This episode dives into a chaotic week in Southern politics, focusing heavily on Georgia’s candidate qualifying, with additional notes on Arkansas and other states. Hosts David, Tim, and Catherine open by questioning the Secretary of State’s oddly partisan candidate listing—Republicans appearing first, incumbents buried—interpreting it as an early sign of Brian Kemp’s partisanship.
The conversation turns to the Georgia governor’s race, where surprises dominated both parties. On the Democratic side, Austin Scott abruptly exited the governor’s race to challenge Rep. Jim Marshall, a move the hosts interpret as strategic and likely influenced by Sen. Johnny Isakson. More shocking was State Rep. Randall Mangum’s last-minute entry, increasing the field to seven Democrats and virtually guaranteeing a runoff. The hosts debate whether Mangum siphons votes from Roy Barnes, Thurbert Baker, or lower-tier candidates Porter and Poythress—ultimately concluding that the crowded ballot makes a Barnes first-round win unlikely.
On the Republican side, controversy erupts as the party refuses to qualify businessman Ray Boyd for refusing a loyalty pledge while still allowing scandal-tainted Ray McBerry to run. This sparks predictions of an eventual GOP runoff and concerns that Boyd’s planned independent bid could drain enough votes to ensure it.
Guest Mayo calls in to discuss congressional dynamics, arguing that Austin Scott’s switch makes GA-08 a genuine toss-up but warning that Marshall historically overperforms. Mayo also reports fireworks at a Dunwoody governor’s forum, where McBerry attacked moderator Jim Galloway, Karen Handel vowed never to share a stage with McBerry again, and Jeff Chapman won the crowd—signaling shifting momentum in a fractured GOP field.