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Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock will win the Georgia Senate runoff race against the Trump-backed Republican Herschel Walker giving Democrats a much-needed 51st vote in the upper chamber.Â
The race was called by the Associated Press just before 10:30 p.m. Tuesday.Â
Around 11 p.m., Walker appeared onstage at the College Football Hall of Fame in Atlanta and conceded the race, encouraging his supporters not to be disheartened by the result – and to keep voting and supporting the Constitution.Â
‘There’s no excuses in life, and I’m not going to make excuses now because we put up one heck of a fight,’ he said.Â
Walker also told supporters ‘we’re all winners’ and ‘God is good’ and thanked his daughters.Â
Son Christian went on a diatribe shortly after the race was called for his father’s opponent.Â
‘Don’t beat women, hold guns to people’s heads, fund abortions then pretend your pro-life, stalk cheerleaders, leave your multiple minor children alone to chase more fame, lie, lie, lie, say stupid crap, and make a fool of your family,’ Christian Walker tweeted. ‘And then maybe you can win a senate seat.’Â
Warnock’s win means the Democrats will have an outright majority in the U.S. Senate and will no longer need Vice President Kamala Harris to cast tie-breaking votes. They’ll also have a majority on committees, making it easier to push legislation through.Â
Warnock took the stage at his Atlanta headquarters shortly after Walker’s concession speech and used the remarks to push that voter suppression in Georgia is still happening despite the Democrat’s win.Â
‘Let me be clear: Just because people endured long lines that wrapped around buildings, some blocks long, just beause they endured the rain and the cold and all kinds of tricks in order to vote doesn’t mean that voter suppression does not exist,’ Warnock said. ‘It simply means that you the people have decided that your voices will not be silenced.’Â
Warnock slammed Republican election officials who had argued there could be no early voting on the Saturday after Thanksgiving, due to a state law that forbid it if a state holiday took place the Thursday or Friday before.Â
‘State officials said that we couldn’t vote on Saturday, but we sued them and we won,’ Warnock said to cheers. ‘And the people once again rose up in a multi-racial, multi-religious coalition of conscience. You endured the rain, you endured the long lines and you voted.’Â Â
Walker, a Georgia football Heisman winner and ex-NFL player, was handpicked by former President Donald Trump to run against Warnock in a state where Republican Gov. Brian Kemp, who split with Trump over the ex-president’s false 2020 fraud claims, easily won reelection over a national Democratic figure, Stacey Abrams.Â
Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock will win the Georgia Senate runoff race against the Trump-backed Republican Herschel Walker giving Democrats a much-needed 51st vote in the upper chamber
Around 11 p.m., Herschel Walker appeared onstage at the College Football Hall of Fame in Atlanta and conceded the race, encouraging his supporters not to be disheartened by the result.
A supporter of Republican Herschel Walker wipes away tears as the football great concedes his Senate race to Democratic Sen. Raphael WarnockÂ
The race was called when Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock had a narrow lead over Republican Herschel Walker, but the bulk of the outstanding vote to be counted came from the area around Atlanta, which favors Democrats
Republican Herschel  Walker appeared onstage at the College Football Hall of Fame in Atlanta and conceded the race, encouraging his supporters not to be disheartened by the result – and to keep voting and support the Constitution
Christian Walker lashed out at his father, Herschel Walker, on Twitter after the Georgia Senate race was declared for Democratic Sen. Raphael WarnockÂ
A supporter of Republican Senate hopeful Herschel Walker frowns as she watches his concession speech at the College Football Hall of Fame in Atlanta Tuesday nightÂ
Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock walks onstage in Atlanta Tuesday night for a victory speech in which he told supporters that voter suppression in Georgia still exists, despite a Democratic win Â
Walker’s loss signals yet another sign of Trump’s diminished clout with the American electorate.Â
Neither Trump nor President Joe Biden hit the campaign trail in Georgia in the month between the November general election and the runoff race.Â
Biden spent Georgia’s election day in Arizona and expressed confidence that Warnock would prevail as he landed at Joint Base Andrews around 10 p.m. Tuesday night. Â
‘We’re going to win. We’re going to win Georgia,’ the president said.Â
Later, Biden tweeted that he had called Warnock to wish him congratulations. Â
‘Tonight Georgia voters stood up for our democracy, rejected Ultra MAGAism, and most importantly: sent a good man back to the Senate,’ Biden wrote ‘Here’s to six more years.’Â
President Joe Biden told reporters at Joint Base Andrews Tuesday night that he believed Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock would win his runoff race in GeorgiaÂ
Former President Donald Trump reacted to his chosen candidate being beat by posting to Truth Social in all capsÂ
President Joe Biden is pictured calling Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock after he notched a win in Tuesday’s runoff race in Georgia – giving Democrats a true Senate majority with 51 seats
Trump, who announced in mid-November he was seeking the White House again, responded to Warnock’s win by posting on his Truth Social website in all caps.
