Stacy Abrams, who is running for governor of the US state of Georgia, says she is exposed to false debts from current Governor Brian Kemp.
to me MSNBC She says Kemp is falsely claiming to be against law and order.
She also believes he’s trying to scare voters by making her skin darker on his campaign poster than it actually is.
Preliminary numbers from the initial vote indicate a record turnout. That’s what Abrams thinks frightens Republicans.
I have noticed that Kemp has used almost every racial metaphor that exists in politics. He called me an “angry black woman” on stage, and made my skin darker in his commercials.
Unlike Kemp, I don’t feel compelled to list all the men who support me.
Georgia has a population of more than ten million people. 3.3 million of them are black, about a third.
Abrams says these voters are still being assaulted on their right to vote by Georgia Republicans.
The election campaign is in full swing, and many voters have already cast their ballots. Election day itself is November 8.
You want more blacks to register as voters
For many years, Abrams campaigned for black voter registration in Georgia, and fought against electoral laws restricting the right to vote.
Although Kemp says he works for children from minorities to have the same access to jobs and education as white Americans, the two disagree on most things.
Candidates argue about education policy, health policy, immigration, gun laws, and labor rights. So far, Kemp leads polls in Georgia.
The 48-year-old is a graduate of Yale Law School. She was born as one of six siblings in a family in Gullford, Mississippi.
She held leadership positions for the Democratic Party in the Georgia State Congress for many years.
According to the British newspaper The Guardian, She has also published eight romance suspense novelsUnder the pseudonym Selina Montgomery.
The United States may have its first black female ruler
Abrams is one of six candidates who, in six states, could this year become the first black woman governor in the United States.
She also ran for election in 2018, but lost to Kemp, who then identified himself as a Trump supporter. He no longer does so after storming Congress in early 2021.
Five of this year’s women nominees are doing so as Democrats: Stacey Abrams in Georgia, Deidre Deger in Iowa, Connie Johnson in Oklahoma, and Mia McLeod in South Carolina.
A sixth, Deidre Gilbert of Texas, is running as an independent.
Black Voters Matter founder LaTosha Brown notes in Insider that the profound differences in American society that emerged during the pandemic made it urgent.
She says it is necessary to appoint a political leader who can solve problems that have existed for several hundred years.
– Black women are capable. De Geer, the candidate in Iowa, tells the paper that black women add value.
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