Joe State Democratic Senate Candidates Raise $100 Million Each Out-of-State Leads

Georgia Democratic Senate candidates Jon Ossoff (right) and Raphael Warnock (left) have each received $100 million in political contributions in the last two months.

The rematch between the two Georgia senators, which will be decided in just a few days, has been so emotional that Democratic supporters across the United States have contributed to both Democratic candidates, resulting in each receiving more than $100 million in just two months, tens of millions of dollars more than their Republican opponents; and the political contributions have come from all over the United States, especially from blue states such as California and New York.

According to the Federal Election Commission, Democratic candidate Jon Ossoff, a journalist, has seen his contributions jump by $100 million in the last two months, raising a total of more than $139 million; another Democratic candidate, the Rev. Another Democratic candidate, Pastor Raphael Warnock, has also seen his campaign funds increase by $100 million in the last two months, totaling more than $125 million.

According to the New York Post’s analysis of data from the above-mentioned pages, it was concluded that the majority of the two men’s donations came from outside Georgia, with the largest contributions coming from New York City, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Seattle. For example, California contributed $14.7 million to Ossoff and $11.7 million to Warnock; New York State contributed $6 million to Ossoff and $4.7 million to Warnock.

On top of individual donors, Black Pac, a leftist group backed by George Soros and Michael Bloomberg, gave $300,000 to both men.

The two defending Republican senators, David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler, raised $68 million and $64 million in campaign funds in two months, respectively.

The current ratio of Republicans to Democrats in the Senate is 50:48. Republicans can take control of the Senate by winning one seat, and the Democrats’ ambition is to win two seats and change the color of the Senate. It is widely believed that if the Democrats take both the House and Senate and put in Biden and He Jinli as president and vice president, the United States will completely change direction and the Democrats’ increasingly left-leaning policy making will become unimpeded.

Although both parties’ presidential candidates have already been to Georgia to canvass for their party’s Senate candidate, President Trump has decided that he will go back to Joe State on January 4 to campaign.

Some Republican analysts said that in the presidential election Democratic voters because of opposition to Trump, so many people came out to vote, but because there is no longer Trump’s name on the January 6 re-election ballot, so Democratic voters will not come out to vote so enthusiastically. It is reported that by December 24, 2 million Joe voters had cast their ballots early for the Senate’s re-election.