Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Cook Partisan Voting Index: R+3
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: rural hospitals at risk: 66 rural Georgia hospitals threatened by OBBBA cuts
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: unemployment rate: 3.7%
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Hispanic or Latino population share: 10.6%
Added: 03 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Black or African American population share: 33.2%
Added: 03 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: White (Non-Hispanic) population share: 50.3%
Added: 03 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: median age: 37.4
Added: 03 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: bachelor's degree or higher: 33.6%
Added: 03 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: homeownership rate: 65.5%
Added: 03 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: uninsured rate: ~12%
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Medicaid enrollment: ~2,000,000 (approximately 18% of population)
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: poverty rate: 13.4% (2024)
Added: 03 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: median household income: $77,353 (2024)
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: population: 11,029,227 (2024 Census)
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Ballot measure: Georgia Constitutional Amendment 2 — Creation of Georgia Tax Court (2024) (2024) — passed, margin 52% Yes — 48% No
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Ballot measure: Georgia Constitutional Amendment 1 — Suspension of Public Officials Indicted for a Felony (2024) (2024) — passed, margin 61% Yes — 39% No
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 31-33 (share 0.1)
Added: 03 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 44-45 (share 0.12)
Added: 03 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 62 (share 0.14)
Added: 03 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Top employer: The Home Depot (Atlanta HQ) (25000 employees)
Added: 03 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Top employer: Fort Benning / Fort Stewart / Kings Bay Naval Base / Robins AFB (85000 employees)
Added: 03 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Top employer: Emory University / Emory Healthcare (33000 employees)
Added: 03 May 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Top employer: Delta Air Lines (Atlanta HQ) (34000 employees)
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] District summary: Georgia is a southeastern state of approximately 11.1 million residents with a rapidly diversifying population and an economy anchored by Atlanta's booming metropolitan region. The state has a median household income of $77,353 (2024) — roughly at the national average. The poverty rate is 13.4% (2024), above the 12.4% national average. Georgia has not expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act, leaving approximately 400,000 low-income Georgians in a coverage gap. Approximately 2 million Georgians — roughly 1 in 5 — rely on Medicaid, including 1.3 million children. Twenty-four percent of Americans nationally are insured through Medicaid; in Georgia, about 12% of Medicaid recipients are children in CHIP, and 72% of seniors in nursing homes are covered by Medicaid. The uninsured rate is approximately 12%. Homeownership is 65.5%, and 33.6% of adults hold a bachelor's degree. The population is 50.3% White (non-Hispanic), 33.2% Black or African American, 10.6% Hispanic, and 4.8% Asian. Major industries include film and television production, aerospace (Delta Air Lines), logistics (UPS, Port of Savannah), healthcare (Emory, Piedmont), agriculture (poultry, peanuts, pecans), and the military (Fort Benning, Fort Stewart, Kings Bay Naval Submarine Base). The state has a Cook PVI of R+3 — one of the most closely contested states in the nation — and voted for Biden by 0.2% in 2020 and for Trump by 2.2% in 2024. Warnock won the 2021 runoff (51.0%) and the 2022 general election runoff (51.4%). His next election is in 2028.
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
Voted sponsored on S.Amdt. 2177 (Warnock Amendment to Prevent Medicaid Cuts (April 5, 2025)) on 2025-04-05: Warnock offered a bipartisan amendment to the GOP budget resolution that would have prevented any Medicaid cuts that reduced benefits, coverage, or provider payments. He argued: 'If they are so confident that they can cut $880 billion from Medicaid without children, without seniors, or the severely disabled losing benefits or coverage, then they should vote for my amendment.' The amendment failed 48-51 with every Republican voting against it. Warnock called it a 'sad admission that my colleagues value the financial health of the richest of the rich over the physical health of millions of children and seniors.' His advocacy for Medicaid protection — including 1.3 million Georgia children — is consistent with his career-long healthcare expansion platform.
