You better watch out. That’s the holiday greeting a Louisiana utility lobbyist might be sending his colleagues in other states this year.
Author Archives: Tom Baxter
Tom Baxter has written about politics and the South for more than four decades. He was national editor and chief political correspondent at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, and later edited The Southern Political Report, an online publication, for four years. Tom was the consultant for the 2008 election night coverage sponsored jointly by Current TV, Digg and Twitter, and a 2011 fellow at the Robert J. Dole Institute of Politics at the University of Kansas. He has written about the impact of Georgia’s and Alabama's immigration laws in reports for the Center for American Progress. Tom and his wife, Lili, have three adult children and seven grandchildren.
Strange, fantastic, important: What’s been happening while the race was being run
he long Senate race has descended into the season of postmortems, when the losers point fingers and the winners check what’s left in the campaign account. But, dear reader, we don’t have to do either.
In Georgia runoff’s wake, American politics looks different
ate Tuesday, as the mist and fog began to clear over much of Georgia, you could begin to make out the features of a new American political landscape. The mountain called Donald Trump is still out there, but it doesn’t stand out nearly as prominently, as other peaks come into view.
Georgia democracy: A hit show that’s getting harder to produce
While we wait for the results to come in, let’s cheer the long-suffering poll workers who made this election possible and pat ourselves on the back one more time for standing in line to vote. Then let’s get real about it.
Georgia gripped by a frenzy of glomming in runoff’s closing days
When inboxes start filling up with desperate messages from Democratic fundraisers, one thing’s for certain.
Herschel Walker’s not ready for the Green Agenda, but it’s coming anyway
You wouldn’t exactly say this has been an issues-driven Senate race, but largely because Republican challenger Herschel Walker brings the subject up so frequently, energy and climate issues have been central to this campaign.
A new speaker takes the gavel in a House that may be harder to handle
Rep. David Ralston’s announcement that he was stepping down as House speaker was overshadowed by Election Day four days later, which is probably what Ralston intended.
How does DeSantis-Kemp sound? Lousy, if you ask Trump
At the very last minute, begrudgingly no doubt, former President Donald Trump endorsed Brian Kemp, the governor he’d vowed to bring down, including him in a list of his recommendations at a rally in Ohio Monday night. That, in a nutshell, is the story of this election.
The political money machine and the anger that feeds it
Ray Strother, who died last month at the age of 81, told me a story more than three decades ago that still comes to mind nearly daily. It’s a fitting time to retell it, as we wait for this year’s election results.
Abrams and Kemp last meeting airs as early voting roars on
We need some new terminology, maybe even another tense, for that floating time between the beginning of early voting and Election Day.
Early voting soars as a worried electorate faces off
How do we account for the surge in early voting, which is running close to the early turnout in Georgia’s presidential election of 2020 and nearly 60 percent higher than the 2018 turnout? It’s a combination of things, including fear.
Over two debates, Warnock jousts with a Republican, a Libertarian and an empty podium
By Tom Baxter It’s funny how political logic can be turned on its ear in a couple of days. Throughout the first part of the U.S. Senate campaign, there has been all kinds of speculation about Herschel Walker and debates. Was he going to participate in any debates with U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock? Under what […]
Another revelation, and worse, his wounded son, plague Walker’s campaign
Before we get into where Herschel Walker’s campaign stands this week, we should pause for a moment to reflect on why it took so long for it to get there.
As winds blow harder, the politics of catastrophe become more frayed
President Joe Biden and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, potential rivals in 2024, made nice to each other last week as Hurricane Ian ripped across Florida and into the Carolinas, and by all reports the federal and state partners have worked together smoothly in the aftermath of the storm. But if storms like Ian become more frequent, the politics of catastrophe will become increasingly frayed.
Coffee County security breach began with selfies. Now it won’t go away
Last week, Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger announced that his office was replacing the election equipment in Coffee County to the tune of around $400,000, an act he said “puts to an end any argument that the results in Coffee County, and anywhere else in Georgia for that matter, will not accurately reflect the will of Georgia voters.” But this story isn’t going away.
Closing of Atlanta Medical Center highlights state’s larger problems
Draw a circle of three or four miles diameter with the WellStar Atlanta Medical Center at the center and you will have encompassed an enormous amount of territory, demographically, historically, culturally and politically. Not to mention a lot of Georgians in need of medical care.
EVs bring big economic questions, along with federal dollars
By Tom Baxter In hearings over the past couple of weeks, a legislative committee has begun to sort out the issues that are going to come with the ever-increasing electrification of Georgia. There are quite a few, and more we may not have thought of. Chaired by Sen. Steve Gooch of Dahlonega and Rep. Rick […]
Lindsey Graham’s long and winding road to the Fulton County Courthouse
By Tom Baxter When future generations try to figure out what in the world was going on in our era, they’re going to have a particularly hard time understanding Lindsey Graham. Over 28 years in the U.S. House and Senate, Graham has moved politically so many times it can be hard to distinguish his flips […]
Summer’s political arc, from breakfast tacos to crudité
Looking back, the tipoff story of this summer was — go figure — the one about Jill Biden and breakfast tacos.
With Trump on the sidelines, governor’s race turns to state’s flushed revenues
The shadow of Donald Trump will fall heavily on many races across the country this fall, as ardent defenders of the former president square off against Democrats and new controversies continue to unfurl. But not here.
