Leftists pile on legendary QB for daring to introduce longtime friend Republican Herschel Walker before his concession speech



Leftists blasted legendary quarterback Doug Flutie for daring to introduce Herschel Walker before the Republican's concession speech Tuesday night; Walker lost Georgia's U.S. Senate runoff election to Democrat Raphael Warnock.

What happened?

Flutie called Walker "a buddy, a friend, a pal" and said the two have been "brothers for life for the last 40 years."

"I’m so proud of him, we’re all so proud of him [after] all he’s gone through and what he’s done," Flutie said of Walker. "He gave it everything he had from Day One, and he did it all for the right reasons. He cares about this state, and he cares about this country. One heck of a man — Herschel Walker."

Doug Flutie stands with Herschel Walker youtu.be

Fox News said Flutie and Walker were teammates in 1985 with the New Jersey Generals, a USFL team once owned by former President Donald Trump. Flutie also quarterbacked with a number of NFL teams.

Flutie made a permanent mark on football on Nov. 23, 1984 for his heart-stopping, Hail Mary touchdown pass that traveled over 60 yards as time expired, putting Boston College ahead of the defending national champion, the University of Miami, during its nationally televised game. Just one week later, Flutie won the Heisman Trophy, having set the NCAA all-time passing yardage mark, ESPN said.

Leftists pile on Flutie

Not surprisingly, leftists hit social media to bash Flutie for standing by Walker — even those who claimed to be fans of the quarterback suddenly tossed him aside:

  • "Sad day for my great hometown of Natick" Alex Reimer — digital content producer for Audacy Sports and deputy managing editor for Outsports — lamented. "Time to pick a new townie hero." Flutie went to high school in the Massachusetts community.
  • Writer-producer Krister Johnson tweeted, "This is like when he threw that incredible Hail Mary pass, except this time the 'football' is his legacy and the 'end zone' is a molten lava pit."

Others posted similar sentiments:

  • "Well, there goes any respect I had for @DougFlutie ...." one Twitter user wrote.
  • "Doug really hit rock bottom as a human being," another commenter claimed. "Wow."
  • "Jeez, I used to like this guy..." another user said.
  • "F*** Doug Flutie, f*** Herschel Walker, and f*** the amoral GOP," another commenter stated.

Warnock defeats Herschel Walker, increasing Democratic control of the Senate



Democrat Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-GA) is projected to defeat Republican U.S. Senate candidate Herschel Walker in the runoff election that will swing control of the U.S. Senate to Democratic control.

Herschel, the University of Georgia Heisman Trophy winner and former NFL running back, throughout the race was beset by revelations about his personal life, involving accusations that he paid for abortions for various mistresses. He has denied the claims.

Republicans assailed Warnock as an extremist over comments he's made in support of abortion and a bizarre interpretation of the meaning of Christianity.

Democrats lost control of the U.S. House of Representatives in the midterm elections, but they will increase their count in the Senate, which was deadlocked during the first half of President Joe Biden's term.

Herschel was enthusiastically supported by former President Donald Trump while many of his critics warned that nominating a celebrity instead of a "serious" candidate might cost the election.

This is a developing story and will be updated.

Here's more about the pivotal Georgia election:

Herschel Walker: Sen. Warnock feels he can 'buy this seat'www.youtube.com

Tom Cotton condemns mob siege of Capitol: 'It shouldn't matter what signs they carry'



Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) on Thursday condemned the mob that invaded the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday, denouncing political violence in all forms.

"Mob violence is never an acceptable form of political expression," Cotton said during an interview on Fox News.

Yesterday, what began as a protest in support of President Donald Trump and an effort by some Republican lawmakers to object to the certification of the Electoral College results in Congress turned into violence as a mob laid siege to the Capitol. The mob, angry at Congress for attempting to affirm Joe Biden as president-elect, assaulted police officers, illegally trespassed on government property, and ransacked and looted government offices. One woman was fatally shot by Capitol police, and three other people died of medical complications during the riot.

Also, a pipe bomb was found and safely detonated at the headquarters of the Republican National Committee, and a suspicious package was discovered at the headquarters of the Democratic National Committee.

Lawmakers were forced to evacuate during the siege, but were able to return and complete the certification of Joe Biden as the winner of the presidential election Wednesday night after the Capitol was cleared by law enforcement.

Cotton told Fox News that the mob was wrong and such violence should put down by law enforcement.

