Trump-backed candidate forced into runoff in Georgia race to replace Greene, US media reports

Georgia Republican congressional candidate Clay Fuller greets supporters during his watch night party after Georgia held a special election to fill a seat in its 14th congressional district, which was left vacant when Republican Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene resigned in January, in Rome, Georgia, U.S. March 10, 2026.
(Reuters) – The election in Georgia to choose the successor to Republican firebrand Marjorie Taylor Greene in the U.S. House of Representatives ​will go to a runoff next month after no ‌candidate, including one backed by President Donald Trump, received a majority of the votes, AP News and NBC News projected on Tuesday.
Trump’s preferred candidate, former district ​attorney for four northwest Georgia counties Clay Fuller, faced fellow Republican ​Colton Moore, a hard-right former state senator and Shawn ⁠Harris, a moderate Democrat who sought to court disillusioned Trump ​voters, were seen as the top contenders in a field of ​17 candidates.

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The race has drawn outsized national attention following former U.S. Representative Greene’s abrupt departure in January after an acrimonious split with Trump, setting off a high-stakes ​contest over who should succeed one of the Make America ​Great Again movement’s most visible figures in Congress.
Georgia’s 14th Congressional District, a mostly ‌blue-collar ⁠corridor from Atlanta’s exurbs up to the Tennessee border, vaulted into the national spotlight after Greene swept to victory there in 2020, turning a reliably Republican seat into a closely watched barometer of ​the party’s populist ​wing.
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The contest is ⁠now being viewed as a test of Trump’s grip on his base ahead of the November general ​election. Fuller’s failure to secure an outright majority could ​signal ⁠some softening of that hold.
The winner of the special election will serve through the end of 2026 but must immediately campaign for the ⁠full ​two-year term starting January 2027, beginning with ​a May primary that could pit many of the same contenders against each other ​again.

Reporting by Nathan Layne in Wilton, Connecticut; Editing by Alistair Bell

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