Date: 2025-04-05
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
Voted nay on H.R. 9745 (Government Funding Continuing Resolution — November 2025 Shutdown Deal) on 2025-11-10: Warnock voted against the bipartisan deal to end the 43-day government shutdown, citing the exclusion of ACA enhanced premium tax credit extensions — which he called essential for preventing 22 million Americans from facing doubled premiums. Georgia House Republicans had urged him and Ossoff to 'stop blocking government funding that would keep food assistance flowing to families across the state.' The deal funded SNAP through September 2026. Warnock was one of 40 senators who voted nay. Only 8 Senate Democrats joined Republicans to end the shutdown. The vote reflects his commitment to healthcare affordability as a precondition for fiscal agreements — consistent with his OBBBA opposition and his broader healthcare advocacy.
Date: 2025-11-10
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
Voted yea on S.J.Res. 111/113/115 (Sanders Joint Resolutions of Disapproval on Arms Sales to Israel (November 2024)) on 2024-11-20: Warnock was one of only 19 senators — all Democrats — to vote for at least one of Sanders' resolutions to block $20 billion in offensive arms sales to Israel. He was the only senator to vote for all three resolutions. More than 50 Jewish organizations including AIPAC, ADL, and AJC condemned the vote, stating his 'commitment to Israel's security is not ironclad.' CAIR-Georgia commended the vote. This was the most significant Israel-policy vote of Warnock's career, and the backlash contributed to his April 2025 reversal, when he became one of only four Democrats to flip against similar Sanders resolutions. The vote illustrates the intense cross-pressure facing a Georgia Democrat from both progressive activists and the state's significant Jewish community.
Date: 2024-11-20
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
Voted yea on S. 5 (Laken Riley Act) on 2025-01-20: Warnock was one of only 12 Senate Democrats to vote with all Republicans for mandatory ICE detention of undocumented immigrants accused of nonviolent crimes including shoplifting. He called his vote 'a genuine step toward true bipartisan cooperation' while acknowledging 'this bill isn't the legislation I would have written.' The bill was named after a Georgia nursing student murdered by an undocumented immigrant, creating acute political pressure on Georgia's two Democratic senators. Warnock's Republican opponent in 2022, Herschel Walker, had attacked him on immigration. The bill passed 64-35 with 12 Democratic votes. Both Georgia senators voted yea.
Date: 2025-01-20
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
Voted nay on H.R. 1 (One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) — Senate passage, July 1, 2025) on 2025-07-01: Warnock voted nay on legislation the CBO projected would add $3.4 trillion to deficits and cut approximately $1 trillion from Medicaid. He called the bill a 'disappointing reminder that Washington politicians aren't working for ordinary people,' and said it would kick more than 16 million Americans off healthcare, including 750,000 Georgians, raise premiums for 1.2 million Georgians, and threaten 66 rural Georgia hospitals. He previously offered an amendment (S.Amdt. 2177) to prevent any Medicaid cuts that hurt benefits or coverage — it failed 48-51. Georgia has 13.4% poverty, median household income of $77,353, and approximately 2 million residents on Medicaid. All Senate Democrats plus 3 Republicans voted nay. The bill passed 51-50 with VP Vance breaking the tie. Warnock also voted nay on the ACA repeal elements within the bill.
Date: 2025-07-01
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
[platform] Warnock has repeatedly advocated for comprehensive immigration reform, calling it his 'north star,' and has championed a path to citizenship for DREAMers and the undocumented. Civil rights and immigrant advocacy groups criticized the Laken Riley Act as a 'sweeping assault on core principles' that would mandate detention for people not convicted of crimes.
Date: 2025-01-21
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
[vote] Warnock voted yes on the Laken Riley Act (January 2025) — mandatory ICE detention for undocumented immigrants accused of nonviolent crimes including shoplifting — stating it represented 'true bipartisan cooperation.' He was one of 12 Senate Democrats who joined Republicans to pass the bill 64-35.
Date: 2025-01-20
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
[vote] In April 2025, Warnock reversed his position and voted AGAINST new Sanders resolutions to block $8.8 billion in arms sales to Israel. He was one of only four Senate Democrats who flipped from supporting the November 2024 resolutions to opposing the April 2025 versions. In July 2025, he reversed again — voting with 27 Democrats to limit automatic rifle sales to Israel, stating 'what's unfolding in Gaza now is a moral atrocity.'
