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2020–21 United States Senate election in Georgia

The 2020–21 United States Senate election in Georgia was held on November 3, 2020, and on January 5, 2021 (as a runoff), to elect the Class II member of the United States Senate to represent the State of Georgia. Democrat Jon Ossoff defeated incumbent Republican Senator David Perdue in the runoff election. The general election was held concurrently with the 2020 presidential election, as well as with other elections to the Senate, elections to the U.S. House of Representatives and various state and local elections.

2020–21 United States Senate election in Georgia

← 2014 November 3, 2020 (first round)
January 5, 2021 (runoff)
2026 →
Turnout65.4% (first round)
61.5% (runoff)
 
Candidate Jon Ossoff David Perdue
Party Democratic Republican
First round 2,374,519
47.9%
2,462,617
49.7%
Runoff 2,269,923
50.6%
2,214,979
49.4%

Perdue:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%      >90%
Ossoff:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%

U.S. senator before election

David Perdue
Republican

Elected U.S. Senator

Jon Ossoff
Democratic

No candidate received a majority of the vote during the general election on November 3, so the top two finishers—Perdue (49.7%) and Ossoff (47.9%)—advanced to a runoff election, held on January 5, 2021. The runoff was held concurrently with the special election for Georgia's other U.S. Senate seat (which had also advanced to a runoff), in which Republican incumbent Kelly Loeffler lost to Democratic nominee Raphael Warnock. After the general round of elections, Republicans held 50 Senate seats and the Democratic caucus 48 (including two independents who caucus with them). As a result, the two runoffs decided control of the Senate under the incoming Biden administration. By winning both seats, Democrats took control of the chamber, with Vice President Kamala Harris's tie-breaking vote giving them an effective majority. The extraordinarily high political stakes caused the races to attract significant attention nationwide and globally. On January 6, 2021, most major news outlets projected Ossoff the winner, in the midst of the US Capitol riot.[1][2] Perdue conceded the race on January 8.[3][4] According to OpenSecrets, this campaign was the most expensive in U.S. Senate history, with over $468 million spent.[5] Ossoff's victory, along with Warnock's, gave the Democrats control of the Senate for the first time since 2015. Ossoff and Warnock became the first Democrats to be elected to the U.S. Senate from Georgia since Zell Miller in the 2000 special election.

Ossoff became the first Democrat elected to a full term in the Senate from Georgia since Max Cleland, who held this seat from 1997 to 2003, and the first Jewish member of the Senate from the state.[6] Ossoff became the youngest senator since Don Nickles won in 1980, and the youngest Democrat since Joe Biden won in 1972. Georgia election officials certified Ossoff's victory on January 19, 2021; he was sworn in on January 20.[7] Ossoff is the first Jewish senator from the Deep South since Benjamin F. Jonas of Louisiana, who was elected in 1878, and the first millennial United States senator. This election and the special election both mark the first time since 1994 that both Senate seats in a state have flipped from one party to the other in a single election cycle. This was the first time the Democrats achieved this since West Virginia's 1958 Senate elections. With a margin of 1.2%, this election was also the closest race of the 2020 Senate election cycle.

Republican primary

Candidates

Nominee

Withdrawn

Declined

Results

Republican primary results, June 9, 2020[13]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican David Perdue (incumbent) 992,555 100.00%
Total votes 992,555 100.00%

Democratic primary

Candidates

Nominee

Eliminated in primary

Withdrew

Declined

Polling

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin
of error
Sarah Riggs
Amico
Jon
Ossoff
Teresa
Tomlinson
Other Undecided
Landmark Communications June 1, 2020 500 (LV) ± 4.4% 9% 42% 14% 7%[a] 28%
Cygnal (R) May 28–30, 2020 510 (LV) ± 4.3% 8% 49% 16% 4%[b] 24%
The Progress Campaign (D) May 6–15, 2020 1,162 (LV) 9% 46% 29% 16%[c]
The Progress Campaign (D) March 12–21, 2020 913 (RV) ± 4.6% 18% 34% 21% 27%[d]
University of Georgia March 4–14, 2020 807 (LV) ± 3.4% 15% 31% 16% 39%

Head-to-head polling

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin
of error
Jon
Ossoff
Teresa
Tomlinson
Undecided
Cygnal (R) May 28–30, 2020 510 (LV) ± 4.3% 58% 24% 18%

Endorsements

Teresa Tomlinson
Federal officials
State officials
Local officials
Individuals
Organizations

Results

 
County results
  Ossoff
  •   Ossoff—60–70%
  •   Ossoff—50–60%
  •   Ossoff—40–50%
  •   Ossoff—30–40%
  •   Ossoff—<30%
  Ossoff/Riggs Amico tie
  •   Ossoff/Riggs Amico tie—<30%
  Tomlinson
  •   Tomlinson—60-70%
  •   Tomlinson—50-60%
  •   Tomlinson—40-50%
  •   Tomlinson—30-40%
  •   Tomlinson—<30%
  Riggs Amico
  •   Riggs Amico—30-40%
  •   Riggs Amico—<30%
  Smith
  •   Smith—30-40%
  •   Smith—<30%
  Knox
  •   Knox—<30%

Almost four times as many Georgia voters participated in the 2020 Democratic Senate primary as in the 2016 Democratic Senate primary, when only 310,053 votes were cast.[48]

Democratic primary results, June 9, 2020[49]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Jon Ossoff 626,819 52.82%
Democratic Teresa Tomlinson 187,416 15.79%
Democratic Sarah Riggs Amico 139,574 11.76%
Democratic Maya Dillard-Smith 105,000 8.85%
Democratic James Knox 49,452 4.17%
Democratic Marckeith DeJesus 45,936 3.87%
Democratic Tricia Carpenter McCracken 32,463 2.74%
Total votes 1,186,660 100.00%

Other candidates

 
Hazel in 2018

Libertarian Party

Nominee

Independents

Withdrawn

Debates

The first debate between Hazel, Ossoff, and Perdue occurred virtually[57] on October 12.[58]

A second debate between Ossoff and Perdue, held on October 28[e] in Savannah and aired on television station WTOC-TV,[59] was more heated and made national headlines, with Ossoff saying that Perdue had claimed "COVID-19 was no deadlier than the flu", was "looking after [his] own assets, and ... portfolio", and that Perdue voted "four times to end protections for preexisting conditions".[60] Ossoff also called Perdue a "crook" and criticized him for "attacking the health of the people that [he] represent[s]".[61] Perdue said Ossoff will "say and do anything to my friends in Georgia to mislead them about how radical and socialist" his agenda is.[62] Video of the exchange went viral.[57][61]

The next day, October 29, Perdue said he would not attend the third and final debate, previously scheduled to be broadcast on WSB-TV on November 1; instead Perdue decided to attend a rally with President Trump in Rome on the same day[63]—"as lovely as another debate listening to Jon Ossoff lie to the people of Georgia sounds",[62] according to a Perdue spokesman.

On December 6, Ossoff debated an empty podium as Perdue declined to participate in a Georgia Public Broadcasting-held debate.[64] Ossoff criticized Perdue's absence, accusing him of skipping the event because of the negative response to his performance in the October debates.

General election

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
DDHQ[65] Tossup November 3, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[66] Tossup November 2, 2020
Inside Elections[67] Tossup October 28, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[68] Tossup November 2, 2020
RCP[69] Tossup October 23, 2020
The Cook Political Report[70] Tossup October 29, 2020
Economist[71] Tossup November 2, 2020
Politico[72] Tossup November 2, 2020
Daily Kos[73] Tossup October 30, 2020

Endorsements

David Perdue (R)
U.S. executive branch officials
U.S. senators
State officials
Organizations
Jon Ossoff (D)
U.S. executive branch officials
U.S. Senators
U.S. representatives
State legislators
State officials
Local officials
Organizations
Unions
Individuals

Polling

Graphical summary

Aggregate polls

Source of poll
aggregation
Dates
administered
Dates
updated
David
Perdue

Republican
Jon
Ossoff

Democratic
Other/
Undecided
[f]
Margin
270 To Win November 2, 2020 November 3, 2020 46.2% 47.4% 6.4% Ossoff +1.2
Real Clear Politics November 1, 2020 November 3, 2020 46.3% 47.0% 6.7% Ossoff +0.7
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[g]
Margin
of error
David
Perdue (R)
Jon
Ossoff (D)
Shane
Hazel (L)
Other /
Undecided
Landmark Communications November 1, 2020 500 (LV) ± 4.4% 49% 47% 3% 1%[h]
Swayable November 13, 2020, at the Wayback Machine October 27 – November 1, 2020 407 (LV) ± 6.4% 49% 48% 3%
Data for Progress October 27 – November 1, 2020 1,036 (LV) ± 3% 46% 51% 3% 0%[i]
Emerson College October 29–31, 2020 749 (LV) ± 3.5% 49%[j] 51% 3%[k]
Morning Consult October 22–31, 2020 1,743 (LV) ± 2.0% 46% 47%
Landmark Communications October 28, 2020 750 (LV) ± 3.6% 47% 47% 3% 3%[l]
Public Policy Polling October 27–28, 2020 661 (V) 44% 47% 3% 6%[m]
Monmouth University October 23–27, 2020 504 (RV) ± 4.4% 46% 49% 2% 2%[n]
504 (LV)[o] 47% 49%
504 (LV)[p] 48% 49%
Swayable October 23–26, 2020 342 (LV) ± 7.2% 49% 48% 3%
Civiqs/Daily Kos October 23–26, 2020 1,041 (LV) ± 3.4% 46% 51% 2% 2%[q]
YouGov/CBS October 20–23, 2020 1,090 (LV) ± 3.4% 47% 46% 6%[r]
University of Georgia October 14–23, 2020 1,145 (LV) ± 4% 45% 46% 4% 5%[s]
Landmark Communications October 21, 2020 500 (LV) ± 4.4% 50% 45%
Citizen Data October 17–20, 2020 1,000 (LV) ± 3% 41% 47% 12%[t]
Morning Consult October 11–20, 2020 1,672 (LV) ± 2.4% 46% 44%
Emerson College October 17–19, 2020 506 (LV) ± 4.3% 46% 45% 9%[u]
Siena College/NYT Upshot October 13–19, 2020 759 (LV) ± 4.1% 43% 43% 4% 10%[v]
Opinion Insight (R)[A] October 12–15, 2020 801 (LV) ± 3.46% 45%[j] 45% 8%[w]
Garin-Hart-Yang Research Group (D)[B] October 11–14, 2020 600 (LV) 43% 48% 6% 3%[l]
Quinnipiac University October 8–12, 2020 1,040 (LV) ± 3.0% 45% 51% 3%[x]
SurveyUSA October 8–12, 2020 677 (LV) ± 5.7% 46% 43% 11%[y]
Data for Progress October 8–11, 2020 782 (LV) ± 3.5% 43% 44% 1% 10%
Morning Consult October 2–11, 2020 1,837 (LV) ± 2.3% 46% 42%
Public Policy Polling October 8–9, 2020 528 (V) ± 4.3% 43% 44% 4% 9%[z]
Landmark Communications October 7, 2020 600 (LV) ± 4% 47% 46% 2% 6%[m]
University of Georgia September 27 – October 6, 2020 1,106 (LV) ± 2.9% 49% 41% 3% 7%[aa]
Civiqs/Daily Kos September 26–29, 2020 969 (LV) ± 3.5% 46% 48% 3% 3%[ab]
Hart Research Associates (D)[C] September 24–27, 2020 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 49% 46%
Quinnipiac University September 23–27, 2020 1,125 (LV) ± 2.9% 48% 49% 2%[ac]
Redfield & Wilton Strategies September 23–26, 2020 789 (LV) ± 3.49% 42% 47% 12%[ad]
YouGov/CBS September 22–25, 2020 1,164 (LV) ± 3.4% 47% 42% 10%[ae]
Monmouth University September 17–21, 2020 402 (RV) ± 4.9% 48% 42% 4% 6%[af]
402 (LV)[o] 48% 43% 3% 5%[s]
402 (LV)[p] 50% 42% 2% 4%[ag]
Siena College/NYT Upshot September 16–21, 2020 523 (LV) ± 4.9% 41% 38% 5% 16%[ah]
University of Georgia September 11–20, 2020 1,150 (LV) ± 4% 47% 45% 4% 5%[s]
Morning Consult September 11–20, 2020 1,406 (LV) ± (2% – 7%) 43%[ai] 44%
Data For Progress (D) September 14–19, 2020 800 (LV) ± 3.5% 43% 41% 2% 14%[aj]
Morning Consult September 8–17, 2020 1,402 (LV)[ak] ± (2% – 4%) 43% 43%
GBAO Strategies (D)[D] September 14–16, 2020 600 (LV) 48% 49%
Redfield & Wilton Strategies September 12–16, 2020 800 (LV) ± 3.46% 43% 43% 14%[al]
Fabrizio Ward/Hart Research Associates[E] August 30 – September 5, 2020 800 (LV) ± 3.5% 47% 48% 5%[am]
Opinion Insight/American Action Forum[A] August 30 – September 2, 2020 800 (LV) ± 3.46% 45%[j] 44% 11%[an]
HarrisX (D)[F] August 20–30, 2020 1,616 (RV) ± 2.4% 47% 40% 8% 4%[ao]
Public Policy Polling August 13–14, 2020 530 (V) ± 4.1% 44% 44% 11%[ap]
Garin-Hart-Yang Research (D)[B] August 10–13, 2020 601 (LV) ± 4.0% 46% 48% 6%
SurveyUSA August 6–8, 2020 623 (LV) ± 5.3% 44% 41% 14%[aq]
YouGov/CBS July 28–31, 2020 1,101 (LV) ± 3.4% 45% 43% 13%[ar]
HIT Strategies (D)[G] July 23–31, 2020 400 (RV) ± 4.9% 39% 42% 19%[as]
Monmouth University July 23–27, 2020 402 (RV) ± 4.9% 49% 43% 1% 7%[aa]
402 (LV)[o] 50% 43% 1% 6%[m]
402 (LV)[p] 51% 43% 1% 6%[m]
Morning Consult July 17–26, 2020 1,337 (LV) ± 3.0% 45% 42% 12%
Spry Strategies (R)[H] July 11–16, 2020 700 (LV) ± 3.7% 46% 44% 10%[at]
Garin-Hart-Yang Research (D)[B] July 9–15, 2020 800 (LV) ± 3.5% 44% 45% 11%
Gravis Marketing (R)[I] July 2, 2020 513 (LV) ± 4.3% 48% 43% 9%
Fox News June 20–23, 2020 1,013 (RV) ± 3.0% 45% 42% 13%[au]
Public Policy Polling June 12–13, 2020 661 (V) ± 3.4% 44% 45% 11%
Civiqs/Daily Kos May 16–18, 2020 1,339 (RV) ± 3.1% 45% 47% 7%[av]
The Progress Campaign (D)[113] May 6–15, 2020 2,893 (LV) ± 2.0% 42% 42% 16%
BK Strategies (R)[J] May 11–13, 2020 700 (LV) ± 3.7% 46% 41% 13%
Public Opinion Strategies (R) May 4–7, 2020 500 (LV) ± 4.4% 43% 41% 7% 8%[aw]
Cygnal (R)[114][K] April 25–27, 2020 591 (LV) ± 4.0% 45% 39% 16%
The Progress Campaign (D) March 12–21, 2020 3,042 (RV) ± 4.5% 39% 40% 20%
Hypothetical polling
with Teresa Tomlinson
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[g]
Margin
of error
David
Perdue (R)
Teresa
Tomlinson (D)
Other /
Undecided
Civiqs/Daily Kos May 16–18 1,339 (RV) ±3.1% 45% 44% 10%[ax]
The Progress Campaign (D)[113] May 6–15 2,893 (LV) ± 2% 41% 40% 19%
The Progress Campaign (D) March 12–21 3,042 (RV) ± 4.5% 40% 39% 21%
with Sarah Riggs Amico
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[g]
Margin
of error
David
Perdue (R)
Sarah Riggs
Amico (D)
Other /
Undecided
Civiqs/Daily Kos May 16–18 1,339 (RV) ±3.1% 45% 42% 13%[ay]
with Stacey Abrams
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[g]
Margin
of error
David
Perdue (R)
Stacey
Abrams (D)
Other /
Undecided
The Progress Campaign (D) March 12–21 3,042 (RV) ± 4.5% 41% 46% 12%
with Generic Democrat
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[g]
Margin
of error
David
Perdue (R)
Generic
Democrat
Other /
Undecided
SurveyUSA November 15–18, 2019 1,303 (LV) ± 3.2% 40% 37% 23%
University of Georgia October 28–30, 2019 1,028 (RV) 35.1% 21.1% 43.8%
with Generic Republican and Generic Democrat
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[g]
Margin
of error
Generic
Republican
Generic
Democrat
Other /
Undecided
Global Strategy Group (D)[L] March 17–19, 2019 603 (LV) ± 4.0% 40% 42% 18%

Results

No candidate received a majority of the vote on November 3, so the top two finishers—incumbent Republican senator David Perdue (49.7%) and Democratic challenger Jon Ossoff (47.9%)—advanced to a runoff election held on January 5, 2021.[115][116]

Voters whose mail-in ballots were rejected were allowed to submit corrections until 5pm on November 6.[117][118]

2020 United States Senate election in Georgia[119]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican David Perdue (incumbent) 2,462,617 49.73% −3.2%
Democratic Jon Ossoff 2,374,519 47.95% +2.7%
Libertarian Shane T. Hazel 115,039 2.4% +0.4%
Total votes 4,952,175 100.00%

Runoff

The runoff election between Perdue and Ossoff was on January 5, 2021,[120] alongside the special election for the Georgia U.S. Senate seat held by Republican Kelly Loeffler.

Following the 2020 Senate elections, Republicans held 50 Senate seats and the Democratic caucus 48.[121] Since Democrats won both Georgia runoffs, their caucus gained control of the Senate, as the resultant 50–50 tie is broken by Democratic vice president Kamala Harris. If the Democrats had lost either race, Republicans would have retained control of the Senate.[122] The high political stakes caused the races to attract significant nationwide attention.[123][124][125] These elections are the third and fourth Senate runoff elections to be held in Georgia since runoffs were first mandated in 1964, following runoffs in 1992 and 2008.[126] It is also the third time that both of Georgia's Senate seats have been up for election at the same time, following double-barrel elections in 1914 and 1932.[127]

The deadline for registration for the runoff election was December 7, 2020. Absentee ballots for the runoff election were sent out beginning on November 18, and in-person voting began on December 14.[128][129] Ossoff's runoff campaign largely focused around accusing Perdue of corruption as well as aggressively courting Black voters in an attempt to drive up turnout, while Perdue characterised Ossoff as a socialist and accused him of having ties to the People's Republic of China.[130] Perdue's campaign was hampered by his refusal to state that Joe Biden had won that year's presidential election, which made it exceedingly difficult for him to argue that an Ossoff victory would create a Democratic trifecta.[131]

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[132] Tossup January 4, 2021
Inside Elections[133] Tossup December 14, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[134] Tossup January 5, 2021

Polling

Aggregate polls

Source of poll
aggregation
Dates
administered
Dates
updated
David
Perdue

Republican
Jon
Ossoff

Democratic
Undecided
[f]
Margin
270 To Win Dec 30, 2020 – January 4, 2021 January 4, 2021 47.4% 50.2% 2.4% Ossoff +2.8
RealClearPolitics Dec 14, 2020 – January 4, 2021 January 5, 2021 48.8% 49.3% 1.9% Ossoff +0.5
538 Nov 9, 2020 – January 4, 2021 January 5, 2021 47.4% 49.1% 3.5% Ossoff +1.8
Average 47.9% 49.5% 2.6% Ossoff +1.7

This section also contains pre-runoff polls excluding all candidates except head-to-head matchups.

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[g]
Margin
of error
David
Perdue (R)
Jon
Ossoff (D)
Undecided
Trafalgar Group January 2–4, 2021 1,056 (LV) ± 2.9% 49% 49% 2%
AtlasIntel January 2–4, 2021 857 (LV) ± 3% 47% 51% 2%
InsiderAdvantage January 3, 2021 500 (LV) ± 4.4% 48.7% 48.6% 2.7%
National Research Inc January 2–3, 2021 500 (LV) ± 4.4% 45% 46% 9%
University of Nevada Las Vegas Lee Business School December 30, 2020 – January 3, 2021 550 (LV) ± 4% 49% 48% 3%
Targoz Market Research December 30, 2020 – January 3, 2021 713 (LV) ± 3.7% 50% 50% 0%
1,342 (RV) 47% 51% 2%
AtlasIntel December 25, 2020 – January 1, 2021 1,680 (LV) ± 2% 47% 51% 2%
Gravis Marketing December 29–30, 2020 1,011 (LV) ± 3.1% 47% 50% 3%
JMC Analytics and Polling December 28–29, 2020 500 (LV) ± 4.4% 45% 53% 2%
Trafalgar Group December 23–27, 2020 1,022 (LV) ± 3.0% 48% 50% 2%
Open Model Project December 21–27, 2020 1,405 (LV) ± 4.7% 50% 46% 4%
InsiderAdvantage December 21–22, 2020 500 (LV) ± 4.4% 49% 48% 3%
Mellman Group December 18–22, 2020 578 (LV) ± 4.1% 47% 50% 3%
Reconnect Research/Probolsky Research December 14–22, 2020 1,027 (LV) ± 4% 43% 42% 15%
SurveyUSA December 16–20, 2020 600 (LV) ± 5.1% 46% 51% 3%
Trafalgar Group December 14–16, 2020 1,064 (LV) ± 3.0% 50% 48% 2%
Emerson College December 14–16, 2020 605 (LV) ± 3.9% 51% 48% 1%
InsiderAdvantage December 14, 2020 500 (LV) ± 4.4% 49% 48% 3%
Wick December 18, 2020, at the Wayback Machine December 10–14, 2020 1,500 (LV) 51% 47% 2%
RMG Research December 21, 2020, at the Wayback Machine December 8–14, 2020 1,417 (LV) ± 2.6% 47% 49% 4%
Baris/Peach State Battleground Poll December 4–11, 2020 1,008 (LV) ± 3.1% 45% 47% 9%
Trafalgar Group December 8–10, 2020 1,018 (LV) ± 3.0% 49% 49% 2%
Fabrizio Ward/Hart Research Associates November 30 – December 4, 2020 1,250 (LV) ± 3.2% 46% 48% 6%
Trafalgar Group December 1–3, 2020 1,083 (LV) ± 2.9% 47% 48% 5%
SurveyUSA November 27–30, 2020 583 (LV) ± 5.2% 48% 50% 2%
RMG Research December 4, 2020, at the Wayback Machine November 19–24, 2020 1,377 (LV) ± 2.6% 47% 48% 5%
Data For Progress (D) November 15–20, 2020 1,476 (LV) ± 2.6% 50% 48% 3%
InsiderAdvantage November 16, 2020 800 (LV) ± 3.5% 49% 49% 2%
Remington Research Group November 8–9, 2020 1,450 (LV) ± 2.6% 50% 46% 4%
Garin-Hart-Yang Research Group (D)[B] October 11–14, 2020 600 (LV) 45% 50% 5%
Data For Progress (D) September 14–19, 2020 800 (LV) ± 3.5% 44% 44% 12%
Hypothetical polling
with Generic Republican and Generic Democrat
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[g]
Margin
of error
Generic
Republican
Generic
Democrat
Undecided
RMG Research/PoliticalIQ January 28, 2021, at the Wayback Machine December 8–14, 2020 1,377 (LV) ± 2.6% 46%[az] 42% 11%[ba]
Quinnipiac University September 23–27, 2020 1,125 (LV) ± 2.9% 48% 49% 3%

