in Georgia, Democrats believe in victory

Democrat Raphael Warnock speaks on his YouTube channel on January 6 after being declared the winner in the US Senate.

A historic election, extraordinary suspense. The double senatorial, which was held Tuesday, January 5 in Georgia, decisive for the future President Joe Biden and his takeover of the Upper House in Congress, continues to hold the United States in suspense in the early hours of Wednesday. With fifty seats in their favor, against forty-eight for their opponents, the Republicans could hope to keep their majority in the Senate if they managed to keep at least one of the two seats at stake. They have already lost one. If the Democrats win the second, they will have control of the Senate, thanks to the voice of Vice President Kamala Harris.

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Democrat Raphael Warnock was declared the winner shortly before 2 a.m., with 50.6% of the vote, against 49.4% for his opponent, outgoing Senator Kelly Loeffler. At the same time, the Democratic candidate Jon Ossoff had taken back the lead in the poll against Republican David Perdue, leading by 16,000 votes in advance.

The rest of the count (less than 2% of the vote) suggests that the candidate of Joe Biden’s party could finally cross, Wednesday in the day, the finish line with a short head: the votes not yet counted are in counties of the traditionally democratic state and come from postal ballots, also generally more committed to the “blue vote” (the color of the Democratic Party).

First black senator

As early as midnight, Reverend Warnock created a surprise by addressing Georgians live from his YouTube channel: “Georgians, I am honored by the faith you place in me. (…) Every day spent in the Senate, I will fight for you ”, he let go of his home, catching the main media in the country by surprise. His victory will be validated an hour and a half later.

Decryption: Understand the elections in Georgia, which could tip the Senate

With more than 0.5 point difference between the two candidates, the ballot will not be subject to an automatic recount. Raphael Warnock widened the gap with his competitor, even more than Joe Biden had done with Donald Trump, whom he had beaten with 11,779 votes apart in November. Importantly, at 51, he made history by becoming Georgia’s first black senator – and the 11e in the history of the United States. “It’s amazing to see the South promoting an African American to the upper house”even moved David Jolly, a former Republican representative from Florida.

Pastor of a church in Atlanta where Martin Luther King officiated, he defends the idea of ​​a Church more involved in political life. While Jon Ossoff, with whom he campaigns, embodies the moderate wing of the Democratic Party, he is more on the left wing. He supports the right to abortion and same-sex marriage in a black Church which is not necessarily favorable to it.

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