Wonder if he's checking on any of these:
AJC
Nearly 76,000 new voters registered in Georgia since before the presidential election, enough to make a difference in the U.S. Senate runoffs if they turn out.
The number of new voters was revealed in an updated voter registration list purchased from the secretary of state’s office by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. These voters signed up before the state’s Dec. 7
voter registration deadline and are eligible to participate in the Jan. 5 runoffs that will decide control of the Senate.
They’re overwhelmingly young, with 56% of them under 35 years old. Some are new Georgia residents; others just turned 18. None has a voting record in the state.
The first-time Georgia voters can have an impact in a close election. Democratic President-elect Joe Biden won Georgia by
about 12,000 votes, and Republican Gov. Brian Kemp won by
nearly 55,000 votes in 2018.
“Georgians learned on Nov. 3 that if they register and vote, that their vote has power,” said Seth Bringman, a spokesman for Fair Fight Action, a voting rights group founded by Democrat Stacey Abrams. “If Georgians used their collective power, we could create change in our state.”