Results

2021 United States Senate election in Georgia runoff[119]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Jon Ossoff 2,269,923 50.61% +5.4%
Republican David Perdue 2,214,979 49.39% −3.5%
Total votes 4,484,902 100.00% N/A
Democratic gain from Republican
By county
County[119] Jon Ossoff
Democratic
David Perdue
Republican
Margin Total votes
# % # % # %
Appling 1,598 21.95% 5,683 78.05% -4,085 -56.10% 7,281
Atkinson 720 27.22% 1,925 72.78% -1,205 -45.56% 2,645
Bacon 559 13.54% 3,569 86.46% -3,010 -72.92% 4,128
Baker 630 43.78% 809 56.22% -179 -12.44% 1,439
Baldwin 8,515 51.78% 7,931 48.22% 584 3.55% 16,446
Banks 836 11.22% 6,612 88.78% -5,776 -77.55% 7,448
Barrow 9,276 28.93% 22,789 71.07% -13,513 -42.14% 32,065
Bartow 10,735 24.98% 32,239 75.02% -21,504 -50.04% 42,974
Ben Hill 2,182 38.19% 3,531 61.81% -1,349 -23.61% 5,713
Berrien 1,141 17.08% 5,538 82.92% -4,397 -65.83% 6,679
Bibb 39,717 62.58% 23,748 37.42% 15,969 25.16% 63,465
Bleckley 1,190 23.29% 3,920 76.71% -2,730 -53.42% 5,110
Brantley 615 9.29% 6,003 90.71% -5,388 -81.41% 6,618
Brooks 2,456 39.51% 3,760 60.49% -1,304 -20.98% 6,216
Bryan 6,020 32.34% 12,596 67.66% -6,576 -35.32% 18,616
Bulloch 9,832 37.61% 16,311 62.39% -6,479 -24.78% 26,143
Burke 4,686 49.37% 4,806 50.63% -120 -1.26% 9,492
Butts 3,004 29.43% 7,205 70.57% -4,201 -41.15% 10,209
Calhoun 1,202 59.21% 828 40.79% 374 18.42% 2,030
Camden 6,856 34.50% 13,015 65.50% -6,159 -30.99% 19,871
Candler 1,134 28.97% 2,781 71.03% -1,647 -42.07% 3,915
Carroll 14,590 30.94% 32,573 69.06% -17,983 -38.13% 47,163
Catoosa 6,009 21.64% 21,757 78.36% -15,748 -56.72% 27,766
Charlton 966 24.70% 2,945 75.30% -1,979 -50.60% 3,911
Chatham 72,309 59.64% 48,937 40.36% 23,372 19.28% 121,246
Chattahoochee 606 45.84% 716 54.16% -110 -8.32% 1,322
Chattooga 1,673 20.33% 6,558 79.67% -4,885 -59.35% 8,231
Cherokee 37,596 29.40% 90,276 70.60% -52,680 -41.20% 127,872
Clarke 32,901 71.20% 13,311 28.80% 19,590 42.39% 46,212
Clay 728 55.53% 583 44.47% 145 11.06% 1,311
Clayton 91,015 88.43% 11,907 11.57% 79,108 76.86% 102,922
Clinch 615 25.06% 1,839 74.94% -1,224 -49.88% 2,454
Cobb 201,009 56.04% 157,653 43.96% 43,356 12.09% 358,662
Coffee 4,058 30.71% 9,154 69.29% -5,096 -38.57% 13,212
Colquitt 3,714 26.43% 10,339 73.57% -6,625 -47.14% 14,053
Columbia 26,497 36.72% 45,667 63.28% -19,170 -26.56% 72,164
Cook 1,894 30.51% 4,313 69.49% -2,419 -38.97% 6,207
Coweta 21,527 31.99% 45,776 68.01% -24,249 -36.03% 67,303
Crawford 1,486 27.70% 3,879 72.30% -2,393 -44.60% 5,365
Crisp 2,681 37.58% 4,454 62.42% -1,773 -24.85% 7,135
Dade 1,131 17.79% 5,227 82.21% -4,096 -64.42% 6,358
Dawson 2,230 15.50% 12,159 84.50% -9,929 -69.0% 14,389
Decatur 4,127 41.08% 5,919 58.92% -1,792 -17.84% 10,046
DeKalb 291,667 83.49% 57,674 16.51% 233,993 66.98% 349,341
Dodge 2,011 28.02% 5,165 71.98% -3,154 -43.95% 7,176
Dooly 1,802 48.18% 1,938 51.82% -136 -3.64% 3,740
Dougherty 22,745 70.88% 9,346 29.12% 13,399 41.75% 32,091
Douglas 40,398 64.77% 21,970 35.23% 18,428 29.55% 62,368
Early 2,182 47.96% 2,368 52.04% -186 -4.09% 4,550
Echols 130 10.95% 1,057 89.05% -927 -78.10% 1,187
Effingham 7,147 25.68% 20,680 74.32% -13,533 -48.63% 27,827
Elbert 2,493 31.11% 5,521 68.89% -3,028 -37.78% 8,014
Emanuel 2,547 30.49% 5,807 69.51% -3,260 -39.02% 8,354
Evans 1,198 32.06% 2,539 67.94% -1,341 -35.88% 3,737
Fannin 2,378 17.68% 11,070 82.32% -8,692 -64.63% 13,448
Fayette 30,938 45.90% 36,463 54.10% -5,525 -8.20% 67,401
Floyd 10,676 29.83% 25,108 70.17% -14,432 -40.33% 35,784
Forsyth 36,936 32.06% 78,263 67.94% -41,327 -35.87% 115,199
Franklin 1,345 14.63% 7,849 85.37% -6,504 -70.74% 9,194
Fulton 350,342 71.68% 138,417 28.32% 211,925 43.36% 488,759
Gilmer 2,664 17.97% 12,163 82.03% -9,499 -64.07% 14,827
Glascock 134 9.82% 1,230 90.18% -1,096 -80.35% 1,364
Glynn 13,976 37.32% 23,476 62.68% -9,500 -25.37% 37,452
Gordon 3,881 19.07% 16,471 80.93% -12,590 -61.86% 20,352
Grady 3,099 33.22% 6,229 66.78% -3,130 -33.55% 9,328
Greene 3,703 34.87% 6,917 65.13% -3,214 -30.26% 10,620
Gwinnett 222,346 60.11% 147,563 39.89% 74,783 20.22% 369,909
Habersham 3,160 17.53% 14,871 82.47% -11,711 -64.95% 18,031
Hall 21,883 27.69% 57,157 72.31% -35,274 -44.63% 79,040
Hancock 2,775 72.34% 1,061 27.66% 1,714 44.68% 3,836
Haralson 1,610 13.24% 10,553 86.76% -8,943 -73.53% 12,163
Harris 4,986 27.27% 13,297 72.73% -8,311 -45.46% 18,283
Hart 2,869 25.60% 8,336 74.40% -5,467 -48.79% 11,205
Heard 780 16.68% 3,895 83.32% -3,115 -66.63% 4,675
Henry 68,235 62.38% 41,145 37.62% 27,090 24.77% 109,380
Houston 29,608 44.60% 36,779 55.40% -7,171 -10.80% 66,387
Irwin 877 24.25% 2,739 75.75% -1,862 -51.49% 3,616
Jackson 6,785 20.83% 25,793 79.17% -19,008 -58.35% 32,578
Jasper 1,654 24.32% 5,146 75.68% -3,492 -51.35% 6,800
Jeff Davis 947 18.62% 4,139 81.38% -3,192 -62.76% 5,086
Jefferson 3,752 54.17% 3,174 45.83% 578 8.35% 6,926
Jenkins 1,173 37.64% 1,943 62.36% -770 -24.71% 3,116
Johnson 1,044 29.22% 2,529 70.78% -1,485 -41.56% 3,573
Jones 4,517 33.88% 8,815 66.12% -4,298 -32.24% 13,332
Lamar 2,395 30.0% 5,588 70.0% -3,193 -40.0% 7,983
Lanier 905 29.85% 2,127 70.15% -1,222 -40.30% 3,032
Laurens 7,389 36.50% 12,855 63.50% -5,466 -27.0% 20,244
Lee 4,225 28.37% 10,665 71.63% -6,440 -43.25% 14,890
Liberty 11,830 64.59% 6,485 35.41% 5,345 29.18% 18,315
Lincoln 1,311 31.09% 2,906 68.91% -1,595 -37.82% 4,217
Long 1,795 38.74% 2,838 61.26% -1,043 -22.51% 4,633
Lowndes 17,369 43.60% 22,464 56.40% -5,095 -12.79% 39,833
Lumpkin 2,820 20.59% 10,877 79.41% -8,057 -58.82% 13,697
Macon 2,664 62.49% 1,599 37.51% 1,065 24.98% 4,263
Madison 3,074 23.29% 10,125 76.71% -7,051 -53.42% 13,199
Marion 1,217 37.85% 1,998 62.15% -781 -24.29% 3,215
McDuffie 3,733 40.42% 5,502 59.58% -1,769 -19.16% 9,235
McIntosh 2,399 40.40% 3,539 59.60% -1,140 -19.20% 5,938
Meriwether 4,012 40.75% 5,833 59.25% -1,821 -18.50% 9,845
Miller 650 26.53% 1,800 73.47% -1,150 -46.94% 2,450
Mitchell 3,546 45.14% 4,309 54.86% -763 -9.71% 7,855
Monroe 4,027 28.54% 10,084 71.46% -6,057 -42.92% 14,111
Montgomery 884 25.12% 2,635 74.88% -1,751 -49.76% 3,519
Morgan 3,097 28.60% 7,730 71.40% -4,633 -42.79% 10,827
Murray 2,036 15.66% 10,963 84.34% -8,927 -68.67% 12,999
Muscogee 44,875 62.76% 26,626 37.24% 18,249 25.52% 71,501
Newton 28,177 57.74% 20,620 42.26% 7,557 15.49% 48,797
Oconee 7,322 31.10% 16,220 68.90% -8,898 -37.80% 23,542
Oglethorpe 2,237 30.97% 4,985 69.03% -2,748 -38.05% 7,222
Paulding 27,083 36.62% 46,872 63.38% -19,789 -26.76% 73,955
Peach 5,335 48.27% 5,717 51.73% -382 -3.46% 11,052
Pickens 2,548 16.82% 12,601 83.18% -10,053 -66.36% 15,149
Pierce 956 12.06% 6,972 87.94% -6,016 -75.88% 7,928
Pike 1,372 14.24% 8,266 85.76% -6,894 -71.53% 9,638
Polk 3,305 22.25% 11,546 77.75% -8,241 -55.49% 14,851
Pulaski 1,118 30.36% 2,564 69.64% -1,446 -39.27% 3,682
Putnam 3,160 29.16% 7,676 70.84% -4,516 -41.68% 10,836
Quitman 463 45.80% 548 54.20% -85 -8.41% 1,011
Rabun 1,789 21.28% 6,618 78.72% -4,829 -57.44% 8,407
Randolph 1,672 56.45% 1,290 43.55% 382 12.90% 2,962
Richmond 53,568 69.36% 23,660 30.64% 29,908 38.73% 77,228
Rockdale 29,463 72.38% 11,244 27.62% 18,219 44.76% 40,707
Schley 435 21.14% 1,623 78.86% -1,188 -57.73% 2,058
Screven 2,408 40.70% 3,509 59.30% -1,101 -18.61% 5,917
Seminole 1,147 32.79% 2,351 67.21% -1,204 -34.42% 3,498
Spalding 10,966 40.73% 15,957 59.27% -4,991 -18.54% 26,923
Stephens 2,058 20.50% 7,979 79.50% -5,921 -58.99% 10,037
Stewart 1,115 61.88% 687 38.12% 428 23.75% 1,802
Sumter 5,847 52.79% 5,230 47.21% 617 5.57% 11,077
Talbot 1,945 61.03% 1,242 38.97% 703 22.06% 3,187
Taliaferro 513 60.71% 332 39.29% 181 21.42% 845
Tattnall 1,872 25.94% 5,344 74.06% -3,472 -48.12% 7,216
Taylor 1,350 38.93% 2,118 61.07% -768 -22.15% 3,468
Telfair 1,348 35.06% 2,497 64.94% -1,149 -29.88% 3,845
Terrell 2,256 54.70% 1,868 45.30% 388 9.41% 4,124
Thomas 7,647 39.78% 11,577 60.22% -3,930 -20.44% 19,224
Tift 4,726 32.80% 9,681 67.20% -4,955 -34.39% 14,407
Toombs 2,511 26.75% 6,877 73.25% -4,366 -46.51% 9,388
Towns 1,394 19.26% 5,842 80.74% -4,448 -61.47% 7,236
Treutlen 847 31.30% 1,859 68.70% -1,012 -37.40% 2,706
Troup 10,504 39.95% 15,788 60.05% -5,284 -20.10% 26,292
Turner 1,305 38.27% 2,105 61.73% -800 -23.46% 3,410
Twiggs 1,876 47.70% 2,057 52.30% -181 -4.60% 3,933
Union 2,570 18.12% 11,613 81.88% -9,043 -63.76% 14,183
Upson 3,833 34.30% 7,342 65.70% -3,509 -31.40% 11,175
Walker 4,891 20.25% 19,268 79.75% -14,377 -59.51% 24,159
Walton 11,583 25.46% 33,908 74.54% -22,325 -49.08% 45,491
Ware 3,704 30.36% 8,498 69.64% -4,794 -39.29% 12,202
Warren 1,387 56.24% 1,079 43.76% 308 12.49% 2,466
Washington 4,368 51.21% 4,161 48.79% 207 2.43% 8,529
Wayne 2,488 22.19% 8,724 77.81% -6,236 -55.62% 11,212
Webster 554 44.18% 700 55.82% -146 -11.64% 1,254
Wheeler 627 31.21% 1,382 68.79% -755 -37.58% 2,009
White 2,222 16.72% 11,071 83.28% -8,849 -66.57% 13,293
Whitfield 9,245 29.12% 22,501 70.88% -13,256 -41.76% 31,746
Wilcox 763 26.79% 2,085 73.21% -1,322 -46.42% 2,848
Wilkes 1,949 43.03% 2,580 56.97% -631 -13.93% 4,529
Wilkinson 1,960 45.51% 2,347 54.49% -387 -8.99% 4,307
Worth 2,229 26.91% 6,053 73.09% -3,824 -46.17% 8,282
Totals 2,269,923 50.61% 2,214,979 49.39% 54,944 1.23% 4,484,902
Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic[135]
Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican[136]

See also

Notes

Partisan clients
  1. ^ a b The American Action Forum is a 501 organisation which usually supports Republican candidates.
  2. ^ a b c d Poll sponsored by Ossoff's campaign.
  3. ^ Poll sponsored by The Human Rights Campaign, which endorsed Biden before this poll's sampling period.
  4. ^ Poll sponsored by Warnock's campaign for the 2020–21 United States Senate special election in Georgia.
  5. ^ Poll sponsored by AARP.
  6. ^ Poll sponsored by Matt Lieberman's campaign.
  7. ^ This poll's sponsor, DFER, primarily supports Democratic candidates.
  8. ^ This poll's sponsor is the American Principles Project, a 501 that supports the Republican Party.
  9. ^ Poll is sponsored by OANN, a far-right political talkshow.
  10. ^ This poll was sponsored by the Republican State Leadership Committee.
  11. ^ Poll conducted for the Speaker of Georgia's House Republican caucus.
  12. ^ Poll sponsored by the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee.
Voter samples and additional candidates
  1. ^ "Another candidate" with 7.2%
  2. ^ Knox with 1.5%; DeJesus and Smith with 1%; McCracken with 0.3%
  3. ^ Listed as "other/undecided"
  4. ^ Includes undecided
  5. ^ Initially scheduled for October 19.[57]
  6. ^ a b Calculated by taking the difference of 100% and all other candidates combined.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h Key:
    A – all adults
    RV – registered voters
    LV – likely voters
    V – unclear
  8. ^ Undecided with 1%
  9. ^ "Other candidate or write-in" with 0%
  10. ^ a b c With voters who lean towards a given candidate
  11. ^ "Someone else" with 3%
  12. ^ a b Undecided with 3%
  13. ^ a b c d Undecided with 6%
  14. ^ "Other candidate" and "No one" with 0%; Undecided with 2%
  15. ^ a b c With a likely voter turnout model featuring higher turnout than in the 2016 presidential election
  16. ^ a b c With a likely voter turnout model featuring lower turnout than in the 2016 presidential election
  17. ^ "Someone else" and Undecided with 1%
  18. ^ "Someone else" with 2%; Undecided with 4%
  19. ^ a b c Undecided with 5%
  20. ^ "Other" with 5%; Undecided with 8%
  21. ^ "Someone else" with 3%; Undecided with 6%
  22. ^ "Someone else" and would not vote with 1%; "Undecided/Refused" with 8%
  23. ^ "Someone else" and did/would not vote with 1%; "Undecided/Refused" with 6%
  24. ^ "Someone else" with 0%; Undecided with 3%
  25. ^ "Some other candidate" with 3%; Undecided with 8%
  26. ^ Undecided with 9%
  27. ^ a b Undecided with 7%
  28. ^ "Someone else" with 1%; Undecided with 2%
  29. ^ "Someone else" with 0%; Undecided with 2%
  30. ^ "Another Third Party/Write-in" with 3%; Undecided with 9%
  31. ^ "Someone else" with 2%; Undecided with 8%
  32. ^ "Other" and "No one" with 0%; Undecided with 6%
  33. ^ Undecided with 4%
  34. ^ "Someone else" and would not vote with 0%; "Undecided/Refused" with 16%
  35. ^ Overlapping sample with the previous Morning Consult poll, but more information available regarding sample size
  36. ^ Undecided with 14%
  37. ^ Additional data sourced from FiveThirtyEight
  38. ^ "Another Third Party/Write-in" with 3%; Undecided with 11%
  39. ^ Would not vote with 1%; Undecided with 4%
  40. ^ Would not vote with 2%; Undecided with 9%
  41. ^ Would not vote with 4%
  42. ^ Undecided with 11%
  43. ^ "Some other candidate" with 4%; Undecided with 10%
  44. ^ "Someone else" with 3%; Undecided with 10%
  45. ^ "Third party candidate" with 3%; would not vote with 2%; Undecided with 14%
  46. ^ "Another candidate" with 4%; Undecided with 6%
  47. ^ Undecided with 8%; "Other" with 3%; would not vote with 2%
  48. ^ "Someone else" with 4%; Undecided with 3%
  49. ^ "Undecided" with 8%
  50. ^ "Someone else" with 6%; Undecided with 4%
  51. ^ "Someone else" with 8%; Undecided with 5%
  52. ^ "It is more important for Republicans to have control of the Senate" as opposed to "It is more important for Democrats to have control of the Senate" with 46%
  53. ^ "It does not matter which party has control of the Senate" with 7%; Undecided with 4%

