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Jon Ossoff Is Officially Beating The Brakes Off Mike Collins In The Polls, And It’s Peak Schadenfreude

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Jon Ossoff Is Officially Beating The Brakes Off Mike Collins In The Polls, And It’s Peak Schadenfreude

Jon Ossoff Is Officially Beating The Brakes Off Mike Collins In The Polls, And It’s Peak Schadenfreude

Let me paint you a picture of one of the most satisfying political beatdowns of 2024. You know that feeling when you’re watching a movie and the absolutely insufferable rich kid who bullied the protagonist finally gets his luxury SUV keyed by a homeless guy with a grudge? Yeah, that’s the current vibes coming out of Georgia’s 10th Congressional District. According to a brand-new poll dropped by some data wizards, Senator Jon Ossoff—yeah, the same Jon Ossoff who’s been taking Ls from the GOP since he was in diapers—is now curb-stomping Representative Mike Collins in a hypothetical 2026 matchup.

And before you ask, no, this isn’t a fever dream from a particularly potent batch of Delta-8. This is real life, and it’s delicious.

Let’s break down the numbers, because I know you Reddit ghouls love a good data set to justify your schadenfreude. The poll, conducted by some firm that actually has a pulse on the electorate (unlike Fox News’s “undecided voter” segments), shows Ossoff leading Collins by a solid 6 points. 48% to 42%. For those of you who flunked math in high school because you were too busy arguing about Star Wars lore, that’s outside the margin of error. That’s a real lead. That’s the kind of lead that makes Mike Collins wake up in a cold sweat, clutching his signed photo of Ted Cruz, wondering where his MAGA base went.

Now, I know what you’re thinking: “But u/Salty_Snark_420, Ossoff is a Democrat in a district that looks like it was gerrymandered by a blindfolded toddler with a crayon. How is this even possible?” Great question, hypothetical commenter. The answer is simple: Mike Collins is a walking, talking, tweeting disaster, and America is finally catching on.

Let’s recap the Mike Collins experience for the uninitiated. This is a guy who made his name by being the human equivalent of a “Live, Laugh, Loot” sign. He’s a small business owner who somehow turned his trucking company into a political platform, which is fine, except his entire brand is “I’m going to Washington to drain the swamp, but first, let me cash these campaign checks from PACs named ‘We Hate Poor People, LLC.’” He’s the guy who votes against every infrastructure bill because “muh socialism” but then brags about bringing a pothole repair to his district like he personally laid the asphalt with his own tears.

And then there’s the Jan. 6 stuff. Remember when Collins was all in on the Big Lie? Remember when he voted against certifying the election results like a complete clown? Yeah, the American people have memories longer than a TikTok trend. Polls show that independents in the district—you know, the people who actually decide elections—are looking at Collins and seeing a guy who would rather cosplay as a revolutionary than fix the damn roads. They’re looking at Ossoff and seeing a guy who, despite being a moderate milquetoast, actually shows up and does the job. Ossoff isn’t setting the world on fire, but he’s not actively setting the Capitol on fire either, which is apparently a high bar these days.

But here’s where it gets spicy. The article from The Hill or whoever broke this story (I’m not gonna link it, do your own research, lazy) points out that Ossoff’s lead is being driven by two things: suburban women and young voters. Shocker, I know. Suburban women are sick of the culture war BS. They don’t care about critical race theory in kindergarten. They care about their kid’s school getting mold remediation and their property taxes not going through the roof. Collins is out here tweeting about Hunter Biden’s laptop like it’s 2020, while Ossoff is quietly passing bipartisan bills about water infrastructure. It’s a mismatch. It’s like bringing a knife to a gunfight, but the knife is a rusty butter knife and the gun is a howitzer of moderate pragmatism.

And the young voters? Oh, they remember. Gen Z and Millennials have the memory of an elephant with a grudge. They remember Collins calling the January 6th committee a “kangaroo court.” They remember him voting against student loan relief while raking in donations from predatory loan companies. They’re looking at this poll and circling the date on their calendar like it’s a concert drop.

Now, let’s talk about the “hypothetical” part of this. 2026 is still two years away, which in political terms is like a lifetime in dog years. A lot can happen. Collins could get primaried by a QAnon shaman who promises to bring back the gold standard. Ossoff could get caught in a scandal involving a poorly worded tweet about Chick-fil-A. But the trend line is clear: Mike Collins is losing the plot, and Jon Ossoff is riding the wave of “I’m not that guy, bro.”

The GOP response to this poll has been, predictably, pathetic. They’ve already started spinning, saying that “early polls are meaningless” and that “Ossoff is a corporate shill.” Okay, pal. Whatever helps you sleep at night. The reality is that Collins has a name ID problem. Not in the sense that people don’t know him, but in the sense that people know him and they don’t like him. He’s the guy at the party who won’t stop talking about his crypto portfolio. He’s the guy who sends you a Venmo request for a slice of pizza he bought three years ago. He’s the guy who still hasn’t changed his Facebook profile picture from 2016.

Meanwhile, Ossoff is out here looking like the cool substitute teacher who actually knows

Final Thoughts


Given the tightening margins in this race, the poll suggests that Jon Ossoff’s strategy of nationalizing the contest around healthcare and corruption is resonating in a way that Mike Collins’s hyper-local, anti-establishment messaging has yet to fully counter. However, the real story is the volatility; in a district this red, a single gaffe or a shift in turnout dynamics could render these numbers obsolete overnight. Ultimately, this is a race about whether suburban dissatisfaction with the GOP can finally outweigh the structural advantage of a district built for Republican dominance—and right now, it’s too close to call.