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Gabe Sterling
Podcast |
Radio Atlantic
Publisher |
The Atlantic
Media Type |
audio
Categories Via RSS |
News
News & Politics
Politics
Society & Culture
Publication Date |
Dec 04, 2020
Episode Duration |
00:25:13
As conspiracy theories about the Georgia vote count have escalated into threats, a state election official rebuked President Trump and blamed him for the environment voting administrators now face.  Despite being a lifelong Republican, Gabe Sterling worries about where he finds his party. The president and Georgia’s elected Republicans seem to be in open war with one another. How far could the dangerous rhetoric take things? And what does it mean for Georgia's run-off elections in January to decide control of the Senate? Support this show and all of The Atlantic’s journalism by becoming a subscriber at www.theatlantic.com/supportus Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
As conspiracy theories about the Georgia vote count have escalated into threats, a state election official rebuked President Trump and blamed him for the environment voting administrators now face.  Despite being a lifelong Republican, Gabe Sterling worries about where he finds his party. The president and Georgia’s elected Republicans seem to be in open war with one another. How far could the dangerous rhetoric take things? And what does it mean for Georgia's run-off elections in January to decide control of the Senate? Support this show and all of The Atlantic’s journalism by becoming a subscriber at www.theatlantic.com/supportus Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

As conspiracy theories about the Georgia vote count have escalated into threats, a state election official election-trump.html">rebuked President Trump and blamed him for the environment voting administrators now face. 

Despite being a lifelong Republican, Gabe Sterling worries about where he finds his party. The president and Georgia’s elected Republicans seem to be in open war with one another. How far could the dangerous rhetoric take things? And what does it mean for Georgia's run-off elections in January to decide control of the Senate?

Support this show and all of The Atlantic’s journalism by becoming a subscriber at www.theatlantic.com/supportus

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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