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Further reading

  • Amber Phillips (October 9, 2020), "The Senate seats most likely to flip parties in November", Washingtonpost.com

External links

  • "Georgia 2020 Purge List", SaveMyVote2020.org, Los Angeles, CA: Palast Investigative Fund, Check if you have been purged from the Georgia voter rolls
  • "League of Women Voters of Georgia". January 5, 2018. (State affiliate of the U.S. League of Women Voters)
  • Elections November 12, 2008, at the Wayback Machine at the Georgia Secretary of State official website
  • Georgia at Ballotpedia
  • Government Documents Round Table of the American Library Association, "Georgia", Voting & Elections Toolkits
  • National Institute on Money in Politics; Campaign Finance Institute, "Georgia 2019 & 2020 Elections", OpenSecrets
  • Request a mail-in ballot at the Georgia Secretary of State website
  • Check to see if you are registered to vote November 10, 2020, at the Wayback Machine at the Georgia Secretary of State website
  • Register to vote at Vote.org
Official campaign websites
  • Shane T. Hazel (L) for Senate
  • Jon Ossoff (D) for Senate

2020, united, states, senate, election, georgia, also, 2020, united, states, senate, elections, confused, with, 2020, georgia, state, senate, election, other, senate, election, georgia, held, parallel, 2020, united, states, senate, special, election, georgia, . See also 2020 United States Senate elections Not to be confused with 2020 Georgia State Senate election For the other Senate election in Georgia held in parallel see 2020 21 United States Senate special election in Georgia The 2020 21 United States Senate election in Georgia was held on November 3 2020 and on January 5 2021 as a runoff to elect the Class II member of the United States Senate to represent the State of Georgia Democrat Jon Ossoff defeated incumbent Republican Senator David Perdue in the runoff election The general election was held concurrently with the 2020 presidential election as well as with other elections to the Senate elections to the U S House of Representatives and various state and local elections 2020 21 United States Senate election in Georgia 2014 November 3 2020 first round January 5 2021 runoff 2026 Turnout65 4 first round 61 5 runoff Candidate Jon Ossoff David PerdueParty Democratic RepublicanFirst round 2 374 51947 9 2 462 61749 7 Runoff 2 269 92350 6 2 214 97949 4 First round county resultsRunoff county resultsPerdue 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 90 gt 90 Ossoff 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 90 U S senator before electionDavid PerdueRepublican Elected U S Senator Jon OssoffDemocraticNo candidate received a majority of the vote during the general election on November 3 so the top two finishers Perdue 49 7 and Ossoff 47 9 advanced to a runoff election held on January 5 2021 The runoff was held concurrently with the special election for Georgia s other U S Senate seat which had also advanced to a runoff in which Republican incumbent Kelly Loeffler lost to Democratic nominee Raphael Warnock After the general round of elections Republicans held 50 Senate seats and the Democratic caucus 48 including two independents who caucus with them As a result the two runoffs decided control of the Senate under the incoming Biden administration By winning both seats Democrats took control of the chamber with Vice President Kamala Harris s tie breaking vote giving them an effective majority The extraordinarily high political stakes caused the races to attract significant attention nationwide and globally On January 6 2021 most major news outlets projected Ossoff the winner in the midst of the US Capitol riot 1 2 Perdue conceded the race on January 8 3 4 According to OpenSecrets this campaign was the most expensive in U S Senate history with over 468 million spent 5 Ossoff s victory along with Warnock s gave the Democrats control of the Senate for the first time since 2015 Ossoff and Warnock became the first Democrats to be elected to the U S Senate from Georgia since Zell Miller in the 2000 special election Ossoff became the first Democrat elected to a full term in the Senate from Georgia since Max Cleland who held this seat from 1997 to 2003 and the first Jewish member of the Senate from the state 6 Ossoff became the youngest senator since Don Nickles won in 1980 and the youngest Democrat since Joe Biden won in 1972 Georgia election officials certified Ossoff s victory on January 19 2021 he was sworn in on January 20 7 Ossoff is the first Jewish senator from the Deep South since Benjamin F Jonas of Louisiana who was elected in 1878 and the first millennial United States senator This election and the special election both mark the first time since 1994 that both Senate seats in a state have flipped from one party to the other in a single election cycle This was the first time the Democrats achieved this since West Virginia s 1958 Senate elections With a margin of 1 2 this election was also the closest race of the 2020 Senate election cycle Contents 1 Republican primary 1 1 Candidates 1 1 1 Nominee 1 1 2 Withdrawn 1 1 3 Declined 1 1 4 Results 2 Democratic primary 2 1 Candidates 2 1 1 Nominee 2 1 2 Eliminated in primary 2 1 3 Withdrew 2 1 4 Declined 2 2 Polling 2 2 1 Head to head polling 2 3 Endorsements 2 4 Results 3 Other candidates 3 1 Libertarian Party 3 1 1 Nominee 3 2 Independents 3 2 1 Withdrawn 4 Debates 5 General election 5 1 Predictions 5 2 Endorsements 5 3 Polling 5 3 1 Graphical summary 5 3 2 Aggregate polls 5 4 Results 6 Runoff 6 1 Predictions 6 2 Polling 6 2 1 Aggregate polls 6 3 Results 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksRepublican primary EditCandidates Edit Nominee Edit David Perdue incumbent U S Senator 8 Withdrawn Edit James Jackson 9 10 Michael Jowers veteran 9 10 Ervan Katari Miller perennial candidate 9 10 Declined Edit Derrick Grayson activist and U S Senate candidate in 2014 and 2016 11 ran in the special election 12 Results Edit Republican primary results June 9 2020 13 Party Candidate Votes Republican David Perdue incumbent 992 555 100 00 Total votes 992 555 100 00 Democratic primary EditCandidates Edit Nominee Edit Jon Ossoff investigative journalist media executive nominee for Georgia s 6th congressional district in 2017 14 Eliminated in primary Edit Teresa Tomlinson former mayor of Columbus 15 16 Sarah Riggs Amico nominee for Lieutenant Governor of Georgia in 2018 17 Marckeith DeJesus candidate for Georgia State Senate in 2017 and candidate for Georgia House of Representatives in 2016 18 Maya Dillard Smith former two term Senate Appointee Judge over judicial performance and Rules Committee Chair 19 James Knox retired U S Air Force officer 20 Tricia Carpenter McCracken journalist and nominee for Georgia s 12th congressional district in 2016 20 Withdrew Edit Akhenaten Amun high school teacher 9 10 Harold Shouse 9 10 Ted Terry mayor of Clarkston 21 endorsed Ossoff Elaine Whigham Williams pastor and candidate for president in 2016 9 10 Declined Edit Stacey Abrams nominee for governor of Georgia in 2018 and former minority leader of the Georgia House of Representatives 22 23 endorsed Ossoff Jason Carter grandson of former Georgia Governor and President Jimmy Carter former state senator and nominee for governor of Georgia in 2014 endorsed Tomlinson 24 25 26 Stacey Evans former state representative and candidate for governor of Georgia in 2018 running for state house 27 Scott Holcomb state representative 8 Jen Jordan state senator 28 Michelle Nunn nominee for U S Senate in 2014 24 29 Kasim Reed former mayor of Atlanta 30 31 Doug Teper former state representative 24 Sally Yates former United States Deputy Attorney General 32 Polling Edit Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Marginof error Sarah RiggsAmico JonOssoff TeresaTomlinson Other UndecidedLandmark Communications June 1 2020 500 LV 4 4 9 42 14 7 a 28 Cygnal R May 28 30 2020 510 LV 4 3 8 49 16 4 b 24 The Progress Campaign D May 6 15 2020 1 162 LV 9 46 29 16 c The Progress Campaign D March 12 21 2020 913 RV 4 6 18 34 21 27 d University of Georgia March 4 14 2020 807 LV 3 4 15 31 16 39 Head to head polling Edit Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Marginof error JonOssoff TeresaTomlinson UndecidedCygnal R May 28 30 2020 510 LV 4 3 58 24 18 Endorsements Edit Jon OssoffFederal officialsHank Johnson U S Representative for GA 04 33 John Lewis U S Representative for GA 05 34 deceased State officialsDebra Bazemore state representative 35 Sharon Beasley Teague state representative 35 Karen Bennett state representative 35 Rhonda Burnough state representative 35 Doreen Carter state representative 35 Steve Henson state senator and Senate Minority Leader 36 Shelly Hutchinson state representative 35 Derrick Jackson state representative 35 Donzella James state senator 35 Emanuel Jones state senator previously endorsed Teresa Tomlinson 37 Sheila Jones state representative 35 Josh McLaurin state representative 38 Miriam Paris state representative and former State Senator 35 Doc Rhett state senator 35 Kim Schofield state representative 35 Erica Thomas state representative 35 Local officialsTed Terry mayor of Clarkston and former 2020 U S Senate candidate 39 OrganizationsEnd Citizens United 40 Let America Vote 40 IndividualsAlex Hirsch writer artist and animator 41 Teresa TomlinsonFederal officialsMax Cleland former U S senator GA 1997 2003 former Secretary of State of Georgia 1983 1996 former Administrator of Veterans Affairs 1977 1981 and former Secretary of the American Battle Monuments Commission 2009 2017 42 Buddy Darden former U S representative for GA 07 1983 1995 42 Gordon Giffin former United States Ambassador to Canada 1997 2001 42 Andrew Young former mayor of Atlanta 1982 1990 former U S ambassador to the United Nations 1977 1979 and U S representative for GA 05 1973 1977 43 State officialsRoy Barnes former governor of Georgia 1999 2003 42 Debbie Buckner state representative Gail Buckner former state senator former state representative and Democratic nominee in 2006 Georgia Secretary of State election 42 Jason Carter former state senator Democratic nominee in 2014 Georgia governor s election and grandson of the 39th President of the United States and former Governor of Georgia Jimmy Carter 42 J Craig Gordon state representative 42 Carolyn Hugley state representative 42 Lester G Jackson state senator 42 Harold V Jones II state senator 42 Mary Margaret Oliver state representative and former state senator 42 Leah Ward Sears former associate justice of the Georgia Supreme Court 1992 2005 and former chief justice 2005 2009 42 Freddie Powell Sims State Senator and former state representative 42 Local officialsHardie Davis mayor of Augusta 42 Kelly Girtz mayor of Athens Clarke County 42 Ceasar Mitchell former president of the Atlanta City Council 42 Felicia Moore president of the Atlanta City Council 36 IndividualsHank Aaron retired right fielder for the Atlanta Braves 42 Lil Yachty Atlanta rapper singer and songwriterOrganizationsDemocracy for America 44 National Organization for Women 45 Sarah Riggs AmicoLabor unionsBAC Local 8 Southeast 46 Communication Workers of America 46 International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 613 47 SMART 46 Southeastern Carpenters Regional Council 46 Results Edit County results Ossoff Ossoff 60 70 Ossoff 50 60 Ossoff 40 50 Ossoff 30 40 Ossoff lt 30 Ossoff Riggs Amico tie Ossoff Riggs Amico tie lt 30 Tomlinson Tomlinson 60 70 Tomlinson 50 60 Tomlinson 40 50 Tomlinson 30 40 Tomlinson lt 30 Riggs Amico Riggs Amico 30 40 Riggs Amico lt 30 Smith Smith 30 40 Smith lt 30 Knox Knox lt 30 Almost four times as many Georgia voters participated in the 2020 Democratic Senate primary as in the 2016 Democratic Senate primary when only 310 053 votes were cast 48 Democratic primary results June 9 2020 49 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Jon Ossoff 626 819 52 82 Democratic Teresa Tomlinson 187 416 15 79 Democratic Sarah Riggs Amico 139 574 11 76 Democratic Maya Dillard Smith 105 000 8 85 Democratic James Knox 49 452 4 17 Democratic Marckeith DeJesus 45 936 3 87 Democratic Tricia Carpenter McCracken 32 463 2 74 Total votes 1 186 660 100 00 Other candidates Edit Hazel in 2018 Libertarian Party Edit Nominee Edit Shane Hazel former U S Marine podcaster and Republican candidate for Georgia s 7th congressional district in 2018 50 Independents Edit Withdrawn Edit Elbert Al Bartell perennial candidate running as an independent candidate in the 2020 21 United States Senate special election in Georgia 51 52 Allen Buckley Libertarian candidate for the 2016 United States Senate election in Georgia 9 running as an independent candidate in the 2020 21 United States Senate special election in Georgia 53 Tom Jones 54 53 Clifton Kilby 55 10 53 Darrell McGuire as a write in candidate retired Georgia State Trooper 56 52 Valencia Stovall Georgian Democratic state representative from District 74 