The congressional race in Georgia seemed to hinge on two things. First of all, the base of Republican voters is about as sturdy as a statue of Robert E. Lee, and evidently much, much harder to move. Many rank-and-file Republicans will privately admit that Trump's tweets are embarrassing, or that he's achieved next to nothing in the Oval Office, or that it's ridiculous that their party's senators are drafting a health care bill in total secrecy. None of that matters in the ballot box. Only one thing matters: Their intense hatred of everything they view as liberal — the media, college professors, Hollywood, and Democrats. These are the people they see as the unhinged ones — not a president who tweets three hours of "Fox and Friends" in his bathrobe — and those feelings have only intensified since November. In suburban Atlanta, Trump's election and the rise of Ossoff inspired an amazing army of volunteers, heavily comprised of suburban women over the age of 30 who were "non-political" and who got "woke" after 11/8. But these are folks who voted for Hillary in 2016; all their furious door-knocking and phone-banking converted next to zero of their neighbors who'd voted for Trump.