Primary Content Caption Voters wait in line at the Macon-Bibb County Board of Elections during early voting in the 2020 Presidential Election. Credit: Grant Blankenship While new U.S. Census data shows Georgia added more than a million people over the last decade, an even larger change in registered voters — and who they vote for — will be key considerations when lawmakers begin assigning residents into new voting districts this fall. Population figures released this week provide a starting point for determining how Georgia’s 10,711,908 people will be split up into legislative and Congressional districts of equal proportions. But the political leanings of the state’s 7.6 million active voters — including the five million that flocked to the polls last November — will be an equally important metric in deciding where lines are drawn.