since 2013 9 running as an independent candidate in the 2020 21 United States Senate special election in Georgia 53 Debates EditThe first debate between Hazel Ossoff and Perdue occurred virtually 57 on October 12 58 A second debate between Ossoff and Perdue held on October 28 e in Savannah and aired on television station WTOC TV 59 was more heated and made national headlines with Ossoff saying that Perdue had claimed COVID 19 was no deadlier than the flu was looking after his own assets and portfolio and that Perdue voted four times to end protections for preexisting conditions 60 Ossoff also called Perdue a crook and criticized him for attacking the health of the people that he represent s 61 Perdue said Ossoff will say and do anything to my friends in Georgia to mislead them about how radical and socialist his agenda is 62 Video of the exchange went viral 57 61 The next day October 29 Perdue said he would not attend the third and final debate previously scheduled to be broadcast on WSB TV on November 1 instead Perdue decided to attend a rally with President Trump in Rome on the same day 63 as lovely as another debate listening to Jon Ossoff lie to the people of Georgia sounds 62 according to a Perdue spokesman On December 6 Ossoff debated an empty podium as Perdue declined to participate in a Georgia Public Broadcasting held debate 64 Ossoff criticized Perdue s absence accusing him of skipping the event because of the negative response to his performance in the October debates General election EditPredictions Edit Source Ranking As ofDDHQ 65 Tossup November 3 2020FiveThirtyEight 66 Tossup November 2 2020Inside Elections 67 Tossup October 28 2020Sabato s Crystal Ball 68 Tossup November 2 2020RCP 69 Tossup October 23 2020The Cook Political Report 70 Tossup October 29 2020Economist 71 Tossup November 2 2020Politico 72 Tossup November 2 2020Daily Kos 73 Tossup October 30 2020Endorsements Edit David Perdue R U S executive branch officialsDonald Trump 45th president of the United States 2017 2021 74 U S senatorsSaxby Chambliss U S senator from Georgia 2003 2015 75 Johnny Isakson U S senator from Georgia 2005 2019 75 Mack Mattingly U S senator from Georgia 1981 1987 75 Tim Scott U S senator from South Carolina 2013 present 76 State officialsLarry Hogan governor of Maryland 2015 present 77 John F King Georgia Insurance and Safety Fire Commissioner and former Doraville chief of police 76 Brad Raffensperger Secretary of State of Georgia 2019 present 78 OrganizationsCampaign for Working Families 79 Council for Citizens Against Government Waste Political Action Committee CCAGW PAC 80 Georgia Chamber of Commerce 79 Huck PAC 79 National Federation of Independent Business 76 National Rifle Association 79 National Right to Life Committee 79 Republican Jewish Coalition 79 Senate Conservatives Fund 79 Jon Ossoff D U S executive branch officialsBarack Obama 44th president of the United States 2009 2017 U S Senator from Illinois 2005 2008 81 Joe Biden president elect of the United States 47th Vice President of the United States 2009 2017 U S Senator from Delaware 1973 2009 82 Kamala Harris vice president elect of the United States U S senator from California 2017 2021 83 Hillary Clinton former U S Secretary of State 2009 2013 U S Senator from New York 2001 2009 first lady of the United States 1993 2001 and 2016 Democratic nominee for president 84 U S SenatorsCory Booker U S senator from New Jersey 2013 present 85 Catherine Cortez Masto U S senator from Nevada 2017 present 86 Amy Klobuchar U S senator from Minnesota 2020 Candidate for President 2007 present 87 U S representativesHank Johnson U S representative for GA 04 33 John Lewis former U S representative for GA 05 34 Deceased State legislatorsStacey Abrams nominee for governor of Georgia in 2018 and former minority leader of the Georgia House of Representatives 88 State officialsDebra Bazemore state representative 35 Sharon Beasley Teague state representative 35 Karen Bennett state representative 35 Rhonda Burnough state representative 35 Doreen Carter state representative 35 Steve Henson state senator and Senate Minority Leader 36 Shelly Hutchinson state representative 35 Derrick Jackson state representative 35 Donzella James state senator 35 Emanuel Jones state senator previously endorsed Teresa Tomlinson 37 Sheila Jones state representative 35 Josh McLaurin state representative 38 Miriam Paris state representative and former state senator 2011 2013 35 Doc Rhett state senator 35 Kim Schofield state representative 35 Erica Thomas state representative 35 Local officialsTed Terry mayor of Clarkston and former 2020 U S Senate candidate 39 Pete Buttigieg former Mayor of South Bend 2012 2020 2020 Candidate for President 89 OrganizationsBlack Economic Alliance 90 Center for Biological Diversity 91 Council for a Livable World 92 End Citizens United 40 Everytown for Gun Safety 93 Humane Society of the United States Legislative Fund 94 J Street PAC 95 Jewish Democratic Council of America 96 Joint Action Committee for Political Affairs 97 League of Conservation Voters 98 Let America Vote 40 NARAL 99 Natural Resources Defense Council Action Fund 100 Planned Parenthood Action Fund 101 102 Sierra Club 103 Climate Hawks Vote 104 UnionsAFL CIO 105 National Education Association 106 United Auto Workers 107 IndividualsAmy Acker actress 108 Patrick J Adams actor 108 Usman Ally actor 109 Ed Asner actor 110 Dan Bakkedahl actor 109 Troian Bellisario actress 108 Sufe Bradshaw actress 109 Don Cheadle actor 109 Anna Chlumsky actress 109 Stephen Colbert actor and comedian 109 Gary Cole actor 109 David Costabile actor 108 Bryan Cranston actor 109 Denise Crosby actress 108 Zooey Deschanel actress 110 Julia Louis Dreyfuss actress 109 Kevin Dunn actor 109 Clea DuVall actress 109 Billie Eilish singer 111 Beanie Feldstein actress 109 Will Ferrell actor 110 Nelson Franklin actor 109 Tony Hale actor 109 Mark Hamill actor 109 Rachael Harris actress 108 Ed Helms actor and comedian 110 Alex Hirsch writer artist and animator 41 Rick Hoffman actor 108 Aaron Korsh writer and producer 108 Lisa Ling journalist and author 112 John Lithgow actor 110 Gabriel Macht actor 108 Rory O Malley actor 112 David Mandel writer and director 109 Kumail Nanjiani actor 109 Bob Newhart actor 110 Matt Oberg actor 109 Patton Oswalt actor and comedian 109 Lennon Parham actress 109 David Pasquesi actor 109 Jordan Peele actor director and comedian 112 Sarah Rafferty actress 108 Anthony Rapp actor 112 Sam Richardson actor 109 Andy Richter actor and comedian 110 Paul Scheer actor 109 Amanda Schull actress 108 Reid Scott actor 109 Amy Sedaris actress 110 Timothy Simons actor 109 Mary Steenburgen actress 110 Sarah Sutherland actress 109 Max Topplin actor 108 Gina Torres actress 108 Matt Walsh actor 109 Kerry Washington actress 112 D B Woodside actor 108 Bowen Yang actor and comedian 112 Polling Edit Graphical summary Edit Aggregate polls Edit Source of pollaggregation Dates administered Dates updated DavidPerdueRepublican JonOssoffDemocratic Other Undecided f Margin270 To Win November 2 2020 November 3 2020 46 2 47 4 6 4 Ossoff 1 2Real Clear Politics November 1 2020 November 3 2020 46 3 47 0 6 7 Ossoff 0 7Poll source Date s administered Samplesize g Marginof error DavidPerdue R JonOssoff D ShaneHazel L Other UndecidedLandmark Communications November 1 2020 500 LV 4 4 49 47 3 1 h Swayable Archived November 13 2020 at the Wayback Machine October 27 November 1 2020 407 LV 6 4 49 48 3 Data for Progress October 27 November 1 2020 1 036 LV 3 46 51 3 0 i Emerson College October 29 31 2020 749 LV 3 5 49 j 51 3 k Morning Consult October 22 31 2020 1 743 LV 2 0 46 47 Landmark Communications October 28 2020 750 LV 3 6 47 47 3 3 l Public Policy Polling October 27 28 2020 661 V 44 47 3 6 m Monmouth University October 23 27 2020 504 RV 4 4 46 49 2 2 n 504 LV o 47 49 504 LV p 48 49 Swayable October 23 26 2020 342 LV 7 2 49 48 3 Civiqs Daily Kos October 23 26 2020 1 041 LV 3 4 46 51 2 2 q YouGov CBS October 20 23 2020 1 090 LV 3 4 47 46 6 r University of Georgia October 14 23 2020 1 145 LV 4 45 46 4 5 s Landmark Communications October 21 2020 500 LV 4 4 50 45 Citizen Data October 17 20 2020 1 000 LV 3 41 47 12 t Morning Consult October 11 20 2020 1 672 LV 2 4 46 44 Emerson College October 17 19 2020 506 LV 4 3 46 45 9 u Siena College NYT Upshot October 13 19 2020 759 LV 4 1 43 43 4 10 v Opinion Insight R A October 12 15 2020 801 LV 3 46 45 j 45 8 w Garin Hart Yang Research Group D B October 11 14 2020 600 LV 43 48 6 3 l Quinnipiac University October 8 12 2020 1 040 LV 3 0 45 51 3 x SurveyUSA October 8 12 2020 677 LV 5 7 46 43 11 y Data for Progress October 8 11 2020 782 LV 3 5 43 44 1 10 Morning Consult October 2 11 2020 1 837 LV 2 3 46 42 Public Policy Polling October 8 9 2020 528 V 4 3 43 44 4 9 z Landmark Communications October 7 2020 600 LV 4 47 46 2 6 m University of Georgia September 27 October 6 2020 1 106 LV 2 9 49 41 3 7 aa Civiqs Daily Kos September 26 29 2020 969 LV 3 5 46 48 3 3 ab Hart Research Associates D C September 24 27 2020 400 LV 4 9 49 46 Quinnipiac University September 23 27 2020 1 125 LV 2 9 48 49 2 ac Redfield amp Wilton Strategies September 23 26 2020 789 LV 3 49 42 47 12 ad YouGov CBS September 22 25 2020 1 164 LV 3 4 47 42 10 ae Monmouth University September 17 21 2020 402 RV 4 9 48 42 4 6 af 402 LV o 48 43 3 5 s 402 LV p 50 42 2 4 ag Siena College NYT Upshot September 16 21 2020 523 LV 4 9 41 38 5 16 ah University of Georgia September 11 20 2020 1 150 LV 4 47 45 4 5 s Morning Consult September 11 20 2020 1 406 LV 2 7 43 ai 44 Data For Progress D September 14 19 2020 800 LV 3 5 43 41 2 14 aj Morning Consult September 8 17 2020 1 402 LV ak 2 4 43 43 GBAO Strategies D D September 14 16 2020 600 LV 48 49 Redfield amp Wilton Strategies September 12 16 2020 800 LV 3 46 43 43 14 al Fabrizio Ward Hart Research Associates E August 30 September 5 2020 800 LV 3 5 47 48 5 am Opinion Insight American Action Forum A August 30 September 2 2020 800 LV 3 46 45 j 44 11 an HarrisX D F August 20 30 2020 1 616 RV 2 4 47 40 8 4 ao Public Policy Polling August 13 14 2020 530 V 4 1 44 44 11 ap Garin Hart Yang Research D B August 10 13 2020 601 LV 4 0 46 48 6 SurveyUSA August 6 8 2020 623 LV 5 3 44 41 14 aq YouGov CBS July 28 31 2020 1 101 LV 3 4 45 43 13 ar HIT Strategies D G July 23 31 2020 400 RV 4 9 39 42 19 as Monmouth University July 23 27 2020 402 RV 4 9 49 43 1 7 aa 402 LV o 50 43 1 6 m 402 LV p 51 43 1 6 m Morning Consult July 17 26 2020 1 337 LV 3 0 45 42 12 Spry Strategies R H July 11 16 2020 700 LV 3 7 46 44 10 at Garin Hart Yang Research D B July 9 15 2020 800 LV 3 5 44 45 11 Gravis Marketing R I July 2 2020 513 LV 4 3 48 43 9 Fox News June 20 23 2020 1 013 RV 3 0 45 42 13 au Public Policy Polling June 12 13 2020 661 V 3 4 44 45 11 Civiqs Daily Kos May 16 18 2020 1 339 RV 3 1 45 47 7 av The Progress Campaign D 113 May 6 15 2020 2 893 LV 2 0 42 42 16 BK Strategies R J May 11 13 2020 700 LV 3 7 46 41 13 Public Opinion Strategies R May 4 7 2020 500 LV 4 4 43 41 7 8 aw Cygnal R 114 K April 25 27 2020 591 LV 4 0 45 39 16 The Progress Campaign D March 12 21 2020 3 042 RV 4 5 39 40 20 Hypothetical pollingwith Teresa TomlinsonPoll source Date s administered Samplesize g Marginof error DavidPerdue R TeresaTomlinson D Other UndecidedCiviqs Daily Kos May 16 18 1 339 RV 3 1 45 44 10 ax The Progress Campaign D 113 May 6 15 2 893 LV 2 41 40 19 The Progress Campaign D March 12 21 3 042 RV 4 5 40 39 21 with Sarah Riggs AmicoPoll source Date s administered Samplesize g Marginof error DavidPerdue R Sarah RiggsAmico D Other UndecidedCiviqs Daily Kos May 16 18 1 339 RV 3 1 45 42 13 ay with Stacey AbramsPoll source Date s administered Samplesize g Marginof error DavidPerdue R StaceyAbrams D Other UndecidedThe Progress Campaign D March 12 21 3 042 RV 4 5 41 46 12 with Generic DemocratPoll source Date s administered Samplesize g Marginof error DavidPerdue R GenericDemocrat Other UndecidedSurveyUSA November 15 18 2019 1 303 LV 3 2 40 37 23 University of Georgia October 28 30 2019 1 028 RV 35 1 21 1 43 8 with Generic Republican and Generic DemocratPoll source Date s administered Samplesize g Marginof error GenericRepublican GenericDemocrat Other UndecidedGlobal Strategy Group D L March 17 19 2019 603 LV 4 0 40 42 18 Results Edit No candidate received a majority of the vote on November 3 so the top two finishers incumbent Republican senator David Perdue 49 7 and Democratic challenger Jon Ossoff 47 9 advanced to a runoff election held on January 5 2021 115 116 Voters whose mail in ballots were rejected were allowed to submit corrections until 5pm on November 6 117 118 2020 United States Senate election in Georgia 119 Party Candidate Votes Republican David Perdue incumbent 2 462 617 49 73 3 2 Democratic Jon Ossoff 2 374 519 47 95 2 7 Libertarian Shane T Hazel 115 039 2 4 0 4 Total votes 4 952 175 100 00 Runoff EditThe runoff election between Perdue and Ossoff was on January 5 2021 120 alongside the special election for the Georgia U S Senate seat