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Greg Bluestein
American journalist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Greg Bluestein (born May 25, 1982) is an American journalist, author and TV analyst who covers Georgia politics for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. He has also written about former President Jimmy Carter and covered regional and national news as an Atlanta-based journalist for The Associated Press. He contributes to the Political Insider blog,[1] is an MSNBC and NBC News contributor, and is host of the Politically Georgia podcast.[2]
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Bluestein was born in Atlanta, Georgia and graduated from North Springs High School and the University of Georgia (political science and journalism), where he was editor of The Red & Black campus newspaper.[3]
Bluestein spent seven years with the Associated Press, between 2005 and 2012, where he covered breaking news, politics and legal affairs. He reported on the execution of Troy Davis,[4] the post-presidency of Jimmy Carter[5] and the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill,[6] the Upper Big Branch Mine explosion[7] and the major tornado outbreak of 2011 in Alabama and Georgia.[8]
He joined The Atlanta Journal-Constitution in 2012 to write about the political trends that shaped the region.[9] He covered the 2014 race for governor between Nathan Deal and Jason Carter and the 2016[10] and 2020[11] presidential elections. He has examined how Joe Biden won Georgia in 2020[12] and documented the political ascent of Stacey Abrams,[13] Brian Kemp,[14] Jon Ossoff,[15] Raphael Warnock[16] and David Perdue.[17]
During the 2016 presidential campaign, Bluestein contributed to a series of articles examining political change in the "Shifting South."[18] He also has reported Georgia-related news from the Panama Canal Zone[19] and Israel.[20]
Bluestein was called Georgia's "chief political reporter" in an article in Atlanta Magazine[21] and the state's "ace" politics journalist by Chris Cillizza.[22]
He was named to UGA's 40 Under 40 Honorees in 2021. He delivered the convocation address at UGA's Grady College in 2021.[23] Axios called him the "most dedicated"[24] Georgia fan at the 2023 college football national championship when he attended the Los Angeles game shortly after being hospitalized in San Diego with a kidney stone.
On stage at a Donald Trump rally in 2022, he was called "Buttstein" by former State Representative Vernon Jones.[25]
He is an MSNBC and NBC News political contributor[26] and author of Flipped, published in 2022,[27] on Georgia's transformation into a swing state. He has won numerous awards, including a 2021 Toner Prize for Local Political Reporting for a project on the campaign to undermine Georgia's 2020 election[28] and won first-place for political reporting in the South in 2024 and 2025 by the Society for Professional Journalists.[29]
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Books
- Flipped: How Georgia Turned Purple and Broke the Monopoly on Republican Power (Viking, 2022) ISBN 978-0-593-48915-4
References
External links
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