The US politics news today midterm election Georgia Trump test is live: polls opened this morning in the deeply conservative Georgia-14 district that Marjorie Taylor Greene vacated, where Republican Clay Fuller faces Democrat Shawn Harris in a runoff that analysts say could be the clearest early signal yet of whether the Iran war is beginning to hurt Republicans’ electoral standing.
- Democrat Shawn Harris, a retired Army brigadier general and cattle farmer, led the March 10 primary with 37% in a district Trump won by 37 points in 2024, prompting Trump himself to urge Republicans to “be careful” and post a personal get-out-the-vote message Monday night
- If Harris wins or comes significantly closer than expected, it would signal elevated Democratic enthusiasm heading into November’s midterms, where Republicans hold a razor-thin 218-214 House majority
- The Iran war has become a central issue: Harris has explicitly tied rising gas prices to the conflict, telling voters “they will have to stop at the pump, and that’ll be the last thing they think about before they go and vote”
The US politics news today midterm election Georgia Trump dynamic arrived at its most visible test yet when polls opened this morning in Georgia’s 14th Congressional District, a stretch of northwest Georgia that runs across 10 counties from suburban Atlanta to Tennessee. Bloomberg reported the race as a direct test of Trump’s standing with his own base amid the Iran war, with Harris, a retired Army brigadier general, running against Trump-endorsed district attorney Clay Fuller in the runoff to replace MTG.
The district is the most Republican-leaning congressional seat in Georgia, according to the Cook Political Report. Trump carried it by 37 points in 2024. Harris won the March 10 all-party primary with 37% against 17 candidates — 12 of whom were Republicans — a result that rattled enough people in Washington that Trump posted a personal appeal Monday night: “I am asking all Republicans, America First Patriots, and MAGA Warriors, to please GET OUT AND VOTE for a fantastic Candidate, Clay Fuller.”
Why the Iran War Is at the Center of This Race
Harris has positioned gas prices as his closing argument. “When they go to the polls, they will have to stop at the pump, and that’ll be the last thing they think about before they go and vote,” he told Fox News. “And they’re going to say, ‘You know what, Shawn Harris is the only one that’s talking about bringing down costs.’” National gas prices now average $4.14 per gallon, up from $2.98 before the war began.
Harris has also used his military background to credibly challenge the war. “We will win this war militarily. However, if we don’t watch it and be clear with the American people, based on these gas prices and diesel prices, we could actually lose this war politically,” he said.
Fuller’s counter: “The voters in Georgia-14 support the president in this endeavor.” He has described himself as a “MAGA warrior” and called voters ready to support the district’s continued representation under Trump’s agenda.
What the Margin Will Tell November’s Candidates
Even a Harris loss by a small margin would carry significant information for both parties. As one analyst noted, the key question is “the margin by which he loses, and whether or not it’s narrower compared to 2024” — and whether Harris can demonstrate that Democratic infrastructure built during the special election translates into broader midterm momentum in Georgia.
The stakes for crypto policy are real as well. As crypto.news reported, the Fairshake crypto super PAC has $116 million set aside for the 2026 midterms, targeting congressional races where candidates’ positions on digital asset legislation will shape November’s outcomes. A House that shifts Democratic in November would significantly change the calculus for the CLARITY Act. As crypto.news noted, Democrats may have little incentive to accelerate crypto legislation if they believe they can regain House control — and tonight’s result in Georgia-14 will be the first data point on whether that scenario is becoming more credible.
“What I’m looking at is the improvement compared to 2024,” one Georgia political analyst told MS NOW. “That improvement suggests enthusiasm among Democrats that could be a harbinger going into the November midterm elections.”

