Georgia United States House Elections, 2006
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Overview

All information came from the Secretary of State of Georgia Website.


General

At the time of the election, Georgia had 13 congressional districts whose lines were redrawn in 2005 after Republicans took control of the state legislature and the previous maps were struck down by federal judges. Each district is home to approximately 630,000 Georgia residents. In 2006, seven seats were held by Republicans and six seats were held by Democrats. Results for write in candidates can be foun
here
.


District 1


General election results


Endorsements

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Georgia Secretary of State


District 2


General election results

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Georgia Secretary of State


District 3


General election results

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Georgia Secretary of State


District 4

In the primary of July 18, incumbent
Cynthia McKinney Cynthia Ann McKinney (born March 17, 1955) is an American politician, academic, and conspiracy theorist. As a member of the Democratic Party, she served six terms in the United States House of Representatives. She was the first African American ...
edged Johnson, a significant figure in DeKalb County politics, 47% to 45%

Johnson subsequently defeated McKinney 59% to 41% in the August 8 runoff election.


General election results

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Georgia Secretary of State


Georgia's 5th congressional district, District 5


General election results

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Georgia Secretary of State


District 6


General election results

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Georgia Secretary of State


District 7


General election results

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Georgia Secretary of State


District 8

A Republican mid-decade
redistricting Redistribution (re-districting in the United States and in the Philippines) is the process by which electoral districts are added, removed, or otherwise changed. Redistribution is a form of boundary delimitation that changes electoral dist ...
made this Macon-based district more compact and somewhat more Republican. Democratic incumbent Jim Marshall faced a very tough challenge by former Congressman Mac Collins, who represented an adjoining district from 1993 to 2005. Less than 60 percent of the population in Marshall's present 3rd District was retained in the new 8th District. The reconfigured 8th includes Butts County, the political base of his opponent, former Congressman Mac Collins, who once served as chairman of the county commission. On the other hand, the 8th also includes all of Macon, where Marshall served as mayor from 1995 to 1999

The race featured heavy spending, not only by the candidates themselves, but from independent groups. During the campaign, President George W. Bush attended a rally to try to help Collins. Marshall won reelection by some 1,700 votes. Marshall was reelected with 63% in 2004, but in 2002 won by only 50.5% to 49.5%. This is one of the most competitive House races in the nation.


General election results

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Georgia Secretary of State


District 9


General election results

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Georgia Secretary of State


District 10


General election results

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Georgia Secretary of State


District 11


General election results

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Georgia Secretary of State


District 12

Democrat John Barrow unseated first-term Republican Max Burns by 52% to 48% in a Democratic-leaning district which Burns won over a scandal-tainted opponent in 2002. This year, Burns sought a rematch. Recent redistricting made this southern Georgia district more mixed, but the balance still favored Democrats. Burns ran a tough campaign and made the race extremely close. In the end however Burns lost by 864 votes and ruled out a recount challenge to the certified results. This failure to win the seat by the GOP sealed the unprecedented gains of the Democrats in which they did not lose a single House seat, Senate Seat or Governorship they held going into the election.


General election results

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Georgia Secretary of State


District 13


General election results

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Georgia Secretary of State


References

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