Ga. presidential choice may hinge on who doesn’t vote
AUGUSTA, Ga. (WRDW/WAGT) - As America hurtles toward the 2024 election, the road to the presidency es through Georgia, one of the seven battleground states considered vital to the fortunes of anyone who wants to win the White House.
Georgia also is one of the few Southern states considered up for grabs, having gone to President Joe Biden in 2020 after a run of six-straight wins there by Republican presidential candidates.
Georgians continue to set records with early voting
Early voting began last Tuesday with a state record for voter turnout during the start of the advance voting period. The records continued all week.

Four years after Biden won the state by fewer than 12,000 votes, the campaigns of Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump have poured financial and tactical resources into the state based on the theory that the outcome may be determined as much by who doesn’t vote as who does.
The question is whether their sales pitches will have the ear of everyone.
For people at the lower rungs of the economic ladder, there are often more basic priorities. Bibb County made a good test area with its high poverty rate, diverse demographics and large number of seemingly eligible voters who stayed home in 2020.
‘A lot is at stake’: Local voters weigh in on presidential race
We are just 18 days away from election day, and Georgia has already seen record-breaking numbers at the polls in early voting.

Interviews with dozens of women and some men on the lower socioeconomic level showed there is a possible relationship between poverty and turnout that candidates are working to overcome.
Wasn’t 2020 a record turnout?
More than 150 million people voted but even with 2020′s record number of ballots cast, more than 75 million people eligible to vote did not cast ballots, according to a study by the Center for Inclusive Democracy at the University of Southern California. In Bibb County, about 47,000 people who were eligible to vote, defined as legal citizens 18 or older, did not.
Ga. absentee voters face mail delays, vanishing drop boxes
Early voting began last Tuesday with a state record for voter turnout during the start of the advance voting period. The records continued all week.

How do you know that some of those nonvoters are poor?
Other data from AP VoteCast, a survey of both voters and nonvoters, determined that a percentage of those nonvoters would be more impoverished.
The survey showed that nonvoters in 2020 tended to be poorer, younger, less educated, unmarried and minorities. The data, collected by the AP-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, also found that among voters in 2020, 15% reported having a household income under $25,000 in the previous year, compared with roughly 3 in 10 nonvoters.
Put those characteristics against a population of 27 million adults who live below poverty, according to the Census, and the figures suggest that people on the lower rungs of the economic ladder probably make up a significant subset of all nonvoters.
What are the demographics?
A majority of Bibb County residents are minorities and over 60% are unmarried. Four in 10 are younger than 30 and nearly half only have a high school education. Just over 60% of students in Bibb County schools are eligible for free and reduced-price meals with 36 of the schools offering free and reduced-price meals to all students, said a spokeswoman for the Georgia Department of Education.
I-TEAM | A look at Helene’s impact on mail-in voting
Add mail-in voting to the growing list of things Helene has impacted as we’re just 19 days out from election day. A major backlog of mail means there are concerns absentee ballots won’t make it in on time.

Kathy McCollum, president of the Middle Georgia Community Food Bank, said the poverty rate is 18.5% in the 24 counties served by her organization, including Bibb.
She said donations come in from retail grocers, growers, manufacturers and processors. Financial donations rose dramatically in 2020 during the pandemic but have fallen off.
Food from her organization is distributed to over 200 partner agencies, which are nonprofits or churches that distribute to struggling residents and families.
Why does income matter when it comes to voting?
The reasons people offered were varied. Some were prevented because of past criminal justice problems. Others had childcare and transportation concerns. Early voting, especially for those with unstable housing situations, could be hard because of address requirements.
Harris attends Ga. church service, revs crowd at Atlanta rally
Kamala Harris told the congregation of a large Black church in suburban Atlanta on Sunday that people must show comion and respect in their daily lives and do more than just “preach the values.”

