What A Day - Georgia To Vote On Energy Costs
Episode Date: September 8, 2025A crucial race for Georgia's Public Service Commission is coming up in November. And though the name sounds boring, it's a race that really matters. That's because the commission is in charge of regul...ating public utilities in the state, including electric, gas, and telecommunications. Right now, all five commissioners are Republicans…but two of them are up for election this fall. And the Democratic challengers are strong. To learn more about the importance of this race, we spoke with John Taylor, Executive Director of the Black Male Initiative, a nonprofit focused on civic engagement in Georgia.And in headlines, President Donald Trump continues to threaten Chicago…but this time with war, Russia attacks Ukraine in its latest aerial strike, and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent says the U.S. might have to refund some money it's collected from Trump's infamous tariffs.Show Notes:Check out the Black Male Initiative – www.bmifund.org/Call Congress – 202-224-3121Subscribe to the What A Day Newsletter – https://tinyurl.com/3kk4nyz8What A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcastFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/crookedmedia/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
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It is Monday, September 8th.
I'm Josie Duffy Rice in for Jane Koston, and this is What a Day.
The show that wonders if you watched the MTV Video Music Awards last night,
because we didn't even really know that those were still a thing.
Is MTV even still a thing?
Who knows?
On today's show, we discussed chipocalypse now, and Russia continues to escalate attacks against Ukraine.
But let's start with some regional politics and why one seemingly small election matters.
Here in Georgia, where I live, there is a crucial statewide race coming up this November for the Public Service Commission.
The name sounds pretty boring, but this race actually really matters.
The commissioners are in charge of regulating public utilities in the state.
state, including electricity, gas, and telecommunications, which basically means that they
regulate how much Georgia families and residents have to pay for these utilities, which means that
their job affects pretty much each and every resident in the state. And currently, all five
commissioners are Republicans. In the past three years, the commission has raised the cost of
electricity six times, which amounts to an average monthly increase of $43 per household. It's a pretty
big deal in a state that ranks cost of living as the most critical issue. And meanwhile, data
centers in Georgia have gotten a tax break. Yes, those big warehouses full of energy-guzzling servers
and equipment that are used to power AI and crypto are pushing our electrical grid to the brim
and wasting our drinking water, too. And Georgia's data center market is one of the biggest in the
country. Now, two of the five commissioners are for election this fall. And if you can believe this,
Two seats are the only statewide election on the ballot this year, the only ones.
Republicans have a major advantage in these races because while each commissioner has their own
district, they are all elected statewide.
But this year, there are two strong Democratic challengers.
In District 2, which covers the eastern part of the state from outside of Atlanta,
all the way down to the city of Savannah, Democrat Alicia Johnson is challenging Republican incumbent
Tim Eccles.
And in District 3, which basically covers the Metro Atlanta
region. Democrat Peter Hubbard is running against Republican Fitzjohnson. So here to talk to us more
about this race is John Taylor, executive director of Blackmail Initiative, a nonprofit focused on
civic engagement here in Georgia. John Taylor, welcome to What a Day. Thank you for having me.
So tell us a little bit about the backdrop here. What's been going on with energy prices here in
Georgia? And what role has the Public Service Commission played in that?
So when it comes to the increases in energy prices and the craziness that we're seeing
in Georgia, the reality is that the Public Service Commission has voted six times to
increase rates for the cost of energy, and that's been hitting Georgia residents directly.
Simultaneously, they also voted to give an 80% cut to the data centers.
So in one hand, we're giving tax rebates to data centers, and we're passing those costs right on to Georgia residents who are also struggling to make ends meet.
I was going to ask you about this, like, I'm in Atlanta, I'm in Fulton County, and obviously we're in an off year.
There are a lot of kind of municipal elections happening, but this is the main statewide election happening.
So how are you really kind of engaging with people about?
why they need to pay attention to the Public Service Commission and why it's important to vote on this,
especially people who might not have municipal elections, given that there also are no federal elections this year.
