In this high-energy episode of The Georgia Hour on VoiceofRuralAmerica.com, host BKP delivers a fiery, unfiltered rant on election day in Georgia (November 4, 2025), zeroing in on the high-stakes Public Service Commission (PSC) races as a make-or-break moment Republican dominance. Kicking off with urgent calls to action amid text alerts about Democratic momentum, BKP warns that Democrats are laser-focused on flipping two PSC seats—not to slash power bills, but to unleash unchecked rate hikes favoring big utilities and data centers at the expense of everyday Georgians. He lambasts the all-Republican PSC for losing sight of its core mission: reining in monopolies like Georgia Power, which have jacked up residential bills without accountability, leaving voters (red or blue) fuming.
BKP dives deep into turnout math, citing insider texts projecting an 80,000-vote Democratic early-voting edge that Republicans could erase with a massive election-day surge—especially in rural strongholds like Fannin County (78% GOP vs. 22% Dem). He urges red counties to overwhelm urban blue bulwarks like Atlanta, where a last-minute court ruling extends polling hours to 8 PM for the mayoral race, potentially inflating PSC ballots under the guise of “line management.” Skeptical of Fulton County’s election board—fresh off blocking reformers like Julie Adams and Jason Frazier—BKP questions how ballots will be segregated, fearing chaos that could suppress or manipulate rural votes. He spotlights Democratic mobilization via groups like the Georgia Youth Justice Coalition, which is turbocharging young voters of color with events and media buzz, contrasting it with under-the-radar Turning Point Action efforts.
Shifting to national ripple effects, BKP predicts a brutal “blame game” tomorrow: If Democrats sweep New York City’s mayoralty, New Jersey and Virginia governorships, California’s Prop 50 (enabling redistricting), and Georgia’s PSC seats, Republicans will finger Donald Trump as the scapegoat, triggering a self-preservation stampede. This could doom Georgia’s 2026 Senate flip against Jon Ossoff, as cash-strapped candidates like Buddy Carter, Mike Collins, and Derek Dooley fail to ignite the base. BKP mocks the industry’s million-dollar consulting fees and warns of a “hold vs. flip” whiteboard scramble, where losses greenlight Democrats to pour money into safe seats while starving Georgia’s underdogs.
Bright spots include Marjorie Taylor Greene’s media blitz: BKP teases her 11 AM The View appearance post-Hollywood Halloween party, speculating on gubernatorial ambitions over premature presidential talk. He praises her “No Tax on Home Sales” bill, which axes capital gains on primary residences to revive the stagnant real estate market—enabling equity cash-outs for upgrades without IRS bites—contrasting it with today’s “workforce housing” gimmicks that kill the classic starter-home ladder. BKP calls out House Speaker Mike Johnson to back it, reminiscing nostalgically about affordable family homes fueled by savings and promotions, not government handouts.
Election integrity takes center stage with a DOJ Civil Rights Division letter demanding Fulton County ballot transparency by November 14—coinciding with Judge Scott McAfee’s deadline to reassign Fani Willis’s RICO case after her disqualification. Teasing an upcoming segment with investigator Joe Rossi, BKP exposes a “chain of cover-up” via the State Election Board, unexplained 2020 anomalies, and stonewalled requests for scans, signatures, and metadata. He defends targeted board member Dr. Janice Johnston against an “AJC shameless smear campaign”. BKP advises against frenzy over “paid operators” hyping the letter, insisting the real fireworks hit post-RICO handover.
Wrapping with Georgia GOP grit, BKP skewers the Frost family’s $140 million First Liberty Ponzi collapse—recovering just $1.6 million so far, with son Brant Frost V now hawking insurance—while mocking donor Dennis “What the Futch” for his hypocritical wealth-flaunting cusses. Tim Fleming for Secretary of State endorsed by the state’s top brass, keep praying for “poor little Debbie,” and ends with a rallying cry: “Go vote—round up your own, not Home Depot’s illegals!” Clocking in at a whirlwind hour, the episode blends grassroots urgency, insider scoops, and populist fury, priming listeners for post-election fallout.