held by Republican Kelly Loeffler Following the 2020 Senate elections Republicans held 50 Senate seats and the Democratic caucus 48 121 Since Democrats won both Georgia runoffs their caucus gained control of the Senate as the resultant 50 50 tie is broken by Democratic vice president Kamala Harris If the Democrats had lost either race Republicans would have retained control of the Senate 122 The high political stakes caused the races to attract significant nationwide attention 123 124 125 These elections are the third and fourth Senate runoff elections to be held in Georgia since runoffs were first mandated in 1964 following runoffs in 1992 and 2008 126 It is also the third time that both of Georgia s Senate seats have been up for election at the same time following double barrel elections in 1914 and 1932 127 The deadline for registration for the runoff election was December 7 2020 Absentee ballots for the runoff election were sent out beginning on November 18 and in person voting began on December 14 128 129 Ossoff s runoff campaign largely focused around accusing Perdue of corruption as well as aggressively courting Black voters in an attempt to drive up turnout while Perdue characterised Ossoff as a socialist and accused him of having ties to the People s Republic of China 130 Perdue s campaign was hampered by his refusal to state that Joe Biden had won that year s presidential election which made it exceedingly difficult for him to argue that an Ossoff victory would create a Democratic trifecta 131 Predictions Edit Source Ranking As ofThe Cook Political Report 132 Tossup January 4 2021Inside Elections 133 Tossup December 14 2020Sabato s Crystal Ball 134 Tossup January 5 2021Polling Edit Aggregate polls Edit Source of pollaggregation Dates administered Dates updated DavidPerdueRepublican JonOssoffDemocratic Undecided f Margin270 To Win Dec 30 2020 January 4 2021 January 4 2021 47 4 50 2 2 4 Ossoff 2 8RealClearPolitics Dec 14 2020 January 4 2021 January 5 2021 48 8 49 3 1 9 Ossoff 0 5538 Nov 9 2020 January 4 2021 January 5 2021 47 4 49 1 3 5 Ossoff 1 8Average 47 9 49 5 2 6 Ossoff 1 7This section also contains pre runoff polls excluding all candidates except head to head matchups Poll source Date s administered Samplesize g Marginof error DavidPerdue R JonOssoff D UndecidedTrafalgar Group January 2 4 2021 1 056 LV 2 9 49 49 2 AtlasIntel January 2 4 2021 857 LV 3 47 51 2 InsiderAdvantage January 3 2021 500 LV 4 4 48 7 48 6 2 7 National Research Inc January 2 3 2021 500 LV 4 4 45 46 9 University of Nevada Las Vegas Lee Business School December 30 2020 January 3 2021 550 LV 4 49 48 3 Targoz Market Research December 30 2020 January 3 2021 713 LV 3 7 50 50 0 1 342 RV 47 51 2 AtlasIntel December 25 2020 January 1 2021 1 680 LV 2 47 51 2 Gravis Marketing December 29 30 2020 1 011 LV 3 1 47 50 3 JMC Analytics and Polling December 28 29 2020 500 LV 4 4 45 53 2 Trafalgar Group December 23 27 2020 1 022 LV 3 0 48 50 2 Open Model Project December 21 27 2020 1 405 LV 4 7 50 46 4 InsiderAdvantage December 21 22 2020 500 LV 4 4 49 48 3 Mellman Group December 18 22 2020 578 LV 4 1 47 50 3 Reconnect Research Probolsky Research December 14 22 2020 1 027 LV 4 43 42 15 SurveyUSA December 16 20 2020 600 LV 5 1 46 51 3 Trafalgar Group December 14 16 2020 1 064 LV 3 0 50 48 2 Emerson College December 14 16 2020 605 LV 3 9 51 48 1 InsiderAdvantage December 14 2020 500 LV 4 4 49 48 3 Wick Archived December 18 2020 at the Wayback Machine December 10 14 2020 1 500 LV 51 47 2 RMG Research Archived December 21 2020 at the Wayback Machine December 8 14 2020 1 417 LV 2 6 47 49 4 Baris Peach State Battleground Poll December 4 11 2020 1 008 LV 3 1 45 47 9 Trafalgar Group December 8 10 2020 1 018 LV 3 0 49 49 2 Fabrizio Ward Hart Research Associates November 30 December 4 2020 1 250 LV 3 2 46 48 6 Trafalgar Group December 1 3 2020 1 083 LV 2 9 47 48 5 SurveyUSA November 27 30 2020 583 LV 5 2 48 50 2 RMG Research Archived December 4 2020 at the Wayback Machine November 19 24 2020 1 377 LV 2 6 47 48 5 Data For Progress D November 15 20 2020 1 476 LV 2 6 50 48 3 InsiderAdvantage November 16 2020 800 LV 3 5 49 49 2 Remington Research Group November 8 9 2020 1 450 LV 2 6 50 46 4 Garin Hart Yang Research Group D B October 11 14 2020 600 LV 45 50 5 Data For Progress D September 14 19 2020 800 LV 3 5 44 44 12 Hypothetical pollingwith Generic Republican and Generic DemocratPoll source Date s administered Samplesize g Marginof error GenericRepublican GenericDemocrat UndecidedRMG Research PoliticalIQ Archived January 28 2021 at the Wayback Machine December 8 14 2020 1 377 LV 2 6 46 az 42 11 ba Quinnipiac University September 23 27 2020 1 125 LV 2 9 48 49 3 Results Edit 2021 United States Senate election in Georgia runoff 119 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Jon Ossoff 2 269 923 50 61 5 4 Republican David Perdue 2 214 979 49 39 3 5 Total votes 4 484 902 100 00 N ADemocratic gain from RepublicanBy countyCounty 119 Jon OssoffDemocratic David PerdueRepublican Margin Total votes Appling 1 598 21 95 5 683 78 05 4 085 56 10 7 281Atkinson 720 27 22 1 925 72 78 1 205 45 56 2 645Bacon 559 13 54 3 569 86 46 3 010 72 92 4 128Baker 630 43 78 809 56 22 179 12 44 1 439Baldwin 8 515 51 78 7 931 48 22 584 3 55 16 446Banks 836 11 22 6 612 88 78 5 776 77 55 7 448Barrow 9 276 28 93 22 789 71 07 13 513 42 14 32 065Bartow 10 735 24 98 32 239 75 02 21 504 50 04 42 974Ben Hill 2 182 38 19 3 531 61 81 1 349 23 61 5 713Berrien 1 141 17 08 5 538 82 92 4 397 65 83 6 679Bibb 39 717 62 58 23 748 37 42 15 969 25 16 63 465Bleckley 1 190 23 29 3 920 76 71 2 730 53 42 5 110Brantley 615 9 29 6 003 90 71 5 388 81 41 6 618Brooks 2 456 39 51 3 760 60 49 1 304 20 98 6 216Bryan 6 020 32 34 12 596 67 66 6 576 35 32 18 616Bulloch 9 832 37 61 16 311 62 39 6 479 24 78 26 143Burke 4 686 49 37 4 806 50 63 120 1 26 9 492Butts 3 004 29 43 7 205 70 57 4 201 41 15 10 209Calhoun 1 202 59 21 828 40 79 374 18 42 2 030Camden 6 856 34 50 13 015 65 50 6 159 30 99 19 871Candler 1 134 28 97 2 781 71 03 1 647 42 07 3 915Carroll 14 590 30 94 32 573 69 06 17 983 38 13 47 163Catoosa 6 009 21 64 21 757 78 36 15 748 56 72 27 766Charlton 966 24 70 2 945 75 30 1 979 50 60 3 911Chatham 72 309 59 64 48 937 40 36 23 372 19 28 121 246Chattahoochee 606 45 84 716 54 16 110 8 32 1 322Chattooga 1 673 20 33 6 558 79 67 4 885 59 35 8 231Cherokee 37 596 29 40 90 276 70 60 52 680 41 20 127 872Clarke 32 901 71 20 13 311 28 80 19 590 42 39 46 212Clay 728 55 53 583 44 47 145 11 06 1 311Clayton 91 015 88 43 11 907 11 57 79 108 76 86 102 922Clinch 615 25 06 1 839 74 94 1 224 49 88 2 454Cobb 201 009 56 04 157 653 43 96 43 356 12 09 358 662Coffee 4 058 30 71 9 154 69 29 5 096 38 57 13 212Colquitt 3 714 26 43 10 339 73 57 6 625 47 14 14 053Columbia 26 497 36 72 45 667 63 28 19 170 26 56 72 164Cook 1 894 30 51 4 313 69 49 2 419 38 97 6 207Coweta 21 527 31 99 45 776 68 01 24 249 36 03 67 303Crawford 1 486 27 70 3 879 72 30 2 393 44 60 5 365Crisp 2 681 37 58 4 454 62 42 1 773 24 85 7 135Dade 1 131 17 79 5 227 82 21 4 096 64 42 6 358Dawson 2 230 15 50 12 159 84 50 9 929 69 0 14 389Decatur 4 127 41 08 5 919 58 92 1 792 17 84 10 046DeKalb 291 667 83 49 57 674 16 51 233 993 66 98 349 341Dodge 2 011 28 02 5 165 71 98 3 154 43 95 7 176Dooly 1 802 48 18 1 938 51 82 136 3 64 3 740Dougherty 22 745 70 88 9 346 29 12 13 399 41 75 32 091Douglas 40 398 64 77 21 970 35 23 18 428 29 55 62 368Early 2 182 47 96 2 368 52 04 186 4 09 4 550Echols 130 10 95 1 057 89 05 927 78 10 1 187Effingham 7 147 25 68 20 680 74 32 13 533 48 63 27 827Elbert 2 493 31 11 5 521 68 89 3 028 37 78 8 014Emanuel 2 547 30 49 5 807 69 51 3 260 39 02 8 354Evans 1 198 32 06 2 539 67 94 1 341 35 88 3 737Fannin 2 378 17 68 11 070 82 32 8 692 64 63 13 448Fayette 30 938 45 90 36 463 54 10 5 525 8 20 67 401Floyd 10 676 29 83 25 108 70 17 14 432 40 33 35 784Forsyth 36 936 32 06 78 263 67 94 41 327 35 87 115 199Franklin 1 345 14 63 7 849 85 37 6 504 70 74 9 194Fulton 350 342 71 68 138 417 28 32 211 925 43 36 488 759Gilmer 2 664 17 97 12 163 82 03 9 499 64 07 14 827Glascock 134 9 82 1 230 90 18 1 096 80 35 1 364Glynn 13 976 37 32 23 476 62 68 9 500 25 37 37 452Gordon 3 881 19 07 16 471 80 93 12 590 61 86 20 352Grady 3 099 33 22 6 229 66 78 3 130 33 55 9 328Greene 3 703 34 87 6 917 65 13 3 214 30 26 10 620Gwinnett 222 346 60 11 147 563 39 89 74 783 20 22 369 909Habersham 3 160 17 53 14 871 82 47 11 711 64 95 18 031Hall 21 883 27 69 57 157 72 31 35 274 44 63 79 040Hancock 2 775 72 34 1 061 27 66 1 714 44 68 3 836Haralson 1 610 13 24 10 553 86 76 8 943 73 53 12 163Harris 4 986 27 27 13 297 72 73 8 311 45 46 18 283Hart 2 869 25 60 8 336 74 40 5 467 48 79 11 205Heard 780 16 68 3 895 83 32 3 115 66 63 4 675Henry 68 235 62 38 41 145 37 62 27 090 24 77 109 380Houston 29 608 44 60 36 779 55 40 7 171 10 80 66 387Irwin 877 24 25 2 739 75 75 1 862 51 49 3 616Jackson 6 785 20 83 25 793 79 17 19 008 58 35 32 578Jasper 1 654 24 32 5 146 75 68 3 492 51 35 6 800Jeff Davis 947 18 62 4 139 81 38 3 192 62 76 5 086Jefferson 3 752 54 17 3 174 45 83 578 8 35 6 926Jenkins 1 173 37 64 1 943 62 36 770 24 71 3 116Johnson 1 044 29 22 2 529 70 78 1 485 41 56 3 573Jones 4 517 33 88 8 815 66 12 4 298 32 24 13 332Lamar 2 395 30 0 5 588 70 0 3 193 40 0 7 983Lanier 905 29 85 2 127 70 15 1 222 40 30 3 032Laurens 7 389 36 50 12 855 63 50 5 466 27 0 20 244Lee 4 225 28 37 10 665 71 63 6 440 43 25 14 890Liberty 11 830 64 59 6 485 35 41 5 345 29 18 18 315Lincoln 1 311 31 09 2 906 68 91 1 595 37 82 4 217Long 1 795 38 74 2 838 61 26 1 043 22 51 4 633Lowndes 17 369 43 60 22 464 56 40 5 095 12 79 39 833Lumpkin 2 820 20 59 10 877 79 41 8 057 58 82 13 697Macon 2 664 62 49 1 599 37 51 1 065 24 98 4 263Madison 3 074 23 29 10 125 76 71 7 051 53 42 13 199Marion 1 217 37 85 1 998 62 15 781 24 29 3 215McDuffie 3 733 40 42 5 502 59 58 1 769 19 16 9 235McIntosh 2 399 40 40 3 539 59 60 1 140 19 20 5 938Meriwether 4 012 40 75 5 833 59 25 1 821 18 50 9 845Miller 650 26 53 1 800 73 47 1 150 46 94 2 450Mitchell 3 546 45 14 4 309 54 86 763 9 71 7 855Monroe 4 027 28 54 10 084 71 46 6 057 42 92 14 111Montgomery 884 25 12 2 635 74 88 1 751 49 76 3 519Morgan 3 097 28 60 7 730 71 40 4 633 42 79 10 827Murray 2 036 15 66 10 963 84 34 8 927 68 67 12 999Muscogee 44 875 62 76 26 626 37 24 18 249 25 52 71 501Newton 28 177 57 74 20 620 42 26 7 557 15 49 48 797Oconee 7 322 31 10 16 220 68 90 8 898 37 80 23 542Oglethorpe 2 237 30 97 4 985 69 03 2 748 38 05 7 222Paulding 27 083 36 62 46 872 63 38 19 789 26 76 73 955Peach 5 335 48 27 5 717 51 73 382 3 46 11 052Pickens 2 548 16 82 12 601 83 18 10 053 66 36 15 149Pierce 956 12 06 6 972 87 94 6 016 75 88 7 928Pike 1 372 14 24 8 266 85 76 6 894 71 53 9 638Polk 3 305 22 25 11 546 77 75 8 241 55 49 14 851Pulaski 1 118 30 36 2 564 69 64 1 446 39 27 3 682Putnam 3 160 29 16 7 676 70 84 4 516 41 68 10 836Quitman 463 45 80 548 54 20 85 8 41 1 011Rabun 1 789 21 28 6 618 78 72 4 829 57 44 8 407Randolph 1 672 56 45 1 290 43 55 382 12 90 2 962Richmond 53 568 69 36 23 660 30 64 29 908 38 73 77 228Rockdale 29 463 72 38 11 244 27 62 18 219 44 76 40 707Schley 435 21 14 1 623 78 86 1 188 57 73 2 058Screven 2 408 40 70 3 509 59 30 1 101 18 61 5 917Seminole 1 147 32 79 2 351 67 21 1 204 34 42 3 498Spalding 10 966 40 73 15 957 59 27 4 991 18 54 26 923Stephens 2 058 20 50 7 979 79 50 5 921 58 99 10 037Stewart 1 115 61 88 687 38 12 428 23 75 1 802Sumter 5 847 52 79 5 230 47 21 617 5 57 11 077Talbot 1 945 61 03 1 242 38 97 703 22 06 3 187Taliaferro 513 60 71 332 39 29 181 21 42 845Tattnall 1 872 25 94 5 344 74 06 3 472 48 12 7 216Taylor 1 350 38 93 2 118 61 07 768 22 15 3 468Telfair 1 348 35 06 2 497 64 94 1 149 29 88 3 845Terrell 2 256 54 70 1 868 45 30 388 9 41 4 124Thomas 7 647 39 78 11 577 60 22 3 930 20 44 19 224Tift 4 726 32 80 9 681 67 20 4 955 34 39 14 407Toombs 2 511 26 75 6 877 73 25 4 366 46 51 9 388Towns 1 394 19 26 5 842 80 74 4 448 61 47 7 236Treutlen 847 31 30 1 859 68 70 1 012 37 40 2 706Troup 10 504 39 95 15 788 60 05 5 284 20 10 26 292Turner 1 305 38 27 2 105 61 73 800 23 46 3 410Twiggs 1 876 47 70 2 057 52 30 181 4 60 3 933Union 2 570 18 12 11 613 81 88 9 043 63 76 14 183Upson 3 833 34 30 7 342 65 70 3 509 31 40 11 175Walker 4 891 20 25 19 268 79 75 14 377 59 51 24 159Walton 11 583 25 46 33 908 74 54 22 325 49 08 45 491Ware 3 704 30 36 8 498 69 64 4 794 39 29 12 202Warren 1 387 56 24 1 079 43 76 308 12 49 2 466Washington 4 368 51 21 4 161 48 79 207 2 43 8 529Wayne 2 488 22 19 8 724 77 81 6 236 55 62 11 212Webster 554 44 18 700 55 82 146 11 64 1 254Wheeler 627 31 21 1 382 68 79 755 37 58 2 009White 2 222 16 72 11 071 83 28 8 849 66 57 13 293Whitfield 9 245 29 12 22 501 70 88 13 256 41 76 31 746Wilcox 763 26 79 2 085 73 21 1 322 46 42 2 848Wilkes 1 949 43 03 2 580 56 97 631 13 93 4 529Wilkinson 1 960 45 51 2 347 54 49 387 8 99 4 307Worth 2 229 26 91 6 053 73 09 3 824 46 17 8 282Totals 2 269 923 50 61 2 214 979 49 39 54 944 1 23 4 484 902Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic 135 Cobb largest municipality Marietta Gwinnett largest municipality Peachtree