I mean, the reality is we're doing a lot of door knocking, we're having a lot of phone calls,
we're sending out text messages to folks, and we're doing everything we can on social media to pump the importance of this moment.
I think this is more so than anything, a David versus Goliath moment.
We're looking at two incumbents who are Republican who have been able to keep their seats and move conversations rooted in commerce and business.
And we're talking about candidates that are running as Democrats who are going to public commission meetings every day or every session and asking hard questions about renewable energy, asking questions about rate high.
It's asking the commission to stand up for the citizens that it's supposed to represent and protect.
And so for us, it's super important to get the word out and educate folks in every platform we can.
So tell us what's really at stake if in this election we don't elect the representatives who are concerned with cutting costs.
I mean, unfortunately, our lives are at stake.
That's the right way to put it.
We are dealing with a circumstance where not only our livelihoods,
and our ability to survive and pay bills is at stake,
six times they've raised the rates on residents.
That's preposterous.
But beyond that, the use of water, the use of electricity,
the way that we're allowing data centers
to come into our state and expand,
the compounding health impacts for methane gas,
for dioxide, for an expanded use of a water tank,
that was not designed to handle the rigor or the low.
The truth of the matter is, if we don't get folks in these public service commission seats
to care about the people in Georgia, our lives are on the line.
So obviously, Georgia has faced some challenges, too, when it comes to voting rights, voter access, right?
What are the biggest hurdles right now in terms of actually making short?
that people can get to the polls, that their votes count, that they have access.
So there's a few.
We're dealing with hundreds of thousands of voters being purged from the role.
We're dealing with compounding and ongoing lawsuits due the implementation of SB202
and the changes in legislation that make it harder for good Samaritans and everyday volunteers
to go out and help register.
Georgia voters. We're dealing with a secretary of state that has, in many ways, just missed the vote
and does not care about the voting rights for folks in this state. And most importantly,
we're dealing with a board of elections that has 159 counting and allows them to operate
independently. So even though we have guidelines, we're still battling 159 fights every
election cycle. And we're doing it with less and less resource every cycle. Because when we're
off cycle and when we're dealing with municipalities, we get nowhere near the amount of resource
to mount a credible fight. When you mention resources, like you just did, you mentioned there's
a lack of resources. Are we just talking about money? What are the resources that we need kind of
consistently to make sure that we see the kind of voter turnout and voter interests that we want
in these elections?
So there's three things that we really need.
We define resources, time, money, and people.
So we need TMP.
We need enough time to educate our community
and make sure that they get the value of these elections,
whether it's public service commission or it's senator
or it's state, you know, congressional seats.
They're all very important.
City Council, Mayor, these are the folks that are making the decisions
about how we live our lives and we make.
And so time is important.
And we're short on time
because it feels like these elections pop up on us,
but because of the way we're structured,
again, they're always there.
As far as the money is concerned,
of course, money is a great aggregate
that helps us defend against not having enough time.
Imagine all the things we could do
with all the money in the world.
But money is really only useful
if we can use it to do the third thing,
which is activate, educate, and mobilize the people.
Because we're not interested in having transactional vote.
I want folks who come out and vote
and then they hold the elected official account.
We oftentimes say that the biggest thing we dislike about politics
is when candidates tell us what they're going to do
when they get in office.
We would much prefer have individual
give us their track record of proven action, that they're servant leaders already, and that
they're telling us how they're going to expand what they've already been doing once they're
in office. Absolutely. I want to ask about the role of the commission when it comes to public
services and what else needs to be done. So clearly, in order for anything to be done to lower costs,
to, you know, average families and improve infrastructure for public services, we have to have a good
Public Service Commission.
But what else needs to happen to ensure that Georgians, you know, are able to keep
getting the kind of public utilities that they need effectively?
