Party strategists fear Atlanta legacy, crime attacks, and Biden-era baggage could jeopardize Democrats’ best opportunity in decades to flip Georgia’s governorship.
Georgia Democrats are entering one of the most consequential gubernatorial election cycles in modern state history with growing internal anxiety over whether former Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms can convert primary momentum into a statewide victory.
Bottoms, a former Atlanta mayor, city council member, judge, and senior White House adviser, has maintained a commanding lead in Democratic primary polling for months. Yet behind the scenes, Democratic strategists, elected officials, and operatives are increasingly voicing concerns that her record governing Atlanta during the pandemic, social unrest, and rising violent crime could become a political liability in the general election.
The stakes for Democrats could not be higher.
With Republican Gov. Brian Kemp expected to influence future congressional and legislative redistricting ahead of the 2028 presidential cycle, Democrats view the 2026 governor’s race as potentially their last realistic opportunity in a generation to capture unified political leverage in Georgia. Party leaders also recognize Georgia’s outsized national importance as a presidential battleground state amid continuing debates over election administration, voting rights, and demographic shifts reshaping Southern politics.
Political observers say Bottoms’ candidacy presents Democrats with both historic opportunity and substantial risk.