‘OUR COUNTRY IS IN BIG TROUBLE. WHAT A MESS!’ he wrote. Â
Warnock had taken an early lead after polls closed at 7 p.m., due to early voting totals being reported first, but around 8:40 p.m. the Trump-backed Republican was beating the Democrat.Â
Around 9 p.m., Warnock was winning the race again. Moments later, it was Walker.Â
Warnock got a boost from some of the counties around Atlanta, including DeKalb, reporting its ballots. Walker’s been pulling ahead when in-person voting on Election Day votes are reported.Â
But by 10 p.m., many of Georgia’s red, Republican counties had fully reported their votes, while the Atlanta area hadn’t finished counting.
The networks started calling the race for the Democrat just before 10:30 p.m. Â
The race attracted record-breaking interest, according to Gabrielle Sterling, the chief operating officer for the Georgia Secretary of State. Â
With Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock’s Tuesday night win, the Democrats have a true majority in the Senate 51 to 49Â
The runoff race marked the last Senate race of the 2022 cycle and awarded Georgia Sen. Raphael Warnock with a full six-year term
Supporters of Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock cheer at this election night party in Atlanta, GeorgiaÂ
Supporters of Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock watch CNN on a jumbotron as vote totals in Georgia are reported Tuesday nightÂ
Republican Herschel Walker hosted supporters at the College Football Hall of Fame in Atlanta, GeorgiaÂ
A supporter of Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock holds up a sign at his election night gathering in AtlantaÂ
Director Spike Lee speaks to the crowd at Sen. Raphael Warnock’s election night headquarters in Atlanta, GeorgiaÂ
Director Spike Lee (center) talks with television host Roland Martin (right) at Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock’s election headquarters in Atlanta Tuesday nightÂ
A supporter of Republican Senate hopeful Herschel Walker listens to the national anthem at his election night event in AtlantaÂ
‘With the numbers we have, we’re looking at close to 3.3 million, which is really much more than any of the pundits or consultants expected,’ Sterling said Tuesday night on CNN, about an hour after polls closed.Â
Sterling said the higher-than-expected turnout was ‘everywhere’ and not in specific blue or red counties.
‘So there’s no good way to say who’s winning or losing on this day, which means we’ll actually have to go through this torturous thing of actually counting the votes,’ Sterling said.Â
Journalists on the ground, including from The New York Times, reported that few voters encountered long Election Day lines, while in the Atlanta area some voters who voted early waited for more than two hours – a significant hint that Warnock, with his advantage in early voting, would be successful.
Sterling tweeted around noon that the average wait time for voters statewide was three minutes, with the longest recorded being 32 minutes in Cherokee County. At around 4 p.m., the state was averaging a one-minute wait time, Sterling later tweeted. Â
A voter casts a ballot in-person during Tuesday’s Senate runoff race in Georgia. Republicans are banking on good turnout today, as the early vote tends to boost Democratic candidates
Republican candidate Herschel Walker poses for a picture with a supporter at the Marietta Diner, where he made an Election Day stop TuesdayÂ
A supporter takes a selfie with Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock, who’s hoping to win a full six-year term in the U.S. Senate TuesdayÂ
During campaign trail appearances Tuesday, Warnock and Walker had fighting words about one another.Â
‘Right now, I’ll put my character against Raphael Warnock any day,’ Walker said at an Election Day campaign stop at the Marietta Diner in Marietta, Georgia, after a reporter pointed out that ‘the issue of character is very important to voters.’
Walker had a number of accusations thrown at him during his run, including that the pro-life Republican pressured girlfriends to have abortions and was abusive toward family members.
