Donald Trump clinched Georgia in the 2024 election, securing his path to a second term as president. His win wasn’t marked by a widespread shift across the state but rather by a strategic increase in turnout in solidly Republican counties, where a surge of voters pushed him over the finish line.
Many traditionally Democratic counties showed little change from their 2020 turnout, ultimately leading to a slight but decisive red wave across the state.
However, three Georgia counties flipped from blue to red.
Just the Facts:
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• Trump’s victory in Georgia was propelled by a higher turnout in reliably red counties, not by an overhaul of previously Democratic strongholds.
• Three counties flipped from blue to red between 2020 and 2024, indicating early signs of Trump’s momentum on Election Night.
• The counties that moved from supporting Joe Biden in 2020 to backing Trump in 2024 were Baldwin, Washington, and Jefferson.
• All three counties are located in central Georgia, nestled between Macon and Augusta, with Washington County positioned centrally, Baldwin to the east, and Jefferson to the west.
In Context: Georgia’s role as a swing state has been hotly contested in recent presidential cycles, with Joe Biden narrowly winning the state in 2020. The state has seen shifting political dynamics, with urban and suburban areas generally leaning Democratic and rural areas staying reliably red. However, Trump’s 2024 victory takes the state off the board, reminding residents and politicos that Georgia is still very much a red state.
Why It Matters: Trump’s victory in Georgia reflects a broader trend of strong rural turnout helping Republican candidates edge out Democratic opposition, especially in swing states.