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Warnock will make history as Georgia's first Black senator

Rev. Raphael Warnock will make history when he becomes Georgia's first Black senator and the first Black Democrat to represent a southern state in the Senate.

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By
Veronica Stracqualursi
, CNN
CNN — Rev. Raphael Warnock will make history when he becomes Georgia's first Black senator and the first Black Democrat to represent a southern state in the Senate.

Once sworn in, Warnock will be the 11th African American to serve in the US Senate -- a group that includes former President Barack Obama, who served as a US senator from Illinois, and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris, who is a US senator from California.

CNN projected early Wednesday morning that Warnock beat incumbent GOP Sen. Kelly Loeffler, with Black voters in the Atlanta metro area, the cradle of the Civil Rights Movement, and suburbs turning out to help Warnock win the seat.

Warnock's projected victory is a significant breakthrough for African Americans in southern politics as his election is the culmination of years of voter registration drives conducted by former state House Democratic leader Stacey Abrams and other Black activists, who also helped flip Georgia blue this past presidential election. Warnock will also be the first Georgia Democrat elected to the Senate in 20 years.

A senior campaign aide for Warnock told CNN's Kyung Lah that the campaign believes Democratic runoff voters were driven to vote for Warnock based on his message and the hopes of sending the first Black senator from Georgia to the US Senate, rather than out of anger at President Donald Trump.

"The thing I love about America is we always have a path to make it greater. I love this country. I love this country because I am an iteration of the American dream," Warnock said during a campaign rally earlier this month in Macon, Georgia.

Warnock grew up in Savannah, Georgia, in public housing, the 11th out of 12 children. He's a graduate of Morehouse College, a historically Black college in Atlanta. And he's the senior pastor of Atlanta's Ebenezer Baptist Church where Martin Luther King Jr. preached.

Warnock's father, the late Rev. Jonathan Warnock, was born in 1917 in the Jim Crow South and was a World War II veteran. Warnock tells the story of how his father, dressed in his military fatigues, was asked to give up his seat on a bus to a White teenager.

"He never gave in to bitterness. He never gave in to resentment," Warnock said in his remarks at the Macon rally. "He taught me to love America because he had lived long enough to see the arc of change in his own lifetime, and he knew if we worked hard enough that together if we built a multiracial coalition of conscious, we can bring change that allows the country to live up to its ideals."

Warnock's mother, Rev. Verlene Warnock, grew up in Waycross and worked picking cotton and tobacco in the 1950s.

In a speech Tuesday night, Warnock thanked supporters, paid tribute to his mother and highlighted his family history as how emblematic his candidacy is of the American dream.

"Because this is America, the 82-year-old hands that used to pick somebody else's cotton went to the polls and picked her youngest son to be a United States senator," Warnock said in his remarks.

"I stand before you as a man who knows that the improbable journey that led me to this place in this historic moment in America could only happen here," he added.

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