Date: 2025-04-04
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
[vote] Warnock voted in favor of the Sanders Joint Resolutions of Disapproval in November 2024, supporting a block on $20 billion in arms sales to Israel. He was one of only 19 senators to back the measures. More than 50 Jewish organizations including AIPAC, the ADL, and the AJC condemned the vote, stating his 'commitment to Israel's security is not ironclad.' CAIR-Georgia commended the vote. At a May 2025 town hall, protesters twice disrupted him over his Israel arms stance.
Date: 2024-11-20
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
[disclosure] In October 2022, it was reported that Columbia Tower — a low-income apartment building owned by Warnock's church — filed eviction proceedings against at least eight low-income residents during the pandemic, including one tenant who owed just $28.55. Warnock simultaneously received a $7,417 monthly housing allowance from the same church and lived rent-free in a $1 million church-owned home — unreported on financial disclosures per an ethics complaint.
Date: 2022-10-11
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
[platform] Warnock campaigned in 2020 and 2022 as a champion of the poor, preaching economic justice from MLK's pulpit at Ebenezer Baptist Church. He publicly advocated against evictions during the pandemic, tweeting opposition to landlords displacing vulnerable tenants.
Date: 2020-2022
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
Warnock's church-owned low-income apartment building, Columbia Tower, was reported in October 2022 to have filed eviction proceedings against tenants for as little as $28.55 in past-due rent — during the same period Warnock publicly advocated against evictions. Warnock received a $7,417 monthly housing allowance from the church at the time.
Date: 2022-10-11
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
Warnock is the senior pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta — the former congregation of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. — and has served there for 19 years. He is the first Black senator from Georgia. He holds a B.A. from Morehouse College, a Master of Divinity, a Master of Philosophy, and a Ph.D. from Union Theological Seminary. His annual income jumped from $242,101 as a pastor to an average of $659,977 since taking office.
Date: 2021-01-20
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
In April 2025, an ethics watchdog filed a complaint against Warnock for living rent-free in a $1 million Atlanta home purchased by Ebenezer Baptist Church, where Warnock serves as part-time senior pastor. The Foundation for Accountability and Civic Trust alleged this constitutes an unreported gift in violation of Senate ethics rules.
Date: 2025-04-21
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
Quiver Quantitative estimates Warnock's net worth at $1.4 million as of September 2025 — the 291st highest in Congress. He has approximately $35,200 invested in publicly traded assets. His disclosed assets include up to $1,000,000 in Balanced Fund and various smaller holdings. His net worth approximately doubled from just over $1 million in 2020 to roughly $2.2 million in 2024 due to book deals and investments.
Date: 2025-09-15
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
Warnock's 2022 runoff campaign was the most expensive Senate race of the cycle. He raised over $180 million in the 2021-2022 cycle, driven by small-dollar donors nationwide. His operation includes Warnock Victory Fund, his principal campaign committee, and his leadership PAC.
Date: 2022-12-06
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
Warnock has received more than $1.76 million in pharmaceutical industry contributions over his career, according to OpenSecrets. He was among the senators who most aggressively questioned RFK Jr. during his HHS confirmation hearing. A 2025 analysis found he also received over $220,000 from health professionals and public officials since 2021.
Date: 2025-02-03
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
Top career contributor: Alphabet Inc (Google) at $1,522,959 (all individuals). University of California contributed $1,200,122, Microsoft Corp $633,410, Apple Inc $515,206, and Amazon.com $491,639. Warnock's fundraising is overwhelmingly individual-donor driven; PAC contributions are negligible relative to his total haul.
Date: 2024-12-31
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review
2019-2024 cycle: Raised $329,995,318 — among the highest in the Senate. Top contributing industry: Retired at $38,816,091, followed by Democratic/Liberal ($18,118,234), Education ($16,422,817), Lawyers/Law Firms ($13,520,628), and Health Professionals ($9,012,129).
Date: 2024-12-31
Added: 03 May 2026