Wall Street Journalさんのインスタグラム写真 - (Wall Street JournalInstagram)「Kaneisha Miller, owner of EM Farms in Monroe County, Ga., says she sees Republican-championed policies such as widespread tax cuts as better for her own bottom line, which should be a good sign for the two GOP senators fighting to hold their seats in Georgia’s runoff races . It isn’t.⠀ ⠀ “You can always get money,” said the 30-year-old. “But I know that the Democratic Party usually treats people more equal.”⠀ ⠀ The November election reinforced a pattern showing that party affiliation is increasingly connected with where voters live. Rural voters across the country overwhelmingly supported President Trump, while American cities remained Democratic strongholds, and this year, once reliably Republican suburbs shifted to blue.⠀ ⠀ Black Americans have bucked those trends by largely supporting Democrats regardless of whether they live in big cities, suburbs or rural areas, according to voter surveys and a comparison of demographic data and election results.⠀ ⠀ That dynamic has taken on added importance in Georgia, where Black voters make up about a third of active voters in the Atlanta metropolitan area and about a quarter elsewhere in the state. The two Senate runoff races scheduled for Jan. 5—with Republican Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler facing off against Democrats Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock—will likely come down to whether Republicans can run up the score in rural areas and hold off a surge of Democratic voters in the Atlanta metro area.⠀ ⠀ In interviews, many Black Georgians said they support Democrats because they are more receptive to the idea that Black Americans still face myriad disadvantages, from policing to education to jobs.⠀ ⠀ Read more about at the link in our bio.⠀ ⠀ 📷: @lnweatherspoon for @wsjphotos」1月4日 0時45分 - wsj

Wall Street Journalのインスタグラム(wsj) - 1月4日 00時45分


Kaneisha Miller, owner of EM Farms in Monroe County, Ga., says she sees Republican-championed policies such as widespread tax cuts as better for her own bottom line, which should be a good sign for the two GOP senators fighting to hold their seats in Georgia’s runoff races . It isn’t.⠀

“You can always get money,” said the 30-year-old. “But I know that the Democratic Party usually treats people more equal.”⠀

The November election reinforced a pattern showing that party affiliation is increasingly connected with where voters live. Rural voters across the country overwhelmingly supported President Trump, while American cities remained Democratic strongholds, and this year, once reliably Republican suburbs shifted to blue.⠀

Black Americans have bucked those trends by largely supporting Democrats regardless of whether they live in big cities, suburbs or rural areas, according to voter surveys and a comparison of demographic data and election results.⠀

That dynamic has taken on added importance in Georgia, where Black voters make up about a third of active voters in the Atlanta metropolitan area and about a quarter elsewhere in the state. The two Senate runoff races scheduled for Jan. 5—with Republican Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler facing off against Democrats Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock—will likely come down to whether Republicans can run up the score in rural areas and hold off a surge of Democratic voters in the Atlanta metro area.⠀

In interviews, many Black Georgians said they support Democrats because they are more receptive to the idea that Black Americans still face myriad disadvantages, from policing to education to jobs.⠀

Read more about at the link in our bio.⠀

📷: @lnweatherspoon for @wsjphotos


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