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In race to succeed Marjorie Taylor Greene, candidates steer clear of Trump rift

Reagan Box didn’t plan to become the Door Dash candidate.

But when she quit her job as a horse trainer to launch her congressional campaign, Ms. Box needed a way to keep paying the bills. And as she began delivering food around the northwest Georgia district that, until three months ago, was represented by Marjorie Taylor Greene, she realized it wasn’t a bad way to get to know voters.

“I keep hearing, ‘I’ve never seen anyone willing to do this to run for office,’” says Ms. Box. “And doing that has given me insight into the struggles and failures within all this – stuff that most people would never experience.”

Why We Wrote This

The 17 candidates competing in Tuesday’s special election for Georgia’s 14th Congressional District run the gamut from a trash hauler to a hot dog slinger. The large field reflects a somewhat splintered Republican coalition, as former Representative Greene keeps lobbing a steady stream of criticism against her onetime ally, President Donald Trump.

Ms. Box, who says she was named after President Ronald Reagan, is one of a whopping 17 candidates vying to replace Ms. Greene, a onetime ally of Donald Trump who resigned from the U.S. House of Representatives in January after a falling-out with the president. The 12 Republicans, three Democrats, and two independents in the race include a trash hauler, a hot dog slinger, a pastor, a political writer, a former judge advocate general, a truck driver, and a handful of farmers. With so many candidates, Tuesday’s special election is highly likely to result in an April 7 runoff between the two top vote-getters.

The large field reflects a somewhat splintered Republican coalition. Ms. Greene has maintained a public profile since leaving Washington, and in interviews and social media posts she has issued a steady stream of criticism against President Trump. She accuses him of betraying the MAGA base on a host of issues, from the Epstein files to the war with Iran – a message some analysts say could very well resonate.

In race to succeed Marjorie Taylor Greene, candidates steer clear of Trump rift

Julia Demaree Nikhinson/AP

GOP Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, second from right, attends a news conference on the Epstein Files Transparency Act, outside the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Nov. 18, 2025.

“There are probably a lot of Republican voters who agree with Greene’s position that Trump should be spending more time with domestic concerns, not foreign policy,” says Charles Bullock, a political scientist at the University of Georgia, in Athens.

The deep-red 14th district, which stretches from Lookout Mountain on the Tennessee border to the Atlanta exurbs, has a history of sending controversial candidates to Congress. In the 1970s the region was represented by Larry McDonald, a conservative Democrat and staunch anti-communist who chaired the John Birch Society, and who died when his plane was shot down after entering Soviet airspace in 1983.

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