On January 6, We Triumphed and Imploded. What Comes Next? Biden’s inauguration and the swearing in of our new Democratic senators is not the postscript to a revolution; it's just our last chance to pull ourselves from the wreckage. Jan 20 2021, 11:00 am EST Two days before Georgia’s runoff election at an intersection 35 miles north of Atlanta, 20 South Asians, myself included, waved campaign signs for Democratic Senate candidates Jon Ossoff and Reverend Raphael Warnock, as well as Daniel Blackman, candidate for Public Service Commission. Members of our organization, They See Blue Georgia, spent the previous two months pulling out all the stops to reach South Asian voters: We erected campaign signs near polling places where South Asians voted, passed out campaign literature specific to the South Asian community, knocked on doors, wrote postcards, and phone-banked in English and four South Asian languages. We jumped from one voter outreach method to another, searching for every possible needle in a haystack—the voter who didn’t know their precinct, the voter who wasn’t sure whether they were registered to vote, the voter who may not have known where to drop off their absentee ballot. We invested a significant amount of our energy in Forsyth County, a Republican stronghold notorious for its racist history that also has one of the fastest-growing Asian-American and Pacific Islander populations in the country.