Tyler Perry.Photo: Prince Williams/Wireimage

Tyler Perry

Tyler Perryis making his vote count!

On Tuesday, the 51-year-old multihyphenate star revealed that he flew back to Georgia to vote in the Senate race after his absentee ballot failed to arrive in the mail.

On Monday, Perry tweeted that he never received his mail-in ballot. “Is anyone else having this problem? I ordered my absentee ballot on December 2nd. I’m told it was mailed on the 4th. I still don’t have it!” hewrote on Twitter.

Stacey Abrams, a former candidate for governor in Georgia, responded to the actor’s call for help and noted that he could still vote in person. “Vote in person on Election Day!” shewroteback. “Just tell the person at the check-in table that you wish to cancel your ballot & vote in person.”

TheMadeastar then told Abrams he flew back to Georgia earlier this week in order to cast his vote,saying that the electionwas “too important to miss.” In a follow-up, Perry showed off his voter sticker, and said in ashort clip,“Get out and vote, get out and vote, get out and vote, get out and vote.”

On Wednesday morning, Rev. Raphael Warnock was projected as the victor over Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler in one of Georgia’s close Senate runoff elections, according tomultiple outlets— giving the Democratic Party one more seat in Congress.

Warnock, 51, will make history as the first Black senator elected from Georgia. Loeffler, 50, has not conceded andaddressed supporters in a speech overnight, stating, “We have a path to victory, and we’re staying on it.”

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A record-breaking three million people voted early amid the ongoingnovel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, the Associated Pressreported, while final ballots were cast in person on Tuesday.

RELATED VIDEO: Tyler Perry Speaks from the Heart About Racial Injustice and the World He Wants for His Son

Last year, in adeeply personal and powerful first-person essay for PEOPLEin June, Perry wrote about hope and his vision for the future of America.

“I initially said no, and that was strange for me because I’m a man of faith and I believe greatly in hope,” Perry said at the time. “My reluctance wasn’t because I didn’t think it was important, and certainly not that I’m not outraged at the murder ofGeorge Floydand so many others. It was simply because I was exhausted.”

“I’m exhausted from all the hate and the division, the vitriol that I see online from one to another,” he continued. “I’m exhausted from seeing these kinds of senseless murders play out over and over again with no changes in our society.”

“The level of racism and brutality that George Floyd faced is something that we as black people know all too well. When I saw that video, I had so many raw, guttural emotions. I felt for him and his family, I felt for all of us as black people, I felt for my five-year-old son,” he added. “As I watched with tears in my eyes, it brought back a flood of years of emotions from carrying what feels like the weight of racism on my neck.”

Channeling his emotions, Perry noted, “I dried my eyes and put pen to paper for not only myself, not only for hope, but for morning to come for the millions of us who just want to be treated fairly, for those of us who want justice for all, and for my five-year-old son.”

source: people.com