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  • AFP

    In Georgia's Fulton County, voters wary of rights backslide

    By Brendan Smialowski, ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDSElijah NouvelageBeiyi SEOW,

    4 hours ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0nmuM9_0vEt0may00
    US Vice President Kamala Harris and former president Donald Trump are squaring off in the White House race and battling over a handful of swing states, including Georgia /AFP/File

    As the United States hurtles toward a presidential election this November between Democrat Kamala Harris and Republican Donald Trump, AFP has been taking the temperature in key counties of seven battleground states.

    Turnout in Georgia's populous Fulton County, a Democratic bastion which includes most of the capital Atlanta, will be crucial in deciding who wins the southern state -- and its coveted 16 electoral college votes. This makes it a county pivotal to both presidential candidates.

    Here is what some voters are saying:

    - Attorney Natalie Wood -

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=16c8M4_0vEt0may00
    Georgia voter Natalie Wood believes people in power should not tell citizens what to do with their bodies /AFP

    Natalie Wood, 50, said abortion is an important issue when she decides who she would vote for, likening reproductive issues to other forms of health care.

    "I think as women, we have the right to do what we want with our bodies, and we can answer to whoever our higher power is later on," she said.

    "I am Christian. But I feel the ultimate judge is God for me, and people in power should not tell me what I can choose to do with my body," added Wood, who has a daughter.

    "I think that it's not right."

    - Health care worker Justin Tate -

    Justin Tate, a 43-year-old health care worker, said he worries about inequality and is committed to voting for a brighter future for his daughter.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3yZxDD_0vEt0may00
    Georgia voter Justin Tate cares about inequality and hopes Democrats can improve socio-economic conditions that affect all Americans /AFP

    Socio-economic conditions are among his main concerns, including fair and equal pay for men and women.

    For him, it matters that someone like his seven-year-old "will have the opportunities to be a part of society" and see a woman running for president.

    He is also seeking a White House candidate who will try to address disparities in society and "help fellow Americans to be able to survive."

    - Retiree Sheila Grant -

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0QjOKl_0vEt0may00
    Sheila Grant is concerned about fair housing and Social Security for the next generation /AFP

    Sheila Grant, who is retired, said fair housing and medical care for older citizens are issues that she cares most strongly about.

    Among other problems, housing costs are "astronomical," said the 66-year-old.

    "Social Security is not enough, and it's dwindling," Grant said, adding that she worries about the state of funds for the next generation who needs them.

    "We need somebody that's going to look out for us, look out for our tomorrows," she said.

    She also worries the country could enter a "deep recession" at some point.

    - Student Justin Sims -

    Justin Sims said he recently registered to vote in Georgia, at a booth set up in Morehouse College, where he is a sophomore.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=4W61Og_0vEt0may00
    Justin Sims believes in the importance of casting his vote given the right to do so has been hard-won /AFP

    "I would encourage everybody my age to vote, because everyone's vote is very important," said the 19-year-old.

    What matters to him is "being heard and being understood," he said, noting the right to go to the polls has been hard-fought.

    Sims expressed concern that his community could get pulled "back to a state of oppression that I'm really hopeful that our country is getting out of."

    A candidate that is in touch with education and Historically Black Colleges and Universities, he said, is also appealing.

    "Georgia is a swing state. It makes it even more important that I do come out and cast my own ballot," he said.

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