Former Georgia Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan has finally made it official: after years of drifting left, attacking conservatives, and basking in MSNBC praise, he formally switched to the Democratic Party in 2024. Duncan, once elected as a Republican, now spends his time parroting DNC talking points and reminiscing about how much “easier” life is after abandoning the party that put him in office.

The failed lieutenant governor — now openly embracing his role as a “common-sense” hero to liberals — claims he just couldn’t “do the right thing” as a Republican anymore. What was this supposedly noble moral stand? Gun control, naturally. Duncan insisted the GOP “ignored what the masses want” by refusing to cave to Democratic demands for more restrictions on law-abiding gun owners.

That’s right: after years of benefitting from conservative voters, Duncan’s big line in the sand was taking guns away from those same constituents.

Throughout his self-promotional media tour, Duncan painted himself as a martyr of Republican intolerance. “It just became so hard at times to try to figure out the right way to do the right thing, as a Republican,” he said — as though the problem was the GOP, not his own abandonment of conservative principles.

He then pivoted to pure DNC boilerplate: gun control, “affordability crises,” and of course the tiresome claim that Republicans are destroying democracy. Duncan also couldn’t resist bragging about the newfound affection he receives from Democrats and suburban liberals:
“There were folks who used to wave at us… neighbors and friends, who stopped waving. But now there’s a lot more that started opening up their eyes and cheering us on.”

Translation: *My Republican neighbors got tired of my RINO routine, but Democrats love me now.*

Naturally, Duncan also made sure to praise Kamala Harris and claim that “loving my neighbor is easier now,” as though switching to the party of censorship, political prosecutions, and open borders is the height of moral clarity.

But the most revealing part of Duncan’s confession came when he admitted he’s been quietly courting donors and activists urging him to run for higher office — specifically Georgia governor in 2026.
“I’ve been receiving phone calls… encouraging me to look into seeking higher office,” he bragged. “And it’s something I’ll seriously consider.”

Then came the sales pitch for his would-be gubernatorial run:
“If Georgia wants to elect somebody… to build consensus and turn chaos into conversations, it’s something I’ll entertain.”

In other words, Geoff Duncan wants to become Georgia’s next Democrat governor — he’s just waiting for permission from the same left-wing base he now panders to.

That didn’t stop him from one final swipe at Republicans. “I sleep soundly,” Duncan declared, “knowing I don’t have to defend the indefensible conduct of a morally bankrupt man.”

Perhaps, but it seems even easier for him to sleep knowing he is now fully embraced by the same Democratic establishment he spent years quietly auditioning for.

And now, Duncan says he wants to “take back the Governor’s mansion” for Democrats for the first time in nearly 30 years.

Thanks for the honesty, at least. Conservatives suspected it long ago — now he’s simply wearing the right jersey.