U.S. Congress special election
In February 2007, Republican U.S. Congressman
Charlie Norwood, of
Georgia's 10th congressional district, died of cancer. There was a special election open primary in June 2007, where candidates of all parties participated in the primary. A candidate needed 50% to win outright, and there would be a run-off if no candidate earned it the first time. Ten candidates filed: six Republicans, three Democrats, and a Libertarian. Whitehead was the only elected politician to run, and was the front-runner. He won the endorsements of U.S. Congressman
Saxby Chambliss. In the primary, Whitehead finished first with 44% of the vote. Doctor
Paul Broun qualified for the run-off, