By Tony Bruce | Tuesday June 30 2026 | 5 min read
Sen. Jon Ossoff turned a campaign rally in Savannah into a sweeping indictment of President Donald Trump, Republican leadership, and what he described as a political system consumed by corruption. The “Day of R.A.G.E.“—short for Restore America, Guard Elections—is a phrase I coined to describe what I believe is a growing movement demanding government accountability, election integrity, and resistance to political corruption.—Ossoff argued that the United States is confronting something far more dangerous than partisan politics: a culture where power, money, and political loyalty increasingly outweigh accountability.
Speaking to an energized crowd, Ossoff mixed humor with sharp political attacks, opening with a jab at Trump’s troubled White House reflecting pool renovation.
“The president was so humiliated… he threw his toys out the stroller,” Ossoff quipped, referring to Trump’s reported refusal to sign an affordable housing bill after criticism surrounding the project. He accused the administration of awarding a no-bid contract for the renovation, only for the project to become plagued by algae and require an unusual security response.
But for Ossoff, the reflecting pool was only a symbol of a much larger problem.
“Political Corruption Has Become the Business Model”
Throughout his speech, Ossoff repeatedly argued that corruption has become institutionalized in Washington.
He accused the Trump administration of rewarding political allies while ordinary Americans face rising grocery prices, higher rents, expensive healthcare, and economic uncertainty. According to Jon Ossoff, promises to reduce inflation and lower costs have instead given way to policies that primarily benefit wealthy donors and large corporations.
He pointed to healthcare as one of the clearest examples, criticizing Republican-backed policies that he said increased insurance costs and left hundreds of thousands of Georgians without coverage while delivering tax cuts that disproportionately benefited affluent Americans. Jon Ossoff recounted hearing from a Georgia woman undergoing chemotherapy who feared losing her health insurance in the middle of treatment, describing stories like hers as evidence that political decisions have real human consequences.
Kushner and Foreign Business Deals Become Central Target
One of Ossoff’s strongest lines of attack focused on Jared Kushner.
He criticized Kushner’s overseas investment activities, including his proposed luxury resort development on Albania’s Sazan Island and his investment firm’s financial backing from Saudi Arabia. Ossoff questioned whether Kushner would have received favorable treatment abroad if he were not the president’s son-in-law, arguing that the appearance of conflicts of interest damages America’s credibility overseas.
He broadened the criticism beyond Kushner, accusing members of Trump’s circle of using public office and political influence for private financial gain.
“They are literally the elites they pretend to hate,” Ossoff declared.
Sharp Attacks on Mike Collins
Ossoff devoted a significant portion of his remarks to Georgia Congressman Mike Collins, his likely Republican opponent.
He criticized Collins over staffing decisions, highlighting allegations involving former aides and ongoing federal investigations referenced during the speech. Ossoff also accused Collins of tolerating extremist associations within his political operation and argued that Republican criticism of Collins demonstrates concerns extending beyond Democratic politics.
Those allegations remain politically contested, and no court has determined Collins’ legal liability regarding the matters Ossoff referenced.
“American Politics Is Coin-Operated”
Perhaps the most memorable line of the evening came when Ossoff broadened his criticism beyond Trump.
“American politics is coin-operated,” he said. “Money goes in, favors come out.”
Rather than portraying Trump as the sole cause of America’s political problems, Ossoff argued that Trump’s rise reflects a deeper system distorted by unlimited political spending, wealthy donors, and special interests.
He singled out the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision, calling it one of the most damaging rulings in modern American history and pledging to support a constitutional amendment to overturn it. In Ossoff’s view, secret money and billionaire influence have weakened public trust and shifted government away from ordinary citizens.
Healthcare and Cost of Living Take Center Stage
Beyond ethics, Ossoff returned repeatedly to bread-and-butter concerns.
He criticized Georgia leaders for refusing Medicaid expansion while hospitals continue closing across the state. He argued that higher premiums, shrinking healthcare access, and hospital closures are political choices rather than unavoidable economic realities.
Quoting civil rights leader Marian Wright Edelman, Ossoff said America does not suffer from a shortage of resources but from “a profound values and priorities problem,” insisting that government decisions should place working families ahead of political donors.
Democracy, Not Personality
Ossoff ended on a broader appeal about democracy itself.
Invoking the legacy of the late Congressman John Lewis, he argued that America’s strength comes from shared democratic values rather than ethnicity, wealth, or political power. He warned against concentrating authority in any one leader and accused Trump of pursuing power beyond constitutional limits.
Referencing Georgia’s pivotal role in recent elections, Jon Ossoff urged supporters to reject what he characterized as authoritarian tendencies through the ballot box rather than political violence or division.
His closing message drew one of the night’s loudest ovations.
“Georgia will bow to no king,” Jon Ossoff declared, framing the upcoming election as a test not simply of party control but of democratic accountability itself.
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