During her result on "The Drew Barrymore Show," Democratic gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams supposed her intentions to run for political office again.
The performed Georgia gubernatorial candidate appeared on the talk show Monday where the topic focused on Abrams' voter initiatives. Barrymore, who previously called Abrams an "amazing" gamechanger, questioned whether she plans to run for office.
"So what's next? Are you gonna run again? Do we get to look presumptuous to this and galvanize again?" Barrymore asked.
"I will probable run again," Abrams answered to cheers from the audience.
Stacey Abrams speaks during a movement rally on March 14, 2022 in Atlanta. (Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)
Though Abrams admitted that she didn't know "when" she'd run against, Barrymore applauded the answer and questioned whether she plans to run in contradiction of "tough men" who "don't always play fair."
"Well, if at suited you don't succeed, try, try again. And if it doesn't work, you try against. But this issue is, what did you learn? Did you learn nearby yourself? What did you learn about your opponent and executive sure you're always remembering why you're doing it," Abrams said.
Abrams recently lost her additional bid for Georgia governor against Gov. Brian Kemp, R., in November. It was a rematch from 2018, where she initially refused to concede the campaign. Abrams has since suggested that Republicans "stole" the campaign from her through voter suppression tactics and has stationary to attack Kemp for pushing voter suppression through his campaign security law.
During the show, Abrams continued to push her labors to promote voter registration.
"Part of my job, I run for workplace yes, but my first responsibility is to make sure anyone who wants to vote can, who is eligible. I want you to vote for me when you get in there, but protecting democracy is not about a person. It's nearby the ideal. Our democracy is this collective hallucination we have where we say we're moving to work together to help each other and if anyone blinks and comes out of it like the Matrix, it starts to fall apart. That's why it's so critical that regardless of who you vote for, your declare matters because your silence is also permission," Abrams said.
She added, "We have to remember the reason that voting was denied to so many for so long, women, people of color, young people, non-property owners, every time we come access to the vote, we're advancing access to society."
Although some media members similarly criticized Georgia's election security, the area reported record levels of voter turnout for the vital, general and runoff elections.
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