Georgia will elect one U.S. Senator and 14 members of its U.S. House delegation.
Senator Jon Ossoff (D) is seeking reelection. The Georgia U.S. Senate race is considered to be one of the most competitive in the 2026 cycle. Ossoff has raised $37.6M for his reelection. Three Republican men reported campaign finance data to challenge Ossoff, with Earl Carter raising the most (with nearly $4.7M). Sixty-four percent of Ossoff’s contributions are from small contributions.
Six Republican men and two Republican women have campaign finance data in GA-1, rated “Solid Republican” by The Cook Political Report. James Kingston leads the money race with almost $1.5M. In GA-10, another open seat considered solidly Republican, Houston Gaines leads the money race with over $1.4M. There were no campaign finance data available for Republican women. [Shortly after the campaign finance filing deadline, Republican Representative Barry Loudermilk (R) (GA-11) announced his retirement from Congress. He is not included in this analysis.]
More men than women have reported campaign finance data for Georgia’s open U.S. House seats. The average raised by Democratic women is higher than the average for Democratic men; the reverse is true for Republican candidates.
Two Democratic women are seeking reelection to the U.S. House: Representative Nikema Williams (GA-5) and Lucy McBath (GA-6). The average raised for the two women ($214,044) is higher than the average for the three Democratic men seeking reelection ($150,657). No Republican women incumbents are running for reelection, given that Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene resigned from Congress; she had represented GA-14. [GA-14, which is a special election, is not included in this analysis.]
In open-seat races, self-financing is playing the largest role for Republican men; on average, 38% of their funds are from self-financing.
Republican women running in open seats in Georgia have a higher average proportion of funds from small contributors (22%) than Republican men (4%).
This statistic is the average total amount raised to date from individuals (including self-financing).
This statistic is the average amount from self-financing as a proportion of total raised (from individuals including the candidate) by candidate subgroup. Primary challengers to incumbents are excluded.
This statistic is the average amount of contributions $200 or less as a proportion of total raised (excluding self-financed contributions) by candidate subgroup.