State Senator Derek Mallow
State Senator, Georgia Senate District 2
Georgians are still struggling and the GA GOP’s affordability agenda isn’t helping.
Sen. Derek Mallow went to the Senate floor in February to say what too many won’t. The problems they’ve ignored? He named every one. 👇
05/13/2026
Today, Governor Brian Kemp officially called the Georgia General Assembly into a Special Session beginning June 17, 2026.
Here’s what y’all need to know about why we are being called back to Atlanta:
To have new maps passed that make changes to Georgia’s legislative and congressional district maps following the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision in Louisiana v. Callais
That means the General Assembly will be redrawing the maps for the following for the 2028 election cycle:
* Georgia State Senate
* Georgia House of Representatives
* U.S. Congressional districts
* Other state offices elected by district
We also have to address the ban on QR codes in SB 189, which will take effect after the May 19th primary here in Georgia.
As the State Senator for the 2nd, I believe every Georgian deserves fair representation and a voting process that strengthens democracy, not weakens it.
I want to be clear, however, this is just another brazen attack to ensure black folks are only seen in this democracy, and to further ensure that black folks don’t have a chance to elect someone to represent them in that same democracy.
04/30/2026
🚨 URGENT: Our democracy is under attack.
The Supreme Court’s ruling in Louisiana v. Callais threatens Black voters and decades of progress. But we’re not backing down.
Join our emergency virtual briefing tonight at 7:30 p.m. ET to understand what’s at stake and how we fight back.
Featuring:
• Derrick Johnson, NAACP President & CEO
• Kristen Clarke, NAACP General Counsel
Register for tonight’s call. https://naacpheadquarters.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_idbHh8oHQ9qSfLJLVZcyqQ #/registration
04/29/2026
Statement from Senator Derek Mallow on Louisiana v. Callais
Today, the Supreme Court of the United States issued its ruling in Louisiana v. Callais and with it, effectively gutted the core protections of Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act.
I want to be clear about what happened today: the Court did not strike Section 2 from the books, but they eviscerated what the law actually does. For sixty years, Section 2 stood as the guardrail against racial discrimination in our elections.
Today, that guardrail was torn down.
I represent the 2nd Senate District of Georgia. Savannah, a city built on the backs and the prayers of Black men and women who were never fully counted, never fully heard, and never fully protected at the ballot box. This decision hits home. Because the people that I fight for every single day now have fewer tools to fight back.
What the Court has done is make it almost impossible to prove a voting rights violation without showing intentional discrimination something Congress specifically rejected when it strengthened this law in 1982. Congress looked at what the Court had done, and the decided to stop what has happened today. So let me be clear today’s majority on the Supreme Court has now dressed up this injustice in constitutional language, but we know what it is. We have to call a spade a spade.
This is not justice. This is an injustice to black folks all across America.
And let us be honest about what comes next. Analysts are already warning that this ruling could strip Black representation from as many as 15 congressional seats currently held by members of Congress who look like the communities they serve. That is not a projection that is a plan.
Partisan gerrymandering was already shielded from federal courts. Now racial gerrymandering hides behind the same veil. The two together leave Black voters with nowhere to turn.
I was raised by my grandmother. She did not have the luxury of political theory or legal strategy. She had her faith, prayer, and her belief that the generation coming up behind her deserved better than what she had been given.
She knelt and prayed so that I could rise, and she stood back up so I could see the world from her shoulders. That is what we are called to do today. We will not stay down.
We will stand back up and ensure black voters have the chance to be represented come hell or high water by doing what we can do to ensure the state of Georgia does not allow this practice to happen. We need to amend the state constitution to prohibit racial gerrymandering to ensure this does not happen here in Georgia.
HB 295 is a way for the state to cut off its nose just to spite its face.
This bill does nothing to help those that are the most downtrodden and only adds to the very crowded plate of our law enforcement officials.
You can find my full speech with my stance here: https://youtube.com/?si=zlexHmYkYfAgoigY
04/02/2026
Happy Sine Die folks!
Today is the last day of the legislative session and I’m prepared for the long day ahead.
To stay up to date with what’s happening here under the gold dome and watch live here:
https://www.youtube.com/live/aEjn8teT70U?si=GrxInDhUI7Y6Ty2W
Elections should be in the power of the people. This session has seen sweeping legislation to alter our State’s election processes which will have very intended consequences.
You can find my full speech with my stance on this issue here: https://youtu.be/W_D-UP3SA9c?si=L03iCsYlTI3g2FB6
03/19/2026
Day 34 under the Gold Dome, and I’m working just as hard as I did on Day 1 for the people of the 2nd.
Access to voting is already hard and with policies such as SR 838, it will only be made harder for Georgians across the state.
You can find my full speech with my stance on this issue here: https://youtu.be/M8xg6ZNxU-4?si=R-uqmH-D_dz52DQb
Today I qualified to run for my third term in the State Senate. I am excited and honored to continue to serve this great state and the second senate district. I hope that come this May you choose to continue to have me serve this great state and district.
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Savannah, GA