Well, another one bites the dust. You don’t normally see this happening. Typically, it’s the other way around. But when a Republican does change parties, it’s not much of a surprise because we know they’re RINOs to begin with. Former Georgia Lt. Governor Geoff Duncan has officially thrown in the towel and switched parties, joining the Democrats. After years of parading around as a “Republican,” Duncan has finally made his long-anticipated jump off the cliff, confirming what many grassroots conservatives have suspected for years: he was never really one of us.
In an op-ed for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Duncan tried to paint his defection as some noble act of conscience. He blamed “GOP policies on tax cuts, health insurance and immigration” for pushing him over the edge. Translation: the Republican Party just wasn’t liberal enough for Geoff. Apparently, fighting for lower taxes, securing the border, and reforming a broken health care system is now an unforgivable sin. He also added, in an eye-roll-worthy moment of self-congratulation, “Loving my neighbor is easier now.” Because nothing says “love your neighbor” like joining the party of open borders, endless abortion, and gender confusion in schools.
Duncan’s “journey” to the Democratic Party supposedly began before President Trump contested the 2020 election in Georgia. But let’s not kid ourselves—his fall from grace has everything to do with his obsession with Trump and MAGA populism. He’s spent more time bashing conservatives than fighting for Georgia families, and the state’s GOP finally had enough. In January, the Georgia Republican Party expelled him for endorsing Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. The same woman who’s made a political career out of identity politics and word salads.
After being booted, Duncan fired off a snarky tweet whining that the party should focus on “mass deportations, world peace, and global tariffs.” That’s rich coming from a guy who spent more time on CNN than actually working for Republican voters.
Now, Duncan’s flirting with a run for office in 2026—as a Democrat, of course. He claims he’s getting “coffee meetings” from independents and “common sense Republicans” who want him to “turn chaos into conversations.” What does that even mean? That’s politician-speak for “I don’t really believe in anything, but I’d still like to hold public office.”
Geoff Duncan isn’t saving the Republican Party. He’s confirming what many of us already knew—he was never part of it to begin with. The swamp doesn’t just live in D.C.; it’s got plenty of residents down in Georgia, too.
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