ATLANTA – Every member of Georgia’s congressional delegation running for reelection this year will face at least one opponent.
But as Qualifying Week at the state Capitol ended on Friday, the most interesting congressional race will be for the only open seat in the 14-member delegation. With U.S. Rep. Drew Ferguson, R-West Point, leaving office, seven Republicans had signed up to run in the heavily Republican 3rd Congressional District when the qualifying deadline fell at noon.
The list includes several former state legislators: former state Sens. Mike Dugan of Carrollton, who served as Senate majority leader for three two-year terms; former Sen. Mike Crane of Newnan, who served two terms and part of a third in the state Senate, and former state Rep. Philip Singleton, also from Newnan, who was elected in 2019 but fell victim to legislative redistricting in 2021.
While 10 of the 13 congressional incumbents seeking reelection will not face a primary challenge, three others will have win party primaries on May 21 to advance to the general election in November.
Rep. Lucy McBath, D-Marietta, who is running for another two-year term in the newly redrawn 6th Congressional District, is being challenged for the Democratic nomination by Cobb County Commissioner Jerica Richardson and state Rep. Mandisha Thomas of South Fulton. In the 11th Congressional District, Rep. Barry Loudermilk, R-Cassville, will face two challengers in the Republican primary.
But the congressional incumbent facing the most opponents from inside his party is Rep. David Scott, D-Atlanta. Scott’s 13th District – like McBath’s 6th District – was significantly redrawn by the General Assembly’s Republican majorities late last year, leaving him with a lot of new constituents.
Six Democrats qualified this week to challenge Scott in the upcoming primary, including Marcus Flowers, the Democrat who ran unsuccessfully against Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Rome, in 2022.
Unlike the congressional landscape, where every incumbent is being opposed in a party primary and/or the general election, 26 incumbent state senators will get to relax during this election year because they didn’t draw any opposition.
Sixteen Republican state senators and 10 Democrats skated through Qualifying Week unchallenged and, thus, have automatically won another two-year term under the Gold Dome.
Four of the 56 Georgia Senate seats are being vacated by incumbents deciding not to seek reelection. Republican Sen. Shelly Echols of Gainesville, who chaired the Senate redistricting committee that redrew the Senate maps last year, announced Friday that she is leaving office after serving a single term.
Longtime Democratic Sens. Horacena Tate of Atlanta, who has missed this year’s legislative session due to illness, and Valencia Seay of Riverdale also did not qualify to seek reelection this week. Senate Minority Leader Gloria Butler, D-Stone Mountain, announced late last month that she will leave office this year.
The three open Democratic state Senate seats drew a flurry of interest from Democrats this week. Eighteen Democrats qualified to seek those seats, including former Rep. Randall Mangham, who is running to succeed Butler.
Nadine Thomas, another former Democratic lawmaker who left the Senate way back in 2005, qualified in Senate District 44, where she will take on incumbent Sen. Elena Parent, D-Atlanta, in the Democratic primary. The new Senate map moved Parent’s district east and south to include part of Clayton County, where Thomas lives.
In the Georgia House, eight incumbents have opted not to seek reelection. The most prominent departure is that of House Minority Leader James Beverly, D-Macon. Other Democrats leaving office at the end of this year include Reps. Pedro “Pete” Marin of Duluth, Gloria Frazier of Hephzibah, Gregg Kinnard of Lawrenceville, and Doug Stoner of Smyrna.
On the Republican side, the retirees include Reps. Penny Houston of Nashville, Clay Pirkle of Ashburn, and David Knight of Griffin.
Two Democratic House members – Reps. Becky Evans and Saira Draper of Atlanta – will face off in the Democratic primary after being put inside the same House district during the redistricting session.
Not surprisingly, House Speaker Jon Burns, R-Newington, qualified to run for reelection unopposed.
AT A GLANCE
Here is the list of candidates who qualified for congressional seats this week:
District 1
Republican
U.S. Rep. Buddy Carter*
Democrat
Patti Hewitt
District 2
Republican
Chuck Hand
Wayne Johnson
Regina “Reggie” Liparato
Michael Nixon
Democrat
U.S. Rep. Sanford Bishop*
District 3
Republican
Jim Bennett
Ray Blair
Michael Corbin
Mike Crane
Mike Dugan
Brian Jack
Philip Singleton
Democrat
Val Almonord
Maura Keller
District 4
Republican
Eugene Yu
Democrat
U.S. Rep. Hank Johnson*
District 5
Republican
John “Bongo” Salvesen
Democrat
U.S. Rep. Nikema Williams*
District 6
Republican
Jeff Criswell
Democrat
U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath*
Jerica Richardson
Mandisha Thomas
District 7
Republican
U.S. Rep. Rich McCormick*
Democrat
Bob Christian
District 8
Republican
U.S. Rep. Austin Scott*
Democrat
Darrius Maurice Butler
Vince Watkins
District 9
Republican
U.S. Rep. Andrew Clyde*
Democrat
Tambrei Cash
District 10
Republican
U.S. Rep. Mike Collins*
Democrat
Alexandra “Lexy” Doherty
Jessica Fore
District 11
Republican
U.S. Rep. Barry Loudermilk*
Lori Pesta
Mike Pons
Democrat
Antonio Daza
Katy Stamper
District 12
Republican
U.S. Rep. Rick Allen*
Democrat
Daniel “DJ” Jackson
Liz Johnson
District 13
Republican
Jonathan Chavez
Johsie Cruz Fletcher
Democrat
Mark Baker
Marcus Flowers
Brian Johnson
Uloma Kama
Rashid Malik
Karen Rene
U.S. Rep. David Scott*
District 14
Republican
U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene*
Democrat
Clarence Blalock
Shawn General Harris
Deric Houston
Joseph Leigh
*denotes incumbent