And some didn’t see how discussions about money for home buyers, college debt forgiveness and tax cuts for the wealthy pertained to them.
Linda Solomon, 58, said her concern is stretching her Social Security disability far enough to cover her apartment rent and utilities.
She relies on food pantries and organizations like the nonprofit Mother’s Nest in Macon to get her through the tight periods. She stopped voting years ago when she decided her circumstances stayed the same through multiple istrations.
Solomon said she and her daughter aren’t voting " because nothing changes " no matter who sits in the White House. “Why you gonna vote and ain’t nobody doing nothing?”
While Harris has excited Black voters in and around Atlanta, with its wealthier and better-educated electorate, interviews in Bibb County suggest voters living in far worse circumstances are not moved by the historic nature of her candidacy. Democrats won the county by a 2-1 margin in 2020, and Republicans are increasingly confident they can erode Democrats’ historic advantage of winning roughly 90% of all Black votes.
Solomon came to Mother’s Nest with her grown son and daughter and grandchildren. None of them vote, she said. Her son can’t because of a criminal record but she and her daughter won’t because, “If you ain’t got nothing, nobody has time for you whether you are Black or white. If you’re poor, you’re poor and they ain’t got time.”
Sabrina Friday, who started the center in 2022, slips in comments on voting and why it’s important, not just nationally but locally, where issues are decided that impact the families directly.
“You’d be surprised that a lot of them just don’t want to because they’ve given up,” she said.
Tynesha Haslem, 36, said she ed voting — she believes during one of Barack Obama’s elections — but voting has not been a priority in a “horrible” life.
She lost the car she had earlier this year and she and her sons spend nights in a hotel. She is not ed to vote now but even if she wanted to, it is unclear that she could because of a felony conviction on her record from 2016 for attacking an ex-boyfriend. Her top priority is getting a job “hopefully in customer service,” she said.
Have others noticed?
LaTosha Brown, co-founder of Black Voters Matter, said she thinks there’s beginning to be discussion about basic pocketbook issues, like food costs and housing.
But there needs to be more to entice people who are ignored by society to see voting as something that can solve their systemic problems. The stock market and unemployment “are not an indicator of how well people are doing.”
A look at the false information around Hurricane Helene
The devastation around Hurricanes Helene and Milton has been complicated further by false and misleading information, much of it politically motivated.

Are the campaigns there?
Janiyah Thomas, a Trump campaign official, said get-out-the-vote efforts are focused on low-propensity voters. She added they are also utilizing volunteers and using traditional canvassing methods as well as TikTok and outside groups.
The Harris campaign has an office in Macon staffed by six full-time team who are focused on reaching communities throughout the region. That includes canvassing and door-knocking in lower-income and other areas. A campaign official said there also is a large rural presence in Georgia that skews towards lower-income residents.
Augusta advance voting locations and schedule
- Linda W. Beazley Community Room in the Municipal Building, 535 Telfair Street. Oct. 15- Oct 19, Oct. 21 - Nov. 1, from 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
- Henry Brigham Community Center, 2463 Golden Camp Road. Oct. 15-Oct 19, Oct. 21-Oct. 26, Oct. 28-Nov. 1, from 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
- Warren Road Community Center, 300 Warren Road. Oct. 15-Oct 19, Oct. 21-Oct. 26, Oct. 28-Nov. 1, from 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
- Robert Howard Community Center at Diamond Lakes. 103 Diamond Lakes Way. Oct. 15-Oct 19, Oct. 21-Oct. 26, Oct. 28-Nov. 1, from 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
- Absentee Drop Box, Municipal Building, 535 Telfair Street. Oct. 15- Oct 19, Oct. 21 - Nov. 1, from 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Voters need to show any one of these photo IDs at the polls:
- Any valid state or federal government-issued photo ID, including a free ID card issued by your county registrar’s office or the Georgia Department of Driver Services.
- Georgia driver’s license, even if expired.
- Valid employee photo ID from any branch, department, agency, or entity of the U.S. government, Georgia, or any county, municipality, board, authority or other entity of the state.
- Valid U.S. port ID.
- Valid U.S. military photo ID containing a photograph of the voter.
- Student photo ID card issued by a Georgia public college, university, or technical school.
- Valid tribal photo ID containing your photograph.
Voters unable to provide photo identification can vote through a provisional ballot. They will need to provide a copy of their ID within three days after the election to their county board of elections and registration.
Columbia County leaders change polling location due to Helene damage
Due to damages from Hurricane Helene, the polling location at Savannah Rapids Pavilion will be changed.

Doss says some polling locations will change because of damage from Hurricane Helene.
If you vote at Henry Brigham Community Center, you now report to the senior center next door. For the Robert Howard Community Center, voting will be in the gym.
“The voting room that we would normally vote in did have a tree fall on the building. So, therefore, they have a big gaping hole in the building, there was another room that we thought we were going to be able to use on their complex but, unfortunately, the HVAC unit also took a hit, so right now the building does not have power,” said Doss.
But other locations should be good for early voting.
In Richmond County, it’s from 8:30 a.m. until 6 p.m. Monday through Friday.
There also will be voting on Oct. 26.
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