Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Video Of Stacey Abrams Smacking Down Brian Kemp In 2018 Debate Goes Viral For All The Right Reasons

Video Of Stacey Abrams Smacking Down Brian Kemp In 2018 Debate Goes Viral For All The Right Reasons
@mrbenwexler/Twitter
Make us preferred on Google

As voting rights activist Stacey Abrams and Republican Georgia Governor Brian Kemp prepare to face-off again in November for the Georgia governor's mansion, a clip from a debate in their 2018 race is once again going viral.

In the clip, Abrams effortlessly shut down Kemp's absurd attempt to accuse her of encouraging voter fraud by pointing out his long history of voter suppression--including court cases over the issue in which he lost.


The clip has many excited about the forthcoming rematch between Abrams and Kemp, the latter of whom narrowly won in 2018 in a victory many attributed to the very voter suppression Abrams challenged him on.

They're hoping Abrams' effortless talent for shutting Kemp down will translate into a win this fall.

See the 2018 clip below.

In the clip, Kemp, who was at the time Georgia's Secretary of State and in charge of the state's elections, demanded to know why Abrams was "encouraging people to break the law" by pushing for ineligible voters to be allowed to vote in the 2018 election.

As usual with Republican accusations, there was no merit to Kemp's question, which Abrams made clear in her response:

"Mr. Kemp you are very aware that I know the laws of Georgia when it comes to voting..."
"I have never in my life asked for anyone who is not legally eligible to vote to be able to cast a ballot."

Kemp, on the other hand, has a rich history of voter suppression and conflicts of interest when it comes to elections.

Georgia is widely regarded as one of the most voter-suppressed states in the nation and has long been notorious for hours-long waits at polling places in Black and heavily Democratic districts, including in the hotly contested 2016 and 2018 elections.

Kemp was still serving as Secretary of State during his own run for governor in 2018--a clear conflict of interest. But he also implemented so-called "exact match" voting laws which required voter registrations to match government identification exactly.

This meant that even a missing hyphen or middle initial would invalidate a voter's registration and require them to prove their identity--a process often impossible to complete in time for Election Day.

Such measures disproportionately impact demographics more likely to vote for Democrats, especially voters of color.

Abrams made a pointed reference to this law in her response to Kemp, previous iterations of which she and her voting rights organization successfully sued him over in 2016.

She said:

"What I've asked for is that you allow those who are legally eligible to vote, to allow them to cast their ballots."
"And in fact we took you to court in 2016 and a federal judge said that you illegally canceled 34,000 registrations."
"You used the exact same system, the 'exact match system,' that is under dispute right now."
"...Your tendency is to blame everyone else for the mistakes that you make. My responsibility as a leader is to see a problem and try to solve it."

Abrams went on to do just that in 2020--her organizations' extensive voter registration and "get out the vote" efforts are widely credited with helping Democratic President Joe Biden win the state of Georgia that year--the first Democrat to do so since 1992.

On Twitter, Abrams' smackdown of Kemp left people cheering and hoping that she can duplicate 2020's successes this fall.






Kemp's "exact match" schemes were thrown out by the courts three days before Election Day in 2018, but as an early voting state, polls had already been open for weeks by that time.

Kemp is widely believed to have "stolen" the 2018 race via voter suppression, and Abrams filed suit after the election. The ensuing trial concluded last month, with the verdict still pending.

Polls show Kemp is currently leading Abrams in the Georgia governor's race by an average of five points. They will face off in their first debate of the 2022 election on October 17.

More from News

Nicolle Wallace; Marco Rubio and Donald Trump
MS NOW; Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Nicolle Wallace Offers Hilariously Brutal Suggestion For 'Addled' Trump Amid 'Bizarre' NATO Press Conferences

MAGA Republican President Donald Trump has been participating in the NATO Summit in Ankara, Turkey, since Tuesday afternoon, but the visit has been anything but successful for the embattled POTUS.

Trump's appearances before the international press on hand for the summit have been rife with gaffes that have the domestic and international communities both amused and concerned over the 80-year-old's continued cognitive decline.

Keep ReadingShow less
Catherine Zeta-Jones; Bonnie Tyler
Monica Schipper/Getty Images; Christian Augustin/Getty Images

Catherine Zeta-Jones Pens Touching Tribute To Singer Bonnie Tyler After Death—And Fans Are Emotional

Bonnie Tyler, singer of "Total Eclipse of the Heart" and "Holding Out for a Hero," died on July 8, 2026, just a month after her 78th birthday.

She was in a hospital in Portugal, and she died unexpectedly from the illness she was being treated for.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Rasmus Svaneborg; Mark Rutte
@atrupar/X; Altan Gocher / Hans Lucas / AFP via Getty Images

Reporter Puts NATO Secretary General On The Spot With Brutal 'Self-Respect' Question About Trump

NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte found himself on the spot after Danish reporter Rasmus Svaneborg questioned whether sitting silently beside President Donald Trump as he discusses "conquering" Greenland and criticizing allies has impacted his "self-respect."

Rutte, a former Dutch prime minister, has been forced to manage Trump's repeated criticism of NATO while contending with his public insistence that the United States should acquire Greenland from Denmark.

Keep ReadingShow less
Andrew Garfield
Darren Gerrish/WireImage/Ralph Lauren/Getty Images

Andrew Garfield's New Long Hair Has Fans Completely Swooning—And We So Get It

One thing that fans have always appreciated about Andrew Garfield is his very healthy head of hair.

Even when he wore his hair shorter for The Social Network, or just slightly longer and spiked up for The Amazing Spider-Man, it was obvious that he had very thick and luscious hair.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of JD Vance; Julia Louis-Dreyfus
@HQNewsNow/X; Angela Weiss/AFP via Getty Images

JD Vance Pauses Rally To Check If He Got A Call From Trump—And It's Giving Major 'Veep' Vibes

Vice President JD Vance drew comparisons to Selina Meyer, the bumbling vice president played by actor Julia Louis-Dreyfus on HBO's hit political satire Veep after he stopped a rally speech to check whether President Donald Trump had called him.

As Selina Meyer, Julia Louis-Dreyfus won multiple Emmy Awards and numerous other accolades for portraying the perpetually dysfunctional vice president.

Keep ReadingShow less