"Last summer a lot of critics on the left said that I should not have said that we should use all available means of law enforcement to put down mob violence when insurrectionists gripped our streets, even if that meant sending in the troops. Yesterday, though, there's no difference," Cotton said.

"It shouldn't matter what kind of signs the mob carries before they become violent. There's no acceptable basis for mob violence in this country for political purposes," he added.

It shouldn't matter what signs they carry--there's no acceptable basis for mob violence in this country. https://t.co/uLBqLL4dqi
— Tom Cotton (@Tom Cotton)1610028689.0

After speaking about the riots yesterday, the "Fox & Friends" panel asked Cotton about Tuesday's runoff Senate election results and how Republicans will respond to the the incoming Democratic majority.

"This is going to be a very, very closely divided Congress. It's literally evenly divided in the Senate, 50-50 now. And in the House the Democrats have one of the smallest margins in modern times," Cotton said.

"So what the Republicans need to do now that this election is behind us is to focus on the radical agenda of the Democrats, because they're coming in with a plan to raise your taxes and to defund the police, to slash military spending, to open our borders, and we cannot allow that to happen," he added.

"We've got to organize and we've got to concentrate on protecting everything that we believe and that we think is good for this country," the senator said.

Asked why the GOP lost, Cotton indicated that Republicans were off message in the weeks leading up to the election.

"I think a very simple and very clear message over the last two months would've been that Sens. Perdue and Loeffler and a Republican Senate majority will provided a check and balance on the Biden administration. However, we spend too much time on other matters rather than that clear and simple matter," he explained, without mentioning specifically what "other matters" he referred to.

Cotton also criticized some of his GOP colleagues, charging that they misled Trump supporters into believing that Congress could overturn the results of the election. Though he did not call out anyone by name, on Wednesday Sens. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) were among those who led the objection to the slate of electors from Arizona, voicing concerns from constituents who believe the election was fraudulent.

Some senators, for political gain, misled supporters about their ability to challenge the election results--some ev… https://t.co/C3LPChlzy9
— Tom Cotton (@Tom Cotton)1610035870.0

"You have some senators who, for political advantage, were giving false hope to their supporters, misleading them into thinking that somehow yesterday's actions in Congress could reverse the results of the election or even get some kind of emergency audit of the election result," Cotton said.

"That was never going to happen, yet these senators, as insurrectionists literally stormed the Capitol, were sending out fundraising emails. That shouldn't have happened and it's got to stop now."

Cotton went on to call for an independent commission to review the 2020 election, study how the pandemic may have affected the process, and suggest reforms to restore the American people's faith in the electoral process going forward.

Glenn Beck: This is the REAL Raphael Warnock and our new 'national religion'



Multiple news outlets have called one of Georgia's Senate runoff elections for the Rev. Raphael Warnock, the Democrat who defeated Republican incumbent Sen. Kelly Loeffler.

So, on the radio show Wednesday, Glenn Beck looked into what this "radical preacher" has been saying in the past — and what he'll likely bring to the U.S. Senate in the future.

"Warnock is in one of the most influential and powerful stages of the country. And I use the word 'stage' intentionally," Glenn said. "It's the pulpit. He's the guy who says, if you voted for Donald Trump, well, you're a sinner."

Glenn introduced a video clip in which Warnock asserts:

If it is true that a man who has dominated the news and poisoned the discussion for months needs to repent, then it is doubly true that a nation that can produce such a man and make his vitriol go viral, needs to repent. I know, no matter what happens next month, more than a third of the nation that would go along with this, has reason to be afraid. America needs to repent for its worship of whiteness!

"So, (according to Warnock) you should be afraid," Glenn said. "Oh, and whiteness is evil. And, somehow or another, America has been worshiping whiteness ... see, critical race theory is now our new national religion."

Watch the video clip below to hear more from Glenn:



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Angry Whoopi Goldberg slaps down Meghan McCain's questions for Democratic US Sen.-elect Raphael Warnock — who of course skirted them



Co-host Meghan McCain has been having a tough couple of days on "The View."

On Monday, the lone conservative voice on the decidedly left-wing TV program was forced to push back against Joy Behar — perhaps the most ardent leftist co-host on the show — over her "dangerous'" rhetoric regarding those who voted for President Donald Trump.

But it got nastier on Wednesday during a segment in which "The View" welcomed with open arms the new U.S. senator-elect from Georgia, the Rev. Raphael Warnock.

What happened?

McCain had no intention of pitching softballs to the far-left Democrat, fresh from his runoff victory Tuesday night — but she did offer him congratulations to start things off.