Corners Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican 136 Baker largest municipality Newton Burke largest municipality Waynesboro Chattahoochee largest municipality Cusseta Dooly largest municipality Vienna Twiggs largest municipality Jeffersonville See also Edit Fair Fight Action Voter suppression in the United States 2019 2020 Georgia 2020 Georgia U S state electionsNotes Edit Partisan clients a b The American Action Forum is a 501 organisation which usually supports Republican candidates a b c d Poll sponsored by Ossoff s campaign Poll sponsored by The Human Rights Campaign which endorsed Biden before this poll s sampling period Poll sponsored by Warnock s campaign for the 2020 21 United States Senate special election in Georgia Poll sponsored by AARP Poll sponsored by Matt Lieberman s campaign This poll s sponsor DFER primarily supports Democratic candidates This poll s sponsor is the American Principles Project a 501 that supports the Republican Party Poll is sponsored by OANN a far right political talkshow This poll was sponsored by the Republican State Leadership Committee Poll conducted for the Speaker of Georgia s House Republican caucus Poll sponsored by the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee Voter samples and additional candidates Another candidate with 7 2 Knox with 1 5 DeJesus and Smith with 1 McCracken with 0 3 Listed as other undecided Includes undecided Initially scheduled for October 19 57 a b Calculated by taking the difference of 100 and all other candidates combined a b c d e f g h Key A all adultsRV registered votersLV likely votersV unclear Undecided with 1 Other candidate or write in with 0 a b c With voters who lean towards a given candidate Someone else with 3 a b Undecided with 3 a b c d Undecided with 6 Other candidate and No one with 0 Undecided with 2 a b c With a likely voter turnout model featuring higher turnout than in the 2016 presidential election a b c With a likely voter turnout model featuring lower turnout than in the 2016 presidential election Someone else and Undecided with 1 Someone else with 2 Undecided with 4 a b c Undecided with 5 Other with 5 Undecided with 8 Someone else with 3 Undecided with 6 Someone else and would not vote with 1 Undecided Refused with 8 Someone else and did would not vote with 1 Undecided Refused with 6 Someone else with 0 Undecided with 3 Some other candidate with 3 Undecided with 8 Undecided with 9 a b Undecided with 7 Someone else with 1 Undecided with 2 Someone else with 0 Undecided with 2 Another Third Party Write in with 3 Undecided with 9 Someone else with 2 Undecided with 8 Other and No one with 0 Undecided with 6 Undecided with 4 Someone else and would not vote with 0 Undecided Refused with 16 Overlapping sample with the previous Morning Consult poll but more information available regarding sample size Undecided with 14 Additional data sourced from FiveThirtyEight Another Third Party Write in with 3 Undecided with 11 Would not vote with 1 Undecided with 4 Would not vote with 2 Undecided with 9 Would not vote with 4 Undecided with 11 Some other candidate with 4 Undecided with 10 Someone else with 3 Undecided with 10 Third party candidate with 3 would not vote with 2 Undecided with 14 Another candidate with 4 Undecided with 6 Undecided with 8 Other with 3 would not vote with 2 Someone else with 4 Undecided with 3 Undecided with 8 Someone else with 6 Undecided with 4 Someone else with 8 Undecided with 5 It is more important for Republicans to have control of the Senate as opposed to It is more important for Democrats to have control of the Senate with 46 It does not matter which party has control of the Senate with 7 Undecided with 4 References Edit Martin Jonathan Fausset Richard Epstein Reid J January 6 2021 Jon Ossoff wins in Georgia ensuring Democrats will control the Senate The New York Times Archived from the original on January 7 2021 Retrieved January 6 2021 Cathey Libby et al January 6 2021 ABC News projects Ossoff victory over Perdue ABC News Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved January 6 2021 Bluestein Greg David Perdue concedes to Jon Ossoff ending Georgia Senate runoffs The Atlanta Journal Constitution Retrieved January 8 2021 GOP s David Perdue concedes to Jon Ossoff in Georgia runoff AP NEWS January 8 2021 Retrieved January 8 2021 Evers Hillstrom Karl January 4 2021 Georgia Senate races shatter spending records OpenSecrets Archived from the original on January 7 2021 Stuart Tessa January 6 2021 Warnock Makes History and Democrats Gain Senate Majority Rolling Stone Retrieved April 13 2021 Amy Gardner Erica Werner January 19 2021 Georgia certifies Ossoff and Warnock victories paving way for Democratic control of Senate Retrieved January 19 2021 a b Hallerman Tamar Bluestein Greg December 2 2018 Inside David Perdue s 2020 race for another U S Senate term The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved December 3 2018 a b c d e f g h Georgia Senate 2020 Race Open Secrets Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved May 15 2020 a b c d e f g All seats up for grab Early County News May 12 2020 Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved May 15 2020 Bortree Broadcast September 17 2018 Voting Out Rinos with Derrick Grayson Archived from the original on November 17 2021 via YouTube Nadler Ben Amy Jeff March 7 2020 Candidate fields for 2020 races in Georgia take final shape WJXT Associated Press Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved March 23 2020 Rep US Senate Georgia Secretary of State Archived from the original on June 10 2020 Retrieved June 9 2020 Bluestein Greg September 9 2019 Ossoff to run for US Senate in Georgia The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved September 9 2019 Wooten Nick May 1 2019 Former Columbus Mayor Teresa Tomlinson formally announces 2020 U S Senate bid Ledger Enquirer Columbus Georgia Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved May 1 2019 Greg Bluestein Tomlinson s fundraising total could give rival Ga Democrats an opening The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved July 9 2019 Bluestein Greg August 27 2019 Amico enters Georgia race for Senate after her company s bankruptcy The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved August 27 2019 Wooten Nick May 1 2019 Former Columbus Mayor Teresa Tomlinson formally announces 2020 U S Senate bid Ledger Enquirer Columbus Georgia Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved August 27 2019 AJC and Democratic Party Exclude Black Candidates from GA US Senate Debate Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved January 28 2020 a b Amy Jeff Nadler Ben March 6 2020 Candidate fields for 2020 races in Georgia take final shape News 4 Jax Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved March 23 2020 Bluestein Greg January 26 2020 Clarkston s millennial mayor drops out of Georgia Senate race The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved January 26 2020 Burns Alexander April 3 2019 Stacey Abrams Will Not Run for Senate in 2020 The New York Times Archived from the original on April 30 2019 Retrieved April 30 2019 Bluestein Greg May 1 2019 BREAKING Stacey Abrams won t run for US Senate in Georgia The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved May 1 2019 a b c Hallerman Tamar Bluestein Greg April 30 2019 Updated Who could challenge Sen David Perdue in 2020 The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved April 30 2019 Galloway Jim December 28 2018 The question for Georgia Democrats in 2019 WWAD The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved January 3 2019 Naomi Lim January 25 2020 Jimmy Carter grandson declines Georgia Senate bid Washington Examiner Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved January 25 2020 Bluestein Greg December 13 2019 Stacey Evans to mount a political comeback after gov run The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved January 26 2020 Jordan Jen senatorjen April 28 2019 I think about all that have lifted me up specifically my teachers and supported me through the years and continue to do so But it is because of them that I am going to continue to serve the people of my district as a state senator Tweet Retrieved April 28 2019 via Twitter Bluestein Greg October 23 2019 Georgia Senate Michelle Nunn passes on a 2020 bid The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved October 28 2019 Bluestein Greg May 23 2016 Kasim Reed I think I ve got another campaign in me The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved January 8 2019 Bluestein Greg March 1 2017 Kasim Reed I definitely want to run for office again The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved January 8 2019 Hallerman Tamar November 28 2019 Yates passes on run for Georgia office The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved September 9 2019 a b Bluestein Greg September 23 2019 We have to start now Ossoff plans major voter registration rally The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved October 10 2019 a b Arkin James September 9 2019 Jon Ossoff launches run for Senate in Georgia Politico Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved October 10 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Georgia Senate Ossoff lands endorsements from 20 black officials ajc Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved January 28 2020 a b c Galloway Jim Mitchell Tia Bluestein Greg The Jolt Conservative outlets look askance at Kelly Loeffler Doug Collins battle ajc Archived from the original on March 3 2020 Retrieved March 3 2020 a b Mitchell Tia Bluestein Greg February 28 2020 The Jolt A top Tomlinson supporter flips to Ossoff s camp The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved February 28 2020 a b Galloway Jim Bluestein Greg Mitchell Tia April 8 2020 The Jolt Anti abortion groups push Governor Kemp to shut down clinics in Georgia The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved April 13 2020 a b Bluestein Greg May 6 2020 Georgia Senate Ossoff picks up former rival Terry s endorsement The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved May 7 2020 a b c d End Citizens United and Let America Vote Endorse Jon Ossoff and Rev Raphael Warnock for Senate Let America Vote March 18 2020 Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved May 18 2020 a b Page by Page Report Display Page 115 of 1163 Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved February 19 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Endorsers for US Senate Candidate Teresa Tomlinson Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved January 28 2020 Galloway Jim Bluestein Greg Hallerman Tamar September 3 2019 The Jolt Andrew Young endorses Teresa Tomlinson in Senate race No 1 The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved October 10 2019 Mitchell Tia February 12 2020 Tomlinson Warnock bids for U S Senate endorsed by key progressive group Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved February 12 2020 2020 FEDERAL ENDORSEMENTS National Organization for Women PAC Archived from the original on June 15 2020 Retrieved April 13 2020 a b c d Galloway Jim Bluestein Greg Mitchell Tia March 31 2020 The Jolt A plea for pandemic restrictions on funerals The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved April 13 2020 Bluestein Greg October 2 2019 Georgia Senate Amico nabs labor endorsement The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved January 28 2020 Gregorian Dareh June 12 2020 Voter turnout soared in Georgia despite massive primary day problems NBC News Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved June 13 2020 Since Ossoff won more than 50 a primary runoff did not occur DEM US SENATE Georgia Secretary of State Archived from the original on June 10 2020 Retrieved June 9 2020 Szilagyi Jessica February 25 2020 Shane Hazel Announces US Senate Bid All on Georgia Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved September 22 2020 Stafford Leon August 22 2017 Mitchell Norwood to qualify for Atlanta mayor as Bartell drops out AJC Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved May 15 2020 a b United States Senate election in Georgia 2020 Ballotpedia Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved May 18 2020 a b c d Qualifying Candidate Information Georgia Secretary of State August 13 2020 Archived from the original on November 25 2020 Retrieved August 17 2020 GEORGIA Politics1 Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved June 13 2020 Hallerman Tamar Bluestein Greg February 26 2020 NEW DETAILS Who s challenging Sen David Perdue in 2020 AJC Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved May 15 2020 The Green Papers Georgia 2020 General Election The Green Papers May 14 2020 Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved May 15 2020 a b c Perdue Ossoff face off in Georgia Senate debate attack goes viral NBC News Associated Press October 29 2020 Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved October 30 2020 Nadler Ben October 12 2020 Ossoff Slams Perdue Over Virus Republican Cries Socialism US News Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved October 30 2020 Bluestein Greg October 28 2020 Pandemic China Ossoff Perdue Senate debate twists turns around sharp contrasts The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved October 29 2020 Walker James October 29 2020 Jon Ossoff s Blistering Attack on David Perdue at Georgia Debate Watched Over 2 Million Times Newsweek Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved October 30 2020 a b Connolly George October 29 2020 Georgia Senate Jon Ossoff goes viral for blasting Republican David Perdue over Covid 19 and health care The Independent Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved October 30 2020 a b Thrush Glenn Vigdor Neil October 29 2020 After bitter debate in Georgia Senator David Perdue cancels third face off with Jon Ossoff The New York Times Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved October 30 2020 Bluestein Greg October 29 2020 Senate debate on WSB canceled after Perdue pulls out of Sunday showdown The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved October 30 2020 Pitofsky Marina December 6 2020 Ossoff debates empty podium as Perdue refuses to participate The Hill Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved December 7 2020 2020 Senate Elections Model Decision Desk HQ September 2 2020 Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved September 2 2020 Silver Nate September 18 2020 Forecasting the race for the Senate FiveThirtyEight Archived from the original on September 20 2020 Retrieved September 18 2020 2020 Senate Ratings The Rothenberg Political Report Retrieved March 11 2021 2020 Senate race ratings Sabato s Crystal Ball Retrieved March 12 2021 Battle for the Senate 2020 RCP October 23 2020 2020 Senate Race Ratings for October 29 2020 The Cook Political Report Retrieved March 11 2021 Forecasting the US elections The Economist November 2 2020 Retrieved March 13 2021 2020 Election Forecast Politico November 19 2019 Archived from the original on June 20 2020 Retrieved December 2 2019 2020 Senate Race Ratings Daily Kos Elections Retrieved March 13 2021 President Trump endorses Georgia s David Perdue Karen Handel 11Alive com June 11 2020 Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved July 28 2020 a b c Perdue Flaunts Endorsements of Former Senators in Re Election Campaign AllOnGeorgia com September 5 2020 Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved November 16 2020 a b c Sen David Perdue to campaign virtually as Sen Tim Scott makes stop in Savannah January 4 2021 Retrieved May 13 2021 Olson Tyler November 30 2020 Maryland Gov Hogan endorses Loeffler and Perdue in high stakes Georgia runoffs Fox News Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved November 30 2020 We ve never found systemic fraud not enough to overturn the election Georgia Secretary of State Raffensperger says ABC News a b c d e f g David Perdue s Ratings and Endorsements Vote Smart Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved November 16 2020 CCAGW PAC Endorses Sen David Perdue for Re election to the Senate Business Wire November 18 2020 Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved December 19 2020 More Endorsements Roll in US Senate Race As Election Inches Closer www allongeorgia com October 25 2020 Retrieved May 13 2021 Biden puts skin in the game in Georgia Politico Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved December 15 2020 Mitchell Tia Bluestein Greg Galloway Jim July 22 2020 The Jolt Governor Kemp s lawsuit would overturn mask requirements in 100 Georgia cities brief says The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved July 28 2020 PAC Ossoff confident anti corruption campaign will hit home with voters DSCC Congratulates Jon Ossoff on Advancing to the General Election in Georgia Senate Race Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee June 11 2020 Retrieved June 11 2020 The Win Big Project GA Sen A Stacey Abrams Endorses Jon Ossoff D Calling Him A Warrior Against Corruption June 24 2020 Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved October 17 2020 Pager Tyler September 17 2020 Buttigieg Endorses More Than Two Dozen Candidates for 2020 Bloomberg Retrieved April 5 2022 Jon Ossoff Black Economic Alliance PAC Black Economic Alliance Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved September 24 2020 2020 Endorsements Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved October 6 2020 Senate Candidates Council for a Livable World Council for a Livable World Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved September 21 2020 Everytown for Gun Safety Action Fund Endorses Jon Ossoff and Rev Raphael Warnock For U S Senate State Sen Nikema Williams and Carolyn Bourdeaux for U S House Everytown September 15 2020 Archived from the original on November 2 2020 Retrieved November 1 2020 Society Humane 2020 Endorsements Humane Society Legislative Fund Archived from the original on June 10 2020 Retrieved October 8 2020 JStreetPAC Candidates JStreetPAC Archived from the original on May 2 2018 Retrieved September 21 2020 Jewish Dems Launch Georgia Campaign Jewish Democratic Council of America November 20 2020 Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved December 7 2020 Meet the 2020 Candidates Joint Action Committee for Political Affairs permanent dead link Connnon Courtnee June 17 2020 LCV Action Fund Endorses Rev Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff for Georgia Senate Seats League of Conservation Voters Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved June 20 2020 Georgia Senate Ossoff Warnock win NARAL endorsements The Atlanta Journal Constitution July 9 2020 Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved July 10 2020 NRDC Action Fund Endorses 14 for House Senate nrdcactionfund org September 3 2020 Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved September 9 2020 Galloway Jim Bluestein Greg Mitchell Tia July 3 2020 The Jolt A vanished race for district attorney suddenly reappears The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved July 3 2020 Southeast Advocates PP July 2 2020 Planned Parenthood Action Fund Endorses Health Care Champions Jon Ossoff to represent Georgia in the U S Senate and Carolyn Bordeaux to Represent Georgia Congressional District 7 in the U S House Planned Parenthood Action Archived from the original on July 4 2020 Retrieved July 4 2020 Sierra Club Georgia Chapter 2020 Endorsements Sierra Club Georgia Chapter August 19 2020 Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved September 1 2020 JON OSSOFF CLIMATE HAWKS VOTE Climate Hawks Vote AFL CIO formally endorses Ossoff for U S Senate September 16 2020 Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved September 16 2020 U S Senate Education Votes educationvotes nea org Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved November 3 2020 Georgia UAW Endorsements uawendorsements org United Automobile Workers Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved September 3 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Andreeva Nellie December 18 2020 Suits Cast Sans Meghan Markle Reunite For Georgia Democratic Party Get Out the Vote Fundraiser Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved December 20 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa Ramos Dino Ray December 6 2020 Veep Cast Reunites For Virtual Table Read To Support Voter Turnout For Georgia Runoffs Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved December 20 2020 a b c d e f g h i Elf Reunion Will Ferrell Zooey Deschanel Joined by John Lithgow Wanda Sykes Ed Helms and More for Democratic Fundraiser Hollywood Reporter The Hollywood Reporter December 13 2020 Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved December 14 2020 TheHill January 1 2021 Billie Eilish Vote for Warnock and Ossoff Tweet via Twitter a b c d e f Logan Elizabeth November 7 2020 Celebrities Celebrate Stacey Abrams for Getting Out the Vote in Georgia Glamour Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved December 8 2020 a b The Progress Campaign OurProgressHQ June 8 2020 We surveyed 2 893 likely voters in Georgia In the Presidential preference race voters were split between Joe Biden and Donald Trump 47 to 47 with 13 of Independents undecided Tweet Retrieved April 5 2022 via Twitter Internal GOP poll points to troubling signs for Georgia Republicans Ajc com May 1 2020 Retrieved April 5 2022 Judd Donald November 16 2020 Georgia Sen David Perdue declines to debate opponent ahead of January 5 runoff CNN Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved November 17 2020 Georgia Senate runoff elections how they work and why they matter The Guardian January 4 2021 Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved January 4 2021 Democrats urge voters in Georgia to fix their absentee ballots before a Friday deadline The New York Times November 6 2020 archived from the original on January 6 2021 retrieved November 6 2020 Absentee By Mail Ballot Signature Cure Affidavit Form PDF Georgiademocrat org archived PDF from the original on January 6 2021 retrieved November 6 2020 a b c Georgia Election Results Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved November 21 2020 Georgia Election Results 2021 Live Senate Runoff Map Perdue vs Ossoff Politico Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved January 6 2021 Mascaro Lisa Biden s agenda at stake battle for Senate pushes to January The Detroit News Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved January 4 2021 Nilsen Ella November 30 2020 9 questions about the Georgia Senate runoffs you were too embarrassed to ask Vox Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved January 4 2021 Saul Stephanie December 28 2020 Relief Package Grows as Campaign Issue in Georgia Senate Races The New York Times Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved January 4 2021 Live updates Georgia Senate race attracts national attention Fox News November 10 2020 Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved January 4 2021 Dems feel a great deal of urgency ahead of Georgia runoffs Stacey Abrams ABC News Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved January 4 2021 Hallerman Tamar Georgia s unique runoff system shaped by long complicated history The Atlanta Journal Constitution Retrieved October 28 2021 Skelley Geoffrey The Minnesota Twins A Complete History of Double Barrel Senate Elections Sabato s Crystal Ball Retrieved October 28 2021 Caroline Kelly Georgians have until December 7 to register to vote in Senate runoff and other key dates CNN Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved December 1 2020 Lifsey Jennifer Key dates for Senate Runoff in Georgia wtoc com Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved December 1 2020 Bluestein Greg January 10 2021 Inside the runoff flips How Ossoff and Warnock pulled off epic victories The Atlanta Journal Constitution Retrieved November 4 2021 Arkin James Desiderio Andrew January 7 2021 How Warnock and Ossoff painted Georgia blue and flipped the Senate Politico Retrieved November 4 2021 One Day Out Will Trump Torpedo Republican Chances in the Georgia Runoffs The Cook Political Report Retrieved December 7 2021 2020 Senate Ratings The Rothenberg Political Report Retrieved March 11 2021 GOP Likely Needs a Big Georgia Turnout Today Sabato s Crystal Ball Retrieved April 1 2021 Election results from CNN Georgia Election Results The New York Times January 5 2021 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 3 2021 Further reading Edit Amber Phillips October 9 2020 The Senate seats most likely to flip parties in November Washingtonpost comExternal links Edit Georgia 2020 Purge List SaveMyVote2020 org Los Angeles CA Palast Investigative Fund Check if you have been purged from the Georgia voter rolls League of Women Voters of Georgia January 5 2018 State affiliate of the U S League of Women Voters Elections Archived November 12 2008 at the Wayback Machine at the Georgia Secretary of State official website Georgia at Ballotpedia Government Documents Round Table of the American Library Association Georgia Voting amp Elections Toolkits National Institute on Money in Politics Campaign Finance Institute Georgia 2019 amp 2020 Elections OpenSecrets Request a mail in ballot at the Georgia Secretary of State website Check to see if you are registered to vote Archived November 10 2020 at the Wayback Machine at the Georgia Secretary of State website Register to vote at Vote orgOfficial campaign websitesShane T Hazel L for Senate Jon Ossoff D for Senate David Perdue R for Senate Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2020 21 United States Senate election in Georgia amp oldid 1136343589, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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