WASHINGTON - Georgia Republicans selected US Representative Mike Collins as their US Senate nominee on June 16, according to US media, choosing President Donald Trump’s preferred candidate in a runoff over political outsider Derek Dooley.
Collins will face Jon Ossoff, a potential Democratic presidential candidate in 2028 and the only incumbent Senate Democrat up for reelection in a state that Trump won in 2024.
Trump endorsed Collins, who finished first in the May 19 primary, over the weekend.
Trump called Collins a “WARRIOR and WINNER” who supported the president “from the very beginning”. Governor Brian Kemp had endorsed Dooley, a former college football coach.
Republicans hold a 53-47 majority in the Senate but have limited opportunities to win additional seats.
Their top targets are Georgia and Michigan, two states the president narrowly won. But they have a tall task in unseating Ossoff.
Charles Bullock, a political science professor at the University of Georgia, said while Ossoff is more liberal than most Georgia voters, his office has a strong constituent services operation and he spends a lot of time in the state.
“Even Republican campaign consultants, activists like that, that I talk to are pretty much willing to concede that, yeah, Ossoff’s going to be able to hold this seat,” he said.
Ossoff has raised US$60 million (S$76.8 million) and reported entering May with nearly US$33 million on hand.
He is currently favored to win reelection, according to political prognosticators.
Collins has raised US$4.9 million through May 27 with US$1.2 million on hand.
The Democratic Senate Majority PAC has reserved US$20 million in TV advertising in Georgia, and the Republican Senate Leadership Fund has pledged to invest US$44 million into flipping the seat.
Democrats would need to net four seats in November’s midterm elections to win control of the Senate.
Sabato’s Crystal Ball, a newsletter that makes electoral projections, shifted three states toward Democrats last week, moving North Carolina’s open seat to lean Democratic and Republican-leaning Alaska and Ohio to toss-ups.
Democrats have strong candidates in each of those states: former North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper, former Representative Mary Peltola of Alaska and former Senator Sherrod Brown of Ohio.
Their candidacies are buoyed by Trump’s low approval rating and concerns over the high cost of living, heightened by the US-Israel war with Iran.
Senator Susan Collins of Maine is the most vulnerable incumbent Republican, representing a state that Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris won by nearly 7 percentage points in 2024.
She will face progressive oysterman Graham Platner, who overcame several controversies to win the Democratic nomination.
Democrats believe they have also expanded the map of competitive states to include Iowa and Texas, where Democratic voters nominated state Representative Josh Turek, a paralympian, and state Representative James Talarico, a Presbyterian seminarian. In 2024, Trump won Iowa by 13 percentage points and Texas by 14 points. REUTERS
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