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Georgia’s special election will quietly test how deep Trumpism still runs

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These races will show whether Trump-aligned candidates remain the default on the right or whether 2024 losses finally made electability matter again to Republican voters. According to The New York Times, more than a dozen candidates are vying to replace Marjorie Taylor Greene in a special election with Republicans and Democrats on the same ballot. The election in Georgia’s 14th Congressional District, held March 10, 2026, is a quiet test. The district voted overwhelmingly for Trump in 2020 and 2024. Greene resigned after a public falling out with Trump. Now the question is whether voters in the most Republican-leaning district in Georgia still want a MAGA warrior or someone who can actually win.

The race is a referendum on Trump’s endorsement power in deep-red territory

Trump endorsed Clay Fuller, a district attorney and Air National Guard officer. As the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported, Trump’s endorsement faces a crowded test. More than a dozen candidates, mostly Republicans, are competing, many claiming to be Trump’s strongest local ally. Fuller had the second-largest fundraising haul as of mid-February, with $2.3 million raised. But Republican rival Colton Moore, a former state senator who positions himself as Trump’s No. 1 defender, finished first in a recent straw poll with 85 votes to Fuller’s 37. University of Georgia political scientist Trey Hood said Trump’s endorsement may make a difference, but the race is also an identity check for local Republicans.

Greene resigned in January 2026 after tensions escalated when she pushed for the release of documents related to Jeffrey Epstein and criticised Trump’s foreign policy. Trump said he would support a primary challenge against her. As AP News reported, Governor Brian Kemp set the special election for March 10. If no candidate wins a majority, the top two finishers advance to a runoff on April 7. The district stretches from Atlanta’s suburbs through 10 counties to the Tennessee border. It is the most Republican-leaning in the state.

Democrat Shawn Harris, a retired Army brigadier general, leads all candidates in fundraising with $4.3 million raised and represents the party’s best hope. As NPR reported, an upset is not out of the question. Despite the district being solidly Republican, Trump won it with 68 percent in 2024, Democrats have been outperforming their 2024 performance by an average of 14 points across recent special elections. A strong Democratic showing would embarrass Republicans even if they hold the seat. Republicans hold a slender House majority, and any Democratic gains would further narrow their control.

The last time this happened, electability lost

In a Georgia state Senate special election runoff held in September 2025, Republican Jason Dickerson defeated Democrat Debra Shigley. Shigley had drawn national attention by winning 40 percent of the vote in the August special election in a heavily Republican district. The seat had previously been won by Republican Brandon Beach in 2024 with over 70 percent. As Georgia Public Broadcasting reported, the stronger-than-expected Democratic performance in low-turnout special elections suggested a potential Democratic wave heading into 2026. But the Republican still won the runoff.

The pattern in deep-red districts has been that Trump-aligned candidates dominate the primary, and electability arguments rarely sway base voters. As the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported, Trump won Georgia in 2024 with a 115,100-vote margin, driven by strong Republican voter consolidation. Trump received 88 percent support from the 2.4 million Georgia voters who cast straight Republican tickets. The question now is whether Greene’s downfall and the crowded field have created an opening for voters to ask: do we want the most Trumpy candidate, or the one most likely to win?

Georgia Republicans have largely remained aligned with Trump one year into his second term. The state GOP has spent more than $1.7 million on legal fees linked to Trump’s court fights. Governor Brian Kemp has notably steered clear of the Georgia GOP, instead boosting his own political organisation to support legislative and local candidates from the bottom up. The special election sits at the intersection of these tensions: party loyalty to Trump versus the practical need to hold the seat.

What This Actually Means

Georgia’s special election will quietly test how deep Trumpism still runs. If Fuller wins with Trump’s endorsement, it confirms that in the most Republican district in Georgia, the MAGA brand still carries the day. If Moore or another anti-establishment Republican beats Fuller despite the endorsement, it suggests that even in Trump country, local mavericks can outflank the anointed candidate. If Harris forces a runoff or wins outright, it would signal that 2024 losses and Democratic overperformance have made electability matter again. The race is a pattern match: the last time a deep-red Georgia seat opened up, the Republican won. This time, the variables have changed. Greene is gone. The field is crowded. And Democrats are betting that suburban fatigue with chaos might finally outweigh tribal loyalty.

Background

What is Georgia’s 14th Congressional District? The 14th District in northwest Georgia is the most Republican-leaning in the state. It stretches from Atlanta’s suburbs through 10 counties to the Tennessee border. It voted overwhelmingly for Trump in both 2020 and 2024. Marjorie Taylor Greene represented the district from 2021 until her resignation in January 2026.

Who is Marjorie Taylor Greene? Marjorie Taylor Greene is a Republican who served in the US House from Georgia’s 14th District. She was initially a strong Trump ally but resigned in January 2026 after a public falling out with Trump over Epstein documents, foreign policy, and healthcare. Trump said he would support a primary challenge against her.

Sources

The New York Times, AP News, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, NPR, Georgia Public Broadcasting

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