So there's the things that the Public Service Commission does, which we've talked about.
They regulate rates.
They help to make sure that we have access.
They really vote for what we can and cannot do.
But they also vote to increase the number of watts.
megawatts that, you know, the companies can produce. And so this essentially says, this is how much
power you can bring into or you can generate each year. This is what it's going to cost. This is
what it requires of you. They allow that scale to exist. But beyond that, we need legislators to
put moratoriums on utility heights. We need legislators to start pushing back on these costs and be
clear about the fact that we are in a place where the cost of utility, the cost of housing,
the cost for wraparound services and household expenses is outpacing the economics of
household. We grew up in an era where the cost of living, the COLA increases 2.5%. Most of the
folks in Georgia are not getting a 2.5% rage. But when you vote six times to raise the cost of
utilities, you're blowing that out of the water. You're making it impossible for people's
pocketbooks in purses to keep up with your hikes. We need that to stop. Can I ask you the kind
of challenges you're seeing with this election, both in terms of what's at stake?
who's on the ballot, right, and making sure that voters care and show up, do you think that they're
reflective of what's happening across the country, or do you see this as sort of Georgia-specific?
I really wish this was Georgia-specific, because if it was, then we'd be able to have a much
different conversation. We'd be able to identify a way to build back a different dynamic, but
we're seeing this everywhere. You're seeing this in New York with Mamdani. We're seeing this
in Texas. We're seeing this in Alabama. There are so many candidates that are pushing against
the status quo. They're trying to create what most people are calling socialist
answers or socialist democratic answers. But what they're really doing is advocating for true
democracy. They're advocating for constituents, not for big business, not for corporations.
They're advocating for citizens to have a voice and to actually be listened to.
If we're not clear about the fact that whether it's the Public Service Commission or we're
talking about militarized engagement and states' rights, what we're seeing is a rise of
authoritarianism, what we're seeing is a rise of the oligarchs, right?
And so that's ultimately what we're saying.
And we don't believe that utility costs, that the power, that the energy, the very lifeblood of
a community should be randomized and set at the pace of corporate profiteers.
That stuff has to be first and foremost regulated for what the community needs.
Thank you, John, so much for joining us.
My pleasure.
That was my conversation with John Taylor, executive director of Blackmail Initiative.
We'll get to more of the news in a moment, but if you like the show, make sure to subscribe, leave a five-star review on Apple Podcasts, watch us on YouTube, and share with your friends.
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So should we expect action in Chicago this week? Absolutely. You can expect action in most sanctuary
cities across the country. President Trumps prioritized sanctuary cities because sanctuary cities
knowingly release illegal alien public safety threats to the streets every day.
That's where the problem is.
We don't have that problem in Florida, where every sheriff and chief works for us, right?
Or Texas.
So we got to send additional resources to the problem of marriage, which are sanctuary cities.
Texas and Florida, notoriously two of the best-behaved states in America.
White House borders are Tom Homan spoke to CNN's Jake Tapper on State of the Union on Sunday.
He's referring to Trump's threat to send immigration and customs enforcement.
potentially the National Guard into Chicago.
On Saturday, Trump posted an absolutely bat-shit meme on Truth Social,
showing helicopters flying over the Chicago skyline with a fiery explosion and the words
Chipocalypse Now.
And it included a photoshopped or maybe AI image of Trump dressed as Lieutenant Kilgore,
a character from the movie Apocalypse Now, who is a psychopath obsessed with blowing up civilians in Vietnam.
In his post, Trump replaces Kilgore's famous line,
I love the smell of napalm in the morning,
with, quote, I love the smell of deportations in the morning,
adding, quote,
Chicago is about to find out why it's called the Department of War.
It's actually not called the Department of War,
but he's referencing the executive order that he signed on Friday
to change the name of the Department of Defense to the Department of War.
It won't be official until Congress approves it.
