In a raucous and energized room in Decatur on Saturday, US Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-Georgia) opened the first field office of his 2026 reelection campaign. The message was clear: the fight to hold his Senate seat starts now.
The event drew nearly 100 volunteers from across DeKalb County, one of the most reliably Democratic counties in Georgia. In 2024, more than 80% of voters in the county cast their ballot for Kamala Harris, making it a natural launching pad for a campaign that will need to maximize turnout in its base while competing statewide.
The office opening marked a milestone. It is the earliest a Democratic Senate campaign in Georgia has ever started its field operation, according to the Democratic Party of Georgia. Ossoff’s team says more offices are in the process of opening up across the state and they intend to compete on the ground everywhere, not only in Democratic strongholds.
“It will be the biggest and most powerful turnout effort in Georgia’s political history to mobilize an unprecedented coalition to deliver decisive victories this fall,” Ossoff told Courier Georgia.
A central theme of Saturday’s event was unity. Ossoff, who faced no primary challengers, coasted through last Tuesday’s primary and arrived at the general election with his resources and coalition intact.
In contrast, Ossoff’s two potential general election opponents—US Rep. Mike Collins (R-Jackson) and former University of Tennessee football coach Derek Dooley—are locked in a competitive and grueling runoff after neither secured a majority of the vote last week.
Candidates forced into runoffs frequently emerge with less cash on hand and a shorter runway to the general election. Those who clear their primaries enjoy a significant head start in organizing, fundraising, and message setting.
The early mobilization reflects the outsized importance of this race. Ossoff is the only Democratic senator up for re-election this cycle in a state Donald Trump won in 2024, making his seat a prime target for Republicans seeking to retain their Senate majority.
The Senate Leadership Fund, the main fundraising vehicle for Senate Republicans, announced in April that it will pour $44 million into television ads aimed at flipping Ossoff’s seat. The number is a staggering early commitment that underscores how seriously the GOP is taking the race.
Ossoff, for his part, has raised $31 million. The sum reflects both his national profile and the intensity of small-dollar Democratic enthusiasm around his re-election. Saturday’s field office opening suggested his campaign intends to match that financial firepower with an equally aggressive on-the-ground operation.
Whether that combination of early organizing, unified party support, and fundraising muscle will be enough to hold the seat remains the central question of Georgia’s 2026 cycle. But on Saturday afternoon, Sen. Ossoff radiated confidence.
“I am hearing from Republicans who come up to me on the street or they come up to me at the airport. They’re seeing the chaos, the corruption, the inflation, and the war. And they’re telling me that they’re gonna vote for a Democrat for the first time in this election.”













