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Georgia will be well-represented at the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia this week. Former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich was the only Georgia politician who spoke at last week’s Republican convention in Cleveland, Ohio. This week, Congressman John Lewis, Georgia House Minority Leader Stacey Abrams, and Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed will all speak. Former state Sen. Jason Carter will introduce a video of his grandfather, former President Jimmy Carter.

State Democratic Party Chairman DuBose Porter said that kind of representation shows Georgia will be “in play” come November.

“Our polling data, independent polling data, campaign polling data, even Fox News lists us as a battleground state,” Porter said. “So, they see the same numbers we [do].”

On Friday, the website Wikileaks posted hacked emails from the Democratic National Committee. The messages suggested party leaders favored now-presumptive Democratic Presidential Nominee Hillary Clinton over Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders during the primary. The leak prompted DNC Party Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz to say she’ll resign after the convention.

But Porter said supporters of Sanders and Clinton want the same things.

“Bernie Sanders got most of what he wanted in that platform, but it’s things that Hillary Clinton and her supporters are for as well: to have access to college without the horrendous debt; to move the minimum wage to $15/hour,” Porter said.

But Democratic delegate Khalid Kamau is sticking with Sanders. Kamau, who’s also an organizer with the grassroots group #ATLisready, says Republican anger toward Clinton during last week’s convention helped “strengthen the spines” of Sanders delegates.

“Poll after poll after poll show that Bernie beats Donald [Trump] more decisively [than Clinton], and so I think that there’s an angst and an urgency that a lot of Bernie delegates are feeling that we still have a few days yet to do this course correction,” he said.

The last time a Democratic presidential candidate carried Georgia was in 1992, when Hillary Clinton’s husband, Bill, ran for the first time.