"I watched your race closely like everyone else, and you talked a lot about unity on the campaign trail and the need to unify the country and unify Georgians," she continued. "But progressives across the country are celebrating that your election could mean adding two states, eliminating the filibuster, and packing the Supreme Court with more members. Your colleague [Democratic U.S. Sen.] Joe Manchin has joined with Republicans to reject those ideas. [Democratic Senate Minority Leader] Chuck Schumer this morning tweeted 'buckle up.' So you could understand how it's hard for Republicans like to believe in the spirit of unity. And I want to know, will you do the same thing as Joe Manchin and agree not to follow up on all of those things?"

Warnock skirted McCain's question by replying that he hasn't been thinking about those issues, and neither are his constituents. But McCain refused to let him grandstand, and she interrupted his attempt to move the goalposts.

"Senator, I do believe that average Americans care about packing the courts, and I just want to know if you would agree and join Joe Manchin and agree that you're not for that?" McCain continued.

Already a skilled politician, Warnock certainly knows how to avoid giving direct answers — and he warbled on about other issues.

But after he finished, McCain continued to press: "Senator, I understand that. I'm just asking you a direct question. I just wanted to know if you would join—"

Goldberg, however, began speaking while McCain was still asking her question: "Well ... actually, I'm going to end this. I get ..."

And then she yelled at McCain: "Hey, listen!"

Dialing it back just a tad, Goldberg continued by saying, "We're gonna say thanks to the Senator-elect, Rev. Raphael Warnock, and we will be right back. Thanks for coming back, sir."

Warnock smiled and said, "Great to be on 'The View!'"

Raphael Warnock Calls Projected Win "Reversal of the Old Southern Strategy' | The Viewyoutu.be

Horowitz: Republicans have nobody to blame but themselves



Perhaps if Republicans would govern differently from Democrats rather than acting like Democrats, they'd inspire people to vote for something new and exciting. Until then, they have nobody to blame but themselves for failing to motivate their base to vote for them.

Aside from Florida, where can you find bold GOP governance? And not surprisingly, that is the state where Republicans overperformed in November. Georgia, on the other hand, is a state where Republicans have strong majorities in both chambers of the legislature and control every statewide office, but they couldn't even pass an anti-gang bill or any voter integrity laws.

Self-inflicted wounds by the aimless GOP

What comes around goes around. Now they have failed to inspire voters, plus they have enabled a juggernaut machine of mail-in ballots that has come back to bite them, making it impossible for them to ever win statewide. After what happened in November, for the GOP to not use its full power to end mail-in ballots is equivalent to a victim of burglary hanging up a sign inviting more burglars rather than getting a steel door and an alarm system.

GOP officials and pundits are blaming the conservative base and Trump voters for not turning out in sufficient numbers for the two GOP Senate candidates. We can debate the prudence of the decision of these voters to sit out the election, but that would miss the salient point. The very fact that a portion of voters are not inspired to turn out for Republicans given how radical the Democrats are is a testament to how milquetoast and downright perfidious the Republican Party has been when it is in power at the state and national levels. Toss into the equation the fact that most GOP leaders failed to do anything about voter fraud, and Republicans have nobody to blame but themselves for the defection.

We have all absorbed a year of the worst lockdown and suspension of liberties in American history. It has touched the lives of voters across the ideological spectrum, particularly lower-income voters who rely more on in-person work and schooling, yet Republicans barely spoke about the lockdown, much less used their power to chart a new course. They make veiled references to the shutdown, but agree to the premise of the leftist strategy on the virus. They failed to use any federal legislation to force adherence to the Constitution.

Republicans speak vaguely about the danger of the "defund the police" movement, but they fail to offer a bold contrast with a victims' bill of rights and legislative proposals to lock up the criminals. Instead, they have joined the jailbreak bandwagon. When you look at the core policy outcomes, despite the sharp divergence in rhetoric, you can barely tell the difference between the parties. This is reflected in the fact that every major budget bill of the past four years was passed with nearly universal Democrat support. If you are a swing voter in a state like Georgia with Republicans as the incumbent party at the federal and state levels, what have you been offered by the GOP, and why wouldn't you blame them for the inimical effects of the status quo?

Trump managed to inspire white working-class voters and a growing group of working-class black and Hispanic voters. Republicans can belittle those voters for only turning out for Trump, but why don't they ever ask themselves why these voters are not automatically inclined to turn out for every Republican?

