Republicans Hang on to House Seat in Georgia Special Election

Republican Representative Karen Handel won Georgia special House election Tuesday night, defeating Democrats who were hoping to score an early win against President Trump ahead of the 2018 midterms.

The former Georgia Secretary of State won by almost 4 points, beating 30-year-old former congressional staffer and documentary filmmaker Jon Ossoff.

The race for the Atlanta seat had become the most expensive House race in history as each side jockeyed to turn it into fodder for their preferred national narrative, The Hill reads.

The Republican victory deals a serious blow to Democratic momentum, with the GOP already pointing to Handel’s victory as evidence that backlash against President Trump won’t win the House for Democrats.

Ossoff’s defeat, expected to be about 5 percentage points when the dust settles, is a bitter pill for Democrats. The Democrat outraised Handel by a 5 to 1 margin, raising hopes that the party could finally score a much-needed victory in Georgia.

However, the young Democrat tried to frame the race as the “beginning of something bigger” as he addressed supporters in his concession speech.

“In the first opportunity in this country to make a statement about values can still unite people at a time when politics has been dominated by fear, hatred and scapegoating and division, this community stood up,” Ossoff said.

“This is not the outcome any of us had hoped for, but this is the beginning of something much bigger than us…the fight goes on.”

Following Handel’s victory, Republican groups began chiding Democrats for earning only a “moral victory” by moving the race into contention, arguing that the result shows they are doomed for the 2018 midterms.

“House Democrats have done it again. After promising a revamped strategy that would deliver them a majority, House Democrats are no closer to that goal today than they were at the beginning of the new year,” National Republican Congressional Committee communications director Matt Gorman wrote in a memo released to the media Tuesday night.

“Don’t fall for the spin. They marshaled their resources and went all-in Georgia and they failed. Miserably….Moral victories won’t get Nancy Pelosi any closer to the gavel.”

Georgia’s suburban Atlanta district has been a Republican stronghold for decades, with former Speaker Newt Gingrich among the prominent GOP politicians who have held the seat. Voters in the district repeatedly reelected Tom Price, whose appointment to be Trump’s Health and Human Services secretary brought on the special election, by a large margin. The district has a history of Republican representatives, but Trump won the district by less than 2 points in 2016. That drop in GOP presidential enthusiasm made the seat a prime target for Democrats, The Hill writes.

New Mexico Representative Ben Ray Luján, the chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, echoed a similar sentiment in his statement congratulating Ossoff on his bid. He pushed back at the GOP assertion that Ossoff’s loss means the party is struggling in the Trump era, arguing that competitive showing proves the party has the momentum.

“In a very conservative district where Democrats rarely break the mid-30’s and Republicans enjoy a massive registration advantage, Jon and his supporters pushed the race to the limit, vastly outperforming past Democrats in both the primary and the runoff,” Luján wrote.

“There are more than 70 districts more favorable to Democrats than this deep-red district, and Ossoff’s close margin demonstrates the potential for us to compete deep into the battlefield.”

Handel’s victory means Democrats were unable to win any of the special elections to replace Trump’s Cabinet members. Democrats had surprisingly strong showings in Kansas and Montana, but ultimately fell short in those races as well.

In a surprise twist Tuesday night, Democrats came even closer to pulling off an upset in South Carolina, where a special election to fill Trump budget director Mick Mulvaney’s former seat coincided with Georgia’s vote.

Handel will serve out the rest of Price’s term, which ends in 2018. When Handel is sworn in, she will become Georgia’s first female congressional representative.

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