In response, Illinois Democratic Governor J.B. Pritzker called Trump
a, quote, wannabe dictator who is threatening to go to war with an American city.
In the CNN interview, Homan defended the president, saying his words were being taken out
of context. Despite the fact that I cannot stress this enough, Trump was the one who literally
posted the meme on his own account. And the president himself seemed a little sensitive
about this situation when a reporter asked him about it at the White House on Sunday.
We're not going to war. We're going to clean up our city. We're going to clean them up so they
don't kill five people every weekend. That's not war.
That's common sense.
So to recap, Trump threatened war on an American city
and is now angrily claiming that the media made it up.
More than 300 South Korean workers detained in a massive U.S. immigration raid
at a Hyundai plant in Georgia will be released and sent to South Korea.
Kang Hunzik, the chief of staff for South Korea's president,
said Sunday that they had finalized negotiations with the U.S. on their release.
But Hong Kong said that after the
Hangs said that after administrative details are worked out,
South Korea will send over a charter plane to bring its workers home.
Meanwhile, South Korean media reported that the foreign minister
is headed to the U.S. today for related talks.
U.S. immigration authorities said last week
that they had detained more than 470 people,
most of them South Korean national.
when federal agents raided the manufacturing site in Georgia.
This is part of Trump's administration's need to prove powerful in its mass deportation agenda,
but the move took many by surprise, given that the Hyundai plant has been held up
as an example of economic development in the state.
The lead agent of Homeland Security investigations in Georgia said during a press conference on Friday
that while none of those detained had been charged with any crimes,
some of the workers had entered the U.S. illegally and others had expired visas.
Russia attacked Ukraine with drones and missiles on Sunday, hitting multiple cities,
which makes it the largest aerial strike since the war began.
It's yet another record-breaking move by Russia despite Trump's repeated efforts to broker a peace deal between the two countries.
The strike killed four people, including a mother and her three-year-old child, and injured 44.
It also hit two residential buildings and a government headquarters in Kyiv.
It was unclear if the government building was a direct target or just had been hit by debris, according to the Associated Press.
But if it was intentional, the attack would mark an escalation in Russia's air campaign, which has so far spared government buildings in the city center.
The Russian defense ministry said that it only targeted military sites.
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy said he is working with France as an ally to strengthen his army's defense.
And in a post on Twitter, he said, quote, such killings now,
when real diplomacy could have already begun long ago
for a deliberate crime and a prolongation of the war.
Other European leaders expressed solidarity with Ukraine as well.
British Prime Minister Kier Starrmer said in a statement,
quote,
these cowardly strikes show that Putin believes he can act with impunity.
He is not serious about peace.
Would you offer rebates, though?
Are you prepared to offer rebates?
So we would have to give a refund on about half
the tariffs, which would be terrible for the Treasury.
And you're prepared to give those refunds?
Well, I mean, there's no be prepared.
If the court says it, we'd have to do it.
Treasury Secretary Scott Besant told NBC's Meet the press host,
Kristen Welker, on Sunday, that the U.S. may have to refund some money
they've collected from Trump's tariffs.
That is, if the Supreme Court decides that they're illegal.
We are talking tens of billions of dollars in refunds to American corporations
that paid extra for imports.
Two courts have already ruled that Trump's tariffs on foreign imports are illegal
because it was a unilateral decision by the president
when only Congress has the power to set tariff rates.
The rulings prompted the Trump administration to appeal to the Supreme Court
and the hearing could happen as early as November.
Besson says he's confident that they won't lose the case
and they probably will not, given who is on the Supreme Court.
But if they do, it would be a financial disaster.
Trump recently said on True Social that it would, quote,
literally destroy the United States of America.
Besson also said he isn't phased by the Labor Department's report last week,
showing the highest unemployment rates since 2021.
And that's the news.
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That is all for today.
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subscribe at cricket.com slash subscribe. I'm Josie Duffy Rice, and I did not win the lottery.
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