Let's be brutally realistic. Is the Senate really 50-50? How many Senate Republicans really oppose the lockdown agenda? How many Republicans really support strong borders and stand against Antifa? How many Republicans offer a modicum of contrast on social and fiscal issues, even if Democrats sound more unhinged on the details? In that regard you will see that Democrats easily already had an 80+ seat majority on most issues that mattered.

Obviously, the official Democrat control of the Senate will make a difference for judicial appointments, but keep in mind that if Joe Biden is president, there really was a limit to how much Susan Collins, Mitt Romney, and Lisa Murkowski would have played block and tackle against him.

The good news and the path forward

Democrats are actually in a very precarious political position. They will now likely control all three branches of the federal government. Voters rejected Republicans and some suburban voters didn't like Trump, but they do not support the radical agenda of the Democratic base. Democrats are now like the dog that caught the car, over a narrow mountainous bridge. They own the responsibility of all the policy outcomes, but have tiny majorities in both houses built upon Democrats in conservative house districts and Senators Tester, Brown, and Manchin from deep red states (Plus the Arizona Democrats) who will lose re-election if they push too far. Not to mention the fact that radical Raphael Warnock will have to stand for re-election again in Georgia with Biden as the incumbent. They won't have Republicans to help them pass unpopular bills and take the blame for it like they do so often.

While Biden struggles with the weakest and most tenuous mandate in recent memory at the federal level, conservatives will have an opportunity to fight back at the state level. Republicans hold enormous power in many states, including in Georgia. Now is the time to use it while voters perceive Democrats as being in charge at the federal level. They will have a greater mandate to push back against corona fascism and crime than they did under Trump.

In that respect, conservatives are starting from a much stronger position than they did in 2009, when Obama won with greater control at the federal and state levels. Now is their time to learn from the mistakes of the past and not have the new patriot movement sucked into the black hole of the same unreformed GOP.

Between unified slates of primary challengers, a hyper-local focus on national issues at the state and county levels, and converting the Trump movement into a real grassroots effort to create sanctuaries from Biden and Democrats in red states, they have the opportunity to inaugurate a new movement that could eventually morph into a new party. That is what should have happened with the Tea Party before it got hijacked by the same GOP it was designed to reform and we wound up with Mitt Romney as the nominee in 2014.

Moreover, the precedents Democrats have set during the Trump presidency by creating de facto neo-confederacies in blue states should easily grease the skids for a much stronger opposition to Biden from red states then we saw against Obama in 2009.

Thus, as dark a political era as it may seem we are entering, there are some great opportunities hidden around the corner. The only question is whether conservatives will finally look elsewhere for their vehicle to grasp those opportunities.

As for the GOP establishment dwellers, they can pout, kick, scream, blame, and accuse all they want, but a party cannot be at war with its base indefinitely — not without consequences.

Hillary Clinton mocks 'Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell' on Twitter — and pays for it bigly



In the wake of what appears to be a Democratic sweep in the Georgia runoff election — which would give Democrats control of the U.S. Senate — former Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton couldn't help herself and joined a massive leftist chorus on social media, which plunged verbal daggers into conservatives far and wide.

But Clinton had a special target in mind: Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.

Because if the Georgia leads hold, McConnell no longer will be majority leader — and Clinton reminded him of that fact on Twitter:

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell.
— Hillary Clinton (@Hillary Clinton)1609944945.0

"Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell," the former Secretary of State mocked.

What was the reaction?

While Clinton surely has scads of Twitter fans who loved her hearty jab — it has garnered more than 270,000 likes in less than three hours — many others saw a prime opportunity to mock the former first lady right back:

  • "Hillary 'Will Never Be President' Clinton," one commenter offered.
  • "Criminal tampering with evidence, lying about Benghazi, bleachbit computers, smashing cell phones, and not being worth a stolen election Hillary," another commenter said. "Are you and your staff assisting in destroying election evidence? It would be stupid for the party not to use a pro ..."
  • "Has Been Washed Up Secretary of State Hil Clinton, who had patriots and an ambassador killed," another user noted. "What a resume."
  • "Citizen Hillary Clinton.... don't act like you are some leader of people or of a cause," another user asserted. "You want what stuffs your pockets. You don't offer anything to society in the way of goods and services and yet make millions off the backs of hard working Americans."
  • "Donald Trump served as President. YOU will never be president. Ever," another commenter said.
  • "It certainly doesn't keep her from fantasizing that she's still relevant," another user added to the previous tweet. "Bitter old hag."
  • "'Twice' Not Elected President of the United States Hillary Clinton," another commenter quipped.
  • "Side chick Hillary Clinton," yet another user noted.
  • "And Hillary lost; bad, bad sore loser because she has not shut her effing mouth in 4 years," another commenter said.

