Night in Kentucky, Georgia, Alabama, Idaho, Oregon, and Pennsylvania on May 19, 2026
byu/PoliticsModeratorBot inpolitics
11 Kommentare
My state better not mess this up again like last time. Been watching the georgia results and some of these margins are way closer than expected.
I don’t think she’ll win based on the giant thumb the establishment Dems put on the scale for Bob Harvie, but driving around town this weekend, I saw more Simonelli signs in real people’s yards than I did Bob Harvie signs. Her supporters are definitely higher energy.
I have 3 uncontested races and one with no Dem running.
What ever shall I do with the abundant options?
Here’s to the Cincy suburbs putting Massie back in.
Georgia is going to be the marquee election of the night, since not only are there competitive primaries for Senate and Governor on the GOP side and Governor for Dems, the general election for state supreme court is also going on for two seats. Democrats have outvoted Republicans in the early vote by something like 15 points (Georgia doesn’t have voter registration but keeps records of which ballot someone pulls, along with incredibly detailed information on race, age and gender for voters), which is a 25 point shift from the 2022 partisan breakdown.
That being said, there’s an unusual situation there too where, if the Democrats do end up winning the state supreme court races, the incumbent Republicans are able to „cancel“ the elections by prematurely resigning to invalidate the vacancy. Only one of the justices running committed to not doing this if they were to lose, while the other refused to make a commitment and actually was involved in a decision affirming the ability for incumbents to do this:
https://x.com/Taniel/status/2051434398617116718?s=20
https://x.com/Taniel/status/2051434979842785611?s=20
Finally, beating incumbents in state supreme court races tends to be very difficult, especially if they are elected to their positions. Since the races are nonpartisan, Democratic base voters are also sometimes confused about who to vote for. In 2024, former Dem congressman John Barrow lost by 10 points against a Kemp appointee despite vastly outperforming in his old congressional district in now-blood red Southeast Georgia, in no small part because he lost deep blue populous metro Atlanta counties like Cobb (Harris +15), Gwinnett (Harris +16) and Clayton (Harris +70). While there are positive signs for Dems with the way the primary vote has split, it’s still entirely possible that Rs outperform without partisan indicators (unlike the jaw dropping 25 point statewide margins that Dems got for the PSC races last year).
Still, given the stakes in Georgia, both sides are going to be very closely watching the first general election of the year there to see what it could mean for November. Despite Trump carrying Georgia by 2, it technically shifted blue by quite a bit (since it was about 4 points redder than the national popular vote when Biden narrowly carried it in 2020 and only about half a point redder than the national popular vote when Trump carried it in ’24), and metro Atlanta was one of the few areas that saw Harris‘ numbers hold up and even improve a little over Biden. Dem chances in ’28 will probably depend quite a bit on flipping Georgia, and the gubernatorial election will be quite important in determining whether there’s federal interference on how the ’28 election runs.
I just got back from voting in the PA Democratic Primary and they changed the method of in-person voting this year. I’ve voted in-person since 2008 and until today every time I voted I’d stand at a digital screen and push buttons to fill out my ballot which would then be printed out at the bottom for me to send in. Not today. I had to sit at a table with a physical ballot and fill in squares with a pen, old-school style. I have family who do mail-in so I knew that was still an option obviously, but I hadn’t heard they were switching back to that for same day voting as well. I mentioned it to the cop who watched as I put my completed ballot in the machine and he said it’s gonna be that way for the next 4 years. I was left wondering why. If it was a mistrust of the electronic machines or an attempt to discourage turnout. It took me twice as long as usual, but this was still 10AM on a primary so I was in there no more than 10 minutes. But in a general election? Especially in a presidential year like 2028? I may have been standing there for a loooong time with that process. Which is how other people do it all the time I know, but still. It caught me by surprise.
I’m a Democrat in Western PA. I didn’t even know there was an election today. Can I vote or is it just republican primary?
EDIT: I am in district 16 for anyone wondering
The GOP have created Frankenstein’s monster, they must vote with him or be defeated in the primaries which filter out all but the most crazy voters. In the general more sane people are allowed to vote as well, and then things will hopefully get very ugly for these craven monsters. They will reap what they have sown in November, Toy God’s willing
Go KLB!
Watching Georgia closely. Some of these margins feel too tight for comfort. Hoping for some sense to prevail tonight. Keeping an eye on the AP live page. Fingers crossed
Voted early last week, and got everyone I know to do the same. Hoping our efforts pushed the needle somewhat.