Walker denied the abortion claims and said he’s been up front about previous mental health struggles.Â
Warnock gathered supporters at a canvass kick-off event in Norcross, Georgia and remarked how he had been on the ballot five times in just over two years.Â
‘So I’m fully acquainted with tired,’ he said. ‘But let me tell you my definition of tired this morning: having to be represented by Herschel Walker for six years.’
‘That, my friends, will be exhausting,’ the Democrat added.Â
‘Right now, I’ll put my character against Raphael Warnock any day,’ said Republican Herschel Walker (right) at an Election Day campaign stop Tuesday at the Marietta Diner in Marietta, GeorgiaÂ
‘But let me tell you my definition of tired this morning: having to be represented by Herschel Walker for six years,’ said Demoratic Sen. Raphael Warnock from Norcross, Georgia on TuesdayÂ
Georgia voters wait in line to vote Tuesday in the state’s runoff Senate race between Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock and Republican Herschel WalkerÂ
Warnock and his top surrogate, former President Barack Obama, characterized Walker as someone clueless about public policy, who wouldn’t be able to do the job of U.S. senator.Â
Warnock hasn’t helped himself – going viral when he talked about preferring to be a werewolf over a vampire at a campaign stop in mid-November – and accidentally saying that this ‘erection is about the people.’Â
‘The people of Georgia deserve someone who will walk with them. And Georgia’s better than Herschel Walker,’ Warnock said Tuesday morning.Â
‘I’m not talking about his humanity. I’m talking about his fitness to serve,’ Warnock continued.Â
‘Georgia’s better than that,’ he added.Â
Warnock has already served two years in the Senate after his 2020 special election went to a runoff against Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler, who Republican Gov. Brian Kemp had selected to take the place of retiring GOP Sen. Johnny Isakson. Warnock’s win on January 5, 2021 was to finish Isakson’s remaining two-year term.
After winning a primary and qualifying for the runoff in 2022, he’ll now serve a full six-year term.Â
At Warnock’s victory party in Atlanta, the crowd chanted ‘six more years.’Â
Either candidate would have made history and become the first black person in Georgia history to be elected for a full U.S. Senate term.Â
Onstage in Atlanta, Sen. Raphael Warnock noted how his mother, Verlene Warnock (pictured), had grown up in Georgia in the 1950s and picked ‘somebody’s else cotton and somebody else’s tobacco.’
Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock with his children Chloe (left) and Caleb (right) at his victory party Tuesday night in Atlanta, GeorgiaÂ
Onstage in Atlanta, Warnock noted how his mother had grown up in Georgia in the 1950s and picked ‘somebody’s else cotton and somebody else’s tobacco.’
‘But tonight she picked her youngest son to be a United States senator,’ Warnock said to cheers.Â
He paid homage to his father too – who made money by hauling junk cars, but, like Warnock, was also a pastor. Â
‘On Sunday morning the man who lifted broken cars lifted broken people and convinced them of their value,’ Warnock said.Â
‘I would not be here were it not for them,’ the twice-elected senator said. Â
Earlier, Warnock had said Democrats weren’t leaving anything up to chance.Â
‘Which is why we’re standing out here getting sprinkled and baptized again,’ said Warnock, who serves as the senior pastor at Atlanta’s Ebenezer Baptist Church, where Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. preached.Â
A sample ballot is displayed at Zion Baptist Church during the midterm Senate runoff elections in Marietta, Georgia
Voters wait in line outside a polling place Tuesday in Columbus, Georgia to decide the final Senate race of the 2022 midtermsÂ
Residents stand outside an Atlanta polling place holding umbrellas on Senate runoff Election Day in GeorgiaÂ
Warnock warned that while early voting looked strong – nearly 2 million Georgians went to the polls before Election Days with Democrats tending to prefer early voting – Walker still had ‘a path.’Â
‘The job is not done. The truth is my opponent could still win this election,’ Warnock said. ‘More of our voters tend to vote during the early period and more of his voters tend to vote on election day.’Â
At the Marietta Diner, Walker expressed optimism that he would pull it out.Â
‘Gonna get out and win this election. Herschel Walker gonna be your senator and gonna get things changed,’ he told reporters.Â
In the initial vote, Warnock finished ahead with 1,943,737 votes to Walker’s 1,907,272 votes, or 0.9 percent.Â
As he left the diner Tuesday, Walker refused to answer a question of whether he would concede.Â
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