Fuller wins Greene’s old seat

The election results in Georgia’s 14th Congressional District on Tuesday confirmed Republican Clay Fuller as the winner of the special election runoff — but the margin told a different story: Fuller defeated Democrat Shawn Harris by roughly 12 points in a district Donald Trump carried by 37 points just 18 months ago.

Summary

  • The Associated Press called the race after 8 p.m. with approximately 56% for Fuller and 44% for Harris; the race only fills the remainder of Greene’s term through January 2027, meaning both candidates have already qualified for the May 19 primary to compete for a full two-year term
  • Fuller, a district attorney and Air National Guard lieutenant colonel, received Trump’s endorsement in February and ran a campaign of total alignment with the president on every issue including the Iran war; Harris, a retired Army brigadier general and cattle farmer, raised $6.4 million and positioned himself as a “dirt-road Democrat”
  • Harris won slightly more votes than Fuller in the March 10 all-party primary, when the Republican field was split among 17 candidates; his 2024 result was 35% against Greene — his 44% Tuesday marks the Democrats’ strongest showing in the 14th district in recent memory and a 17-point swing from 2024

As PBS NewsHour reported, Harris drew national Democratic figures including Pete Buttigieg to campaign in northwest Georgia — an extraordinary investment in a district rated by the Cook Political Report as the most Republican in the state. Greene resigned in January after falling out with Trump over his handling of the Epstein files. Fuller backed Trump on every issue at a March 23 debate, and the president made his support visible with a February rally at Coosa Steel in Rome, Georgia.

The headline result is a Republican hold. Fuller will be sworn in and will vote with the GOP caucus, giving Speaker Mike Johnson a slightly larger margin — important for a speaker who can only afford to lose one vote on party-line legislation. But the underlying math is what the Democratic Party has seized on. Charlie Bailey, chair of the Georgia Democratic Party, called Harris’s performance “a jaw-dropping overperformance in Marjorie Taylor Greene’s backyard.” Whereas Greene won by nearly 29 points in 2024, Fuller won by approximately 12. That is a 17-point shift in a single cycle, in a district where Republicans outperform the national average by 19 points. Harris told supporters after the result: “Tonight, we start campaigning for November.”

What Fuller’s Win Means for House Republicans

Fuller’s arrival adds one reliable vote for Republican priorities in a chamber where the majority is functionally one or two seats. The full-term primary on May 19 means Fuller faces a new Republican field immediately — six other Republicans have qualified — before he must campaign against Harris again in November. That compressed timeline makes the 14th district a repeated test of whether Trump’s direct endorsement continues to be the decisive factor it was Tuesday.

What Harris’s Performance Means for the November Midterms

The same-night results from Wisconsin — where a Democratic Supreme Court candidate won by 20 points in a low-stakes race — added context to the Georgia margin. Both results, in different states and different contests, pointed to Democratic enthusiasm running ahead of what 2024 results would predict. As crypto.news has reported, the composition of the House after November directly determines the pace of US crypto regulatory implementation, including GENIUS Act rulemaking deadlines. As crypto.news has noted, a narrower Republican House majority — or a Democratic flip — would materially change the landscape for stablecoin legislation, market structure bills, and the broader digital asset regulatory agenda that has advanced through the current Congress.

Share with your friends!

Products You May Like

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Please enter CoinGecko Free Api Key to get this plugin works.