All political roads lead to Rome. Rome, Georgia, that is.
Or at least they will on Tuesday, when voters in Georgia’s 14th Congressional District will elect a replacement for former Republican U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, who resigned in January following a public rift with President Donald Trump.
Republicans hold a slender majority in the chamber, and a Democratic upset in a district Trump carried with 68% of the vote in 2024 would tighten the GOP margin even further.
A crowded field of 22 candidates initially filed to run for the vacant U.S. House seat, but that number fell to 17 active contenders after a handful of withdrawals from the race. All candidates will compete on the same ballot regardless of political affiliation. If no candidate receives a majority of votes, the top two vote-getters will advance to an April 7 runoff.
Among the 12 Republicans competing in the Special Election are Clay Fuller, a state district attorney who has Trump’s endorsement, and former state Sen. Colton Moore.
Three Democrats are also vying for the seat, including Shawn Harris, a retired Army brigadier general who challenged Greene in 2024. Harris eclipsed the rest of the multi-party field in fundraising as of Feb. 18, with about $4.3 million raised and about $290,000 in the bank. Fuller had the second-largest war chest, with about $238,000 in the bank. He had raised about $787,000 over the course of the campaign.
The 14th Congressional District, in the northwest corner of Georgia, borders Alabama and Tennessee. It spans 10 counties, with Paulding the most populous, followed by a portion of Cobb. It is home to the cities of Rome, Dalton, Acworth and parts of Kennesaw.
Harris received about 36% of the district vote in his 2024 bid. His best performance was in Cobb, where he received about 49%, compared with 51% for Greene. He received about 41% of the vote in Paulding County, his second-best showing.
Greene received about 63% districtwide, with her best showing in Murray County.

