Barack Obama campaigns in Georgia in November.Photo: Jessica McGowan/Getty

Barack Obamasays “the stakes could not be higher” in Tuesday’s runoff Senate elections in Georgia.
On Twitter, the former president addressed Georgia voters, as people across the state head to the polls Tuesday to decide two Senate races. Tuesday’s results will determine the Senate’s majority for the next two years.
The two Senate elections are between Sen.Kelly Loeffler(Republican) vs. Rev. Raphael Warnock (Democrat) and Sen. David Perdue (Republican) vs. Jon Ossoff (Democrat). If the Democratic candidates win both races, the Senate will then be split 50-50 along party lines with Vice President-electKamala Harrisserving as a tie-breaker on any vote.
“We’re seeing how far some will go to retain power and threaten the fundamental principles of our democracy,” Obama, 59, tweeted, in a seeming reference to PresidentDonald Trump’s continued demands to reverse the results of the 2020 election, which he lost to President-electJoe Biden.
“But our democracy isn’t about any individual, even a president—it’s about you,” Obama tweeted.
Senator-elect Jon Ossoff and former President Barack Obama campaigning in November.Jessica McGowan/Getty

Donald Trump.Elijah Nouvelage/Bloomberg via Getty

With Biden set to take office later this month and the Democratic Party holding aslim 222-211 majorityin the House of Representatives, Tuesday’s runoffs will bring the 2020 election cycle to a dramatic and widely-watched conclusion with legislative power hanging in the balance.
The Democratic Party is hoping to carry momentum from the November upset into Tuesday’s race, helping to elect Warnock, 51, and Ossoff, 33, over the two Republican incumbents.
Former President Barack Obama campaigns in Georgia in November.ERIK S LESSER/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

Early voting began in mid-December and the state has already recorded a record turnout. Blooombergreportsmore than three million Georgians have cast their ballots already — the most votes ever recorded in a Georgia runoff election.
About five million people turned out to vote in November, The Associated Pressreports. Because no candidate received a majority of the vote then, the state’s congressional races were sent to a pair of runoff elections.
“These runoffs will decide whether President-Elect Biden has a Senate that will work with him rather than just obstruct him at every turn,” the former first ladywrote in an eight-part Twitter threadMonday afternoon.
The hotly contested, andhistorically funded, congressional races have drawn the Obamas, Biden, Trump, Vice PresidentMike Pence, and Vice President-electKamala Harristo appear in person and virtually at campaign events in the state in recent weeks, rallying voters.
source: people.com