National

Republicans Collins, Dooley advance to primary runoff in hopes of facing US Senator Ossoff in November

Derek Dooley, former University of Tennessee football coach and Republican candidate for U.S Senate, speaks during a Republican political event about the One Big Beautiful Bill  at ALTA Refrigeration in Peachtree City, Georgia, U.S., August 21, 2025.  REUTERS/Alyssa Pointer
Derek Dooley, former University of Tennessee football coach and Republican candidate for U.S Senate, speaks during a Republican political event about the One Big Beautiful Bill at ALTA Refrigeration in Peachtree City, Georgia, U.S., August 21, 2025. REUTERS/Alyssa Pointer Reuters

A hardline Republican congressman and a former college football coach who has never held elective office advanced to a runoff on Tuesday in Georgia's U.S. Senate Republican primary election, extending a messy intra-party battle to determine who will face Democratic Senator Jon Ossoff in the November general election.

• U.S. Representative Mike Collins led former University of Tennessee football coach Derek Dooley 40.5%-30% with 80% of the vote counted, according to the Associated Press. Their projected advance to a June 16 runoff eliminated a third contender, Representative Buddy Carter, who had spent heavily to gain statewide name recognition.

• The eventual Republican nominee faces an uphill battle against Ossoff, a 39-year-old former media executive whose political fate could determine whether Democrats have a chance of taking control of the Senate, where Republicans currently have a 53-47 seat majority.

• Collins, a 58-year-old two-term member of the House of Representatives, positioned himself as the consistent party frontrunner by striking a brash, outspoken persona akin to President Donald Trump and touting his role as sponsor of the Laken Riley Act, named for a Georgia nursing student killed by a man charged with being in the U.S. illegally.

• Dooley, 57, who is a lawyer as well as a former football coach, has run as an alternative to politics in Washington with the endorsement of two-term Georgia Governor Brian Kemp. Kemp was seen as an early favorite for Senate nominee but declined the opportunity.

• Ossoff, the only Senate Democrat running for reelection in a state Trump carried in 2024, has been polling ahead of both Collins and Dooley, who like other Republican candidates in the state must contend with Trump's sagging approval numbers in a climate of rising prices for gasoline and other staples.

• Trump won Georgia with nearly 51% of the vote. But independent political analysts now rate the state as leaning Democratic. Ossoff first won election to the Senate by defeating Trump-aligned Republican incumbent David Perdue in a runoff election in 2021.

(Reporting by David Morgan. Editing by Michael Learmonth)

Copyright Reuters or USA Today Network via Reuters Connect.

This story was originally published May 19, 2026 at 8:50 PM.

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