ATLANTA — A small number of ballots on Tuesday could decide an extremely short term in Congress as voters in Georgia pick the man who will succeed the civil rights legend John Lewis, if only for a few weeks.
Former Atlanta City Council member Kwanza Hall and former Morehouse College President Robert Franklin are contesting a runoff after neither won a majority in a first round of voting in September among seven candidates. Both are Democrats.
The district includes much of the city of Atlanta and adjoining parts of DeKalb and Clayton counties. The seat was long held by Lewis, who died from pancreatic cancer in July. But neither man will be Lewis' permanent successor. State senator and state Democratic Party chair Nikema Williams easily defeated Republican Angela Stanton King for a full two-year-term starting in Jan. 3. Williams and King didn't run in the special election, though.
Some Fulton County voters on Tuesday will also choose between Democrats Sonya Halpern and Linda Pritchett to replace Williams in the state Senate, while voters in Clarke and Oconee counties will choose a new district attorney.
About 31,000 people voted in the September election, or 5% of the district's registered voters, and that number could be smaller by the end of balloting on Tuesday. Fewer than 11,000 had cast early ballots in person or mailed them in as of Sunday according to state voting records.
Hall said Monday that turnout is his biggest challenge, with some voters being asked to cast ballots for the fourth time this year, and with much more attention being focused on Georgia's twin U.S. Senate runoffs on Jan. 5 that will determine which party controls the Senate.
"It's making sure people know there's an election and making sure they vote," Hall said. "There have been so many elections in Georgia. There's a lot of voter confusion."
The most junior member of the House will arrive on Capitol Hill with very little time to accomplish anything besides being guaranteed that they can be remembered as a congressman. Voting on a temporary federal budget could be the most significant act that Hall or Franklin takes, although there are still fading hopes of additional COVID-19 relief legislation.