Tuesday 24 May 2022 02:13 PM David Perdue attacks Stacey Abrams for calling Georgia the 'worst place' trends now
Former Senator David Perdue told Stacey Abrams to 'go back where she came from' and accused her of 'demeaning her own race' after she called Georgia the 'worst state' to live in the country as voters headed to the polls for the primaries.
The Trump-backed Perdue accused the Democratic candidate for governor on Monday night of 'demeaning her own race' with the comments on the eve of the Republican race that sees him trailing to Georgia Governor Brian Kemp.
'She said that Georgia is the worst place in the country to live. Hey, she ain't from here,' Perdue said during an appearance on John Fredericks's radio show. 'Let her go back to where she came from. She doesn't like it here.
'The only thing she wants is to be president of the United States. She doesn't care about the people of Georgia.
'She should never be considered material for governor of any state, much less our state where she hates to live.'
Abrams was born in Wisconsin and lived in Mississippi before she moved to Georgia for high school and college and to start her political career.
Former Senator David Perdue told Stacey Abrams to 'go back where she came from' and accused her of 'demeaning her own race' after she called Georgia the 'worst state' to live in the country as voters headed to the polls for the primaries
Perdue then went on to discuss comments she made in 2018 that residents 'shouldn't have to go into or hospitality to make a living in Georgia.'
'When she told black farmers, 'You don't need to be on the farm,' and she told black workers in hospitality and all this, 'You don't need to be,' she is demeaning her own.'
Republicans have torn into the comments Abrams made at the weekend on Georgia. She claimed they were taken out of context and were in reference to the state's low ranking in issues such as maternal mortality rates.
'I am tired of hearing about being the best state in the country to do business when we are the worst state in the country to live,' Abrams said. 'When you're No. 48 for mental, when you're No. 1 for maternal mortality, when you have an incarceration rate that's on the rise and wages that are on the decline, then you are not the No. 1 place to live in the United States.
'But we can get there. You see, Georgia is capable of greatness. We just need greatness to be in our governor's office'.
'She said that Georgia is the worst place in the country to live. Hey, she ain't from here,' Perdue said during an appearance on John Fredericks's radio show. 'Let her go back to where she came from. She doesn't like it here
Georgia voters head to the polls for primaries and a test of Trump's power: Marjorie Taylor Greene fights for re-election and Perdue tries to bring down Brian Kemp
Georgia primary voters are heading to the polls on Tuesday, where the strength of Donald Trump's endorsements will be tested on everything from Congressional races, the governor's primary and even for the role overseeing the state's elections.
The Peach State shattered early voting records for a primary election, with more than 850,000 already cast according to Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger's office.
'Compared early-voting turnout in recent primaries, this represented a 168 percent increase over the 2018, the last gubernatorial primary and a 212 percent jump above 2020, the last presidential primary year,' a statement from his office read.
Raffensperger credited the state's newly-passed election security law for the surge by creating 'short lines, smooth easy ballot access, and confidence in ballot security,' despite Democrat critics blasting it as 'voter suppression.'
In the heavily-rural 14th Congressional District, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene is facing a crowded field of opponents trying to take her seat led by healthcare executive Jennifer Strahan.
Meanwhile Republican voters statewide will go to the ballot box to decide whether to keep Governor Brian Kemp or get behind his Trump-backed opponent, former Senator Perdue.
Strahan is hoping to offer voters the same brand of Trump-inspired America First politics without the eyebrow-raising headlines that caused Greene to be stripped of her committee assignments by the Democrat-led House early last year.
Asked how Greene feels heading into Tuesday race, her spokesman told DailyMail.com that 'she is very confident.'
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene and her main opponent, healthcare executive Jennifer Strahan, both spent the weekend campaigning for voters' attention in Georgia's 14th Congressional District
Greene's spokesman directed DailyMail.com to the congresswoman's Telegram channel, where she shared photos and videos of herself mingling with supporters