No love lost

Clinton and McConnell have locked horns before. In fact, just a few months back, McConnell called Amy Coney Barrett's confirmation to the Supreme Court a "wonderful birthday present" for Clinton.

"It was a wonderful birthday present for Hillary Clinton to confirm Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court Monday night on her birthday," McConnell said during a campaign stop in Lawrenceburg, Kentucky, the New York Post reported. "Oh, I'm sure she was so grateful, so grateful."

It should come as no surprise that Clinton — who turned 73 years old — was not particularly in favor of the confirmation of Barrett, a deeply religious conservativ, whose presence on the high court following Trump's nomination tipped the balance further away from liberal justices.

Levin: I am appalled at the election of Raphael Warnock



As an American who reveres our country, our founding, and our Constitution, I am appalled at the election of Raphael Warnock. His beliefs, as declared over the course of decades, about this country, race, Israel, and a host of other issues are frightening. As a Jew, I find Warnock's relentless anti-Semitic and anti-Israel statements shocking, yet they represent a growing view within the Democrat Party, the left, and the media. And those statements were never condemned by Democrat Party leaders and the media. In fact, Joe Biden and Kamala Harris campaigned hard for Warnock, and this morning the media are touting his historic victory without comment about what the election of such an extremist and anti-Semite means for the future of the Democrat Party and the nation. Such self-censorship is now all too familiar.

Furthermore, as Democrats and the media, as well as a sizeable number of GOP officials in Washington and their pundits and media, condemn the president for fighting to the bitter end over serious election abuses — the worst of which are the constitutional violations in key battleground states strategically instituted by the Democrat Party and Biden campaign — precious little is said about the declared intention of the Democrat Party to gut the independence of the Supreme Court by packing it with left-wing ideologues, destroying the Senate by packing it with new Democrat senators from Puerto Rico and D.C., killing the filibuster rule to ensure that all and any laws the Democrats wish to pass will come to pass, and destroying the Electoral College. If carried through, this will be the greatest attack on our Constitution and our republican system since the Civil War — when the Democrat Party led the Confederacy. The media, of course, are all in with this. From the New York Times and the1619 Project and the Russian collusion conspiracy by the media and the Democrat Party to the attempted coup and impeachment of President Trump, the cover-up of the Biden family ties to communist China (and other countries), the celebration of Antifa and BLM (violent anti-American organizations), the endorsement of fascistic orders from power-hungry governors violating freedom of association, the free exercise of religion, private property rights, etc., and a long list of other notable propaganda and/or censorship campaigns, the media have become a poisonous and corrupt force in our society.

In the House, Pelosi has the slimmest majority — about 10 more seats than the Republicans. If Ossoff should win the remaining Senate seat in Georgia, the Senate will be split 50-50, with Harris as the potential tie-breaker. This means by the smallest of margins, the Democrats would control Congress. Yet they would use their temporary, slimmest majority to forever alter the way in which we govern ourselves. They would shred the Constitution, which as statists they have long abhorred, and attempt to permanently control the administrative state and the electoral process. This is exactly how they turned states like California, the land of Reagan, into a one-party state with supermajorities in the legislature and no hope of Republicans retaking statewide offices.

We also face a difficult issue with Democrats who abandon the blue states they've helped create for Republican states, where they continue their voting pattern for Democrats and leftists. It is one of the main reasons why states like Georgia and Virginia have turned blue and Texas is moving purple. When this is combined with a half-century of unrestrained immigration and the concomitant purposeful lack of assimilation and identity politics (promoted by the Democrat Party), and now the unconstitutional evisceration of our election laws (Article II, Section 1, Clause 2), the consequences are bleak. So too with the ideological indoctrination on our college campuses and the intellectually corrupt and political partisan mass media in our country.

The Republican establishment and its handful of media propagandists are incapable of addressing any of this — and have not in any effective way. Instead, for the likes of McConnell, his first principle is his own continuing rule over the Senate Republicans. Even back in the Tea Party days, he, Boehner, and their small cabal did all they could to blunt that movement as it threatened their reign. The Democrat Party is a radical force that seeks to constantly alter our government and society, while the Republican Party is passive and ineffectual, clueless on whether or how to slow the growing tyranny. If you think about it, there have only been three Republican presidents in the last 100 years who have dared to confront the statists and their progressive movement — Coolidge, Reagan, and Trump. The disconnect between D.C. Republicans and Main Street Republicans could not be more pronounced. Yet the D.C. Republicans are adept at playing a deceitful game of saying one thing to their constituents when running for office and doing something much different once elected or re-elected. Many are simply unfit by nature, principle, or character for this struggle — a struggle for the nation's future. Reagan won two massive landslides, yet much of the opposition he confronted to his agenda was within the GOP in Congress. Trump stopped dead the advance of the radical Obama agenda with his defeat of Clinton, but he also faced resistance within his own party — the so-called NeverTrumpers among them. Both Reagan and Trump brought the Republican Party great victories in Congress, as did the Tea Party, but the GOP establishment was not only ungrateful but contemptuous. Unlike the Democrat Party, which coddles its base, the D.C. Republicans attack their base.

While the election of an American-hating anti-Semite from Georgia to the U.S. Senate is being celebrated and the Republicans are collapsing and issuing self-righteous statements about how they're upholding the Constitution during the electoral count today, let us remember that we are Americans. There remain tens of millions of us who love our country, our Constitution, and our freedom. We see what's going on. We are engaged. And we are not rolling over. Like our forefathers, we care deeply about preserving our God-given natural and unalienable rights and ensuring that our children and future generations live in a free and just society. We are not going anywhere. I'll have much more to say on the radio this evening.

Mark Levin is the host of LevinTV on BlazeTV.

Democrat Warnock projected to win in Georgia runoff election; Republican Perdue falls behind Ossoff with razor-thin margin



The Georgia runoff election that will decide the partisan fate of the U.S. Senate tipped towards the Democratic challengers late Tuesday evening.

With 98% of the vote counted, Republican incumbent Sen. Kelly Loeffler garnered 49.5% of the vote, falling short of the 50.5% of the vote for Democrat challenger Rev. Raphael Warnock.

NBC News and the Decision Desk projected Warnock the winner of that election.

Democrat challenger Jon Ossoff garnered 50% of the vote with a margin of a few thousand votes over Republican incumbent Sen. David Perdue, who also received 50% of the vote.

Democrats celebrated in anticipation of votes that were left to be counted from heavily Democratic districts.

Chatham County shenanigans

At one point in the evening it was reported that the vote counting in Chatham County had halted and that officials had gone home for the night.

Later, that report was clarified by Georgia's statewide voting implementation manager Gabriel Sterling, who said that officials counted the votes they had received but that some absentee votes were still outstanding.

Chatham County didn't just stop. They completed the counting of everything they have in. That includes Election Day… https://t.co/kj36yCh1jK
— Gabriel Sterling (@Gabriel Sterling)1609906875.0

The candidates speak

Kelly Loeffler addressed a crowd of supporters and encouraged them despite the election being too close to call.

"It's worth it for this election to last into tomorrow. We're gonna make sure every vote is counted, every legal count will be counted, and I'm not going to stop working!" said Loeffler to a cheering crowd.

Warnock also addressed the election in a live videoconference and appeared to claim victory.

"We were told that we couldn't win this election," said Warnock. "But tonight we proved that with hope, hard work and the people by our side, anything is possible. May my story be an inspiration to some young person who is trying to grasp and grab hold to the American Dream."

Ossoff released a statement late into Wednesday morning predicting a victory for the Democratic challenger.

"When all the votes are counted we fully expect that Jon Ossoff will have won this election to represent Georgia in the United States Senate. The outstanding vote is squarely in parts of the state where Jon's performance has been dominant," he said.

If Democrats are able to win both seats of the runoff election, they would gain 50 seats in the U.S. Senate. Any vote split evenly in the Senate would be decided by Vice President-elect Kamala Harris.

Here's more about the runoff elections Tuesday evening:

CBS News Special Report: Warnock takes lead over Loeffler; Ossoff-Perdue race a toss-upwww.youtube.com

Stu Does America Presents: Live GA Runoff Results



Stu Burguiere goes lives to cover the results of Georgia's runoff election pitting Jon Ossoff against David Perdue and Raphael Warnock against Kelly Loeffler to determine control of the Senate. Joining him for analysis will be BlazeTV's Sara Gonzales, Steve Deace, and Glenn Beck himself.

Can't watch? Download the podcast here.


Stu goes lives to cover the results of Georgia’s runoff election pitting Jon Ossoff against David Perdue and Raphael Warnock against Kelly Loeffler to determ...


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