> Georgia has been becoming progressively less red, and was early on in the 2016 cycle seen as a potentially swingable state.
I'm having a really hard time imagining an EV scenario where Georgia is the deciding state. An election where Clinton takes Georgia is one where she wins by a landslide.
And in the end the results in Georgia were right in line with both those of other states and with the exit polls.
There's no story here and, frankly, it distracts from real issues affecting voters like bogus Voter ID requirements, intentionally understaffing or removing polling places on college campuses, etc.
Georgia has been becoming progressively less red, and was early on in the 2016 cycle seen as a potentially swingable state.
> I guess it will have to get much worse in the future to cause action?
At least, it will have to not help the party in power in the state.