A 52 year old Gordon County resident said that she always draws a crowd when she is in the area.
The grand entrance made everyone want to show their support for the Trump candidates. David Perdue, who is trying to chip away at incumbent Gov. Brian Kemp's 30-point lead, was joined at the Friday night rally by congressional hopefuls.
Many of the attendees cheered for her as she emerged from the stripped-down Humvee with a campaign sign strapped to its back. Insider spotted at least a dozen people wearing Marjorie Taylor Greene campaign gear in the crowd of about 150 who gathered for the last-minute addition to Perdue.
We were brought out by Marjorie Taylor Greene. District resident Christie Ellis said that they have been supporting her since day one. Since Russia invaded the neighboring country, she has voted against nearly every bill Congress has taken up, and has taken advantage of the same proxy voting rules she has criticized to skip nearly two dozen votes.
She will need the support of her five GOP primary challengers. She worked the crowd by stopping to pose for selfies, taking swigs of her beer and saying hello to the kids that star-struck moms rushed over to meet her.
Like Donald Trump, she tells it like it is. Bikers for Trump founder and rally organizer Chris Cox told the crowd that they don't have to read her mind. Cox wrapped her in his vest, which he wore as she posed for pictures on one of the motorcycles in the lot.
Perdue, who had dropped the blazer he was wearing earlier in the day while jet-setting from Augusta to Savannah for a campaign stop with 2008 GOP vice presidential nominee turned House hopeful Sarah Palin, rolled up his sleeves and mingled as well. Perdue reintroduced himself to the guys playing pool, awkwardly fist-bumped tattooed bikers, and snuck sips of his soda as others swigged their beer.
Perdue tried to fire everyone up by railing about the rigged and stolen presidential election and how Kemp sold us out.
He wasn't swayed one bit.
Burnz said after Perdue finished speaking that he was undecided and would spend the weekend doing homework.
The local, who declined to give his name, did not fault Perdue for trying. He said that he likes to play a game with friends and neighbors who like her, and asks them to name the area's prior congressional representative.
The local shrugged off the fact that Tom Graves was erased from public service because of a political system that rewards celebrity above civic duty.