
The Deep State's Panic Button: Why the Ossoff-Collins Poll Has the Elites Sweating
The mainstream media wants you to believe that the Georgia Senate race is a simple, boring contest between two career politicians. They’ll tell you it’s about “moderate” policy positions and “bipartisan” handshakes. But if you peel back the glossy veneer of the official narrative, the latest polling data between Jon Ossoff and Mike Collins isn’t just a numbers game—it’s a flashing red siren that the establishment is losing its grip on the American psyche.
We’ve been told for years that the uniparty controls everything. The D.C. swamp, the coastal elites, the intelligence community—they all play for the same team. But a new poll from a reputable Georgia-based firm is sending shockwaves through the corridors of power, and it’s not because of a close race. It’s because the race is revealing a seismic shift in the electorate that the gatekeepers are terrified you’ll notice.
Let’s connect the dots. Jon Ossoff, the junior senator from Georgia, is a poster child for the globalist agenda. He’s a former congressional staffer and documentary filmmaker who ran on a platform of “cleaning up Washington” in 2020. But once he got there, what did he do? He voted lockstep with the Biden administration’s open-border policies, rubber-stamped trillions in foreign aid for endless wars, and championed the same COVID-era mandates that destroyed small businesses and trampled on medical freedom. Ossoff is the face of the “woke” elite—a man who talks about transparency while his donors, including Big Tech and hedge funds, pull the strings from the shadows.
On the other side, you have Mike Collins, a Republican congressman from Georgia’s 10th district. Collins is cut from a different cloth. He’s a businessman and a vocal critic of the deep state. He’s been one of the loudest voices calling for an audit of the Federal Reserve, demanding accountability for the weaponization of the FBI, and pushing back on the narrative that the 2020 election was “the most secure in history.” Collins isn’t a perfect candidate—no one is—but he represents a growing faction in the GOP that is sick of the status quo. He’s the kind of guy who makes the Davos crowd nervous.
Now, let’s get to the numbers that have the establishment sweating. According to a recent survey conducted by a nonpartisan Georgia polling firm (whose methodology is public record, unlike the black-box polls from the DNC), Collins is leading Ossoff by a slim but statistically significant margin: 48% to 44%. But here’s where it gets interesting. The poll didn’t just ask who voters prefer. It dug deeper into the *why*. And that’s where the cover-up begins.
When respondents were asked about their top concerns, the number one issue wasn’t “democracy” or “climate change.” It was **economic sovereignty**—the feeling that America’s wealth is being siphoned off by globalist interests. Over 60% of likely voters in Georgia said they believe the U.S. economy is rigged in favor of multinational corporations and foreign powers. This isn’t a left or right issue; it’s a red-pill issue. And Collins is the only candidate running on an explicit platform of bringing the supply chain back home, breaking up the monopoly power of Big Ag and Big Pharma, and stopping the endless flow of tax dollars to Ukraine and Israel.
But the true narrative-breaking data point was this: 55% of voters said they trust Collins more to **expose corruption** in Washington. That’s a direct threat to the intelligence community’s playbook. Why? Because Ossoff, despite his “independent” branding, has been a reliable vote for the very agencies that have been caught spying on Americans, lying about the Hunter Biden laptop story, and covering up the origins of COVID-19. The poll suggests that the American people are finally waking up to the fact that the “information” they’re fed is a weapon, not a truth serum.
So, why is this poll being buried? Why haven’t you seen it on CNN or MSNBC? Because it exposes a deep fault line in the Democratic coalition. Ossoff’s base is supposed to be Atlanta’s suburbanites and college-educated voters. But the poll shows a massive defection among **independent women**, a demographic the Dems have relied on since 2018. These women are concerned about inflation, school curriculum, and safety in their neighborhoods. They don’t care about pronoun debates; they care about whether their grocery bill has doubled in three years. Collins, who has a strong law-and-order record and talks about “school choice” as a civil rights issue, is picking up these voters in droves.
The establishment’s response? Crickets. Major news outlets are running stories about “boring Senate races” while ignoring the fact that Georgia is on the verge of flipping a seat that was supposed to be safe for the Democrats. It’s the same playbook they used with Donald Trump in 2016: pretend the outlier doesn’t exist, then panic when the reality sets in.
But the most damning evidence of a cover-up is the **crosstab that no one is talking about**. The poll asked a question that is considered “fringe” by the legacy media: “Do you believe the 2020 election was conducted fairly?” Among likely voters, 46% said *no*. That’s not a small, radical fringe. That’s nearly half the electorate. Collins has not explicitly endorsed the “stop the steal” narrative, but he hasn’t condemned it, either. In the world of the deep state, ambiguity is a threat. They need absolute fealty to the narrative.
This poll is a canary in the coal mine. It tells us that the American people are no longer buying the script. They see Jon Ossoff as a clean-cut, telegenic mouthpiece for a system that has failed them. They see Mike Collins as a flawed, but authentic, warrior against the
Final Thoughts
After parsing the latest survey data on the Ossoff-Collins race, the takeaway is clear: while Collins has the immediate advantage of incumbency and name recognition in a deeply polarized state, Ossoff’s strength with suburbanites and independents suggests a ceiling on the Republican’s lead that could crack open in a high-turnout cycle. The poll’s margin underscores that this is less a referendum on Collins than a proxy war over abortion rights and democratic norms—two issues that have historically energized Georgia’s swing voters in ways the GOP hasn’t fully accounted for. In my view, if Democrats can nationalize this race and keep the focus on Collins’s record of compliance with Trump’s election challenges, Ossoff has a genuine path to flipping a seat that once seemed ironclad.