The Associated Press says they obtained a letter and strategy memo from Stacey Abrams, the former Democratic minority leader of the Georgia House of Representatives. The letter and memo were sent to top Democratic presidential candidates, national party committees, and key strategists on Monday.

In the memo, Abrams tasks the party with maintaining efforts in 2018 to bring new minority and young voters to the polls, rather than chasing white voters who left the party to vote for Trump. Abrams asks the party to place more of an emphasis on groups not placed into polling populations.

“Democratic committees, consultants, and the media do not factor unlikely voters into their polling, strategy, and prognostications, effectively making their analyses by re-litigating the prior election as if nothing had changed in the electorate since,” Abrams wrote. "We can win Georgia and we can win across the nation in 2020.”

Many Democratic strategists have argued over the best path forward for the party, with some wanting to win back moderate white voters in the Midwest and others looking to put Georgia and other Sun Belt states in play by appealing to black voters and college-educated suburban women.

“Democrats, let’s do better and go big,” Abrams wrote, arguing her historic bid to be the first black woman governor in U.S. history wasn’t the sole driver of her near-win. “I am not the only candidate who can create a coalition and a strategy to win this state."

Abrams has spent the past few months preparing communities throughout the state of Georgia for the upcoming census. Attempting to work with minority communities — which are regularly undercounted leading to a lack of resources in those communities.

“Georgians risk missing out on critical federal dollars, business opportunities and may suffer unfair or inaccurate redistricting if we don’t get this count done correctly,” said Fair Count Chair and State Rep. Carolyn Hugley (D- GA), to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

An Associated Press analysis came to the conclusion that in the primary process black voters will be a key to whoever can end up on top.