Jones and Jackson Head to GOP Runoff for Georgia Governor
Jones and Jackson Advance to GOP Runoff for Georgia Governor

Lieutenant Governor Burt Jones and healthcare billionaire Rick Jackson have advanced to the June 16 Republican runoff for Georgia governor, extending a bruising campaign battle. President Donald Trump endorsed Jones last year, and a Jones win would boost Trump's influence in a critical battleground state. The president's kingmaker record in Georgia had been shaky, failing to dislodge Governor Brian Kemp and others in 2022 and backing Herschel Walker in a Senate loss that year.

The Republican nominee will try to hold onto the governor's office for the party, which has won every election to the post since 2002. Jackson is betting that his outside pitch will win over antiestablishment conservatives.

Democratic Primary for Governor

Democratic voters are also considering who should lead the party's effort to win the governor's office. The candidates include Keisha Lance Bottoms, the former Atlanta mayor; Geoff Duncan, a Republican-turned-Democrat who served as lieutenant governor; Jason Esteves, a former state senator; and Mike Thurmond, a former state labor commissioner. Bottoms hopes to win her party's nomination and avoid a runoff, having been endorsed by former President Joe Biden. She is the only Black woman in the Democratic field, which can be a powerful advantage in a state where Black women are the bedrock of the party.

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US Senate Race

Meanwhile, Georgia Republicans are looking for a challenger to Democratic U.S. Senator Jon Ossoff in Tuesday's primary. Representatives Mike Collins and Buddy Carter are playing up their conservative records on Capitol Hill, while former college football coach Derek Dooley pitches himself as a political outsider. Ossoff, 39, clinched his party's nomination for a second term on Tuesday night with no opposition in the primary. He is the only Democratic senator in the country seeking reelection this year in a state that Trump won in 2024, making his race one of the most closely watched in the country. He has positioned himself as a critic of political corruption, targeting Trump and his sons for business dealings that have enriched the first family.

Carter has attacked Collins over a House ethics complaint accusing him of abusing taxpayer funds by paying the girlfriend of a top aide for work she allegedly didn't perform. The Office of Congressional Conduct, after an initial inquiry, has referred the matter to the House Ethics Committee. Collins denies wrongdoing. Collins, who has deep ties with grassroots conservatives who propelled Trump, also emphasizes his work on immigration. He sponsored a 2025 law that requires immigrants be detained when charged with certain crimes. Republicans believe the issue damages Ossoff because he initially voted against the measure before supporting it after Trump's 2024 victory.

Spending in Governor's Race

More than $113 million has been spent on advertising in the Republican primary for governor, with more than $61 million of that spend on Jackson's campaign. By contrast, Democrats running for governor have only spent about $3 million. Jones argues that his conservative record as a state senator and lieutenant governor, combined with Trump's support, should make him the clear choice for Republican voters.

US House Primaries

Four of Georgia's 14 U.S. House districts are open, with Carter and Collins running for Senate, Republican U.S. Representative Barry Loudermilk stepping down, and Democrat David Scott's seat opening following his death in April. Scott's death scrambled the race in the majority-Black 13th District in Atlanta's southern and eastern suburbs. The Democratic field includes state Representative Jasmine Clark, who has raised the most money, and Gwinnett County school board Chair Everton Blair. In the 11th District northwest of Atlanta, Loudermilk endorsed staffer Rob Adkerson, who is challenged by neurologist John Cowan and Public Service Commissioner Tricia Pridemore. In the 10th District east of Atlanta, state Representative Houston Gaines is the top Republican seeking to succeed Collins. Jim Kingston, the son of longtime U.S. Representative Jack Kingston, is the top Republican to take Carter's seat in coastal Georgia's 1st District. In northeast Georgia's 9th District, three-term Republican incumbent Andrew Clyde is trying to fend off primary challenges from former Gainesville Mayor Sam Couvillon and Hall County Commissioner Gregg Poole.

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Judicial Elections

Tuesday is the general election for Georgia's judgeships. The posts are technically nonpartisan, but eight of the nine justices on the state Supreme Court were appointed by Republican governors. Democrats are supporting Miracle Rankin in her challenge to Justice Charlie Bethel. They hope a strong Democratic turnout could produce the first defeat of an incumbent justice since 1922. Justice Sarah Hawkins Warren won over Democrat-supported former state Senator Jen Jordan on Tuesday. A third justice, Ben Land, is unopposed for a six-year term. The state Judicial Qualifications Commission, which investigates allegations of wrongdoing by judges, said in statements dated Sunday that Jordan and Rankin violated rules of judicial conduct by publicly endorsing each other and making statements supporting the restoration of abortion rights. The commission said it reached its conclusions, which are not a final determination, after receiving and reviewing a complaint about each candidate. State Democratic Party Chair Charlie Bailey called the commission's statements "a cynical attempt by a mere bureaucratic arm of the Georgia Republican establishment to hide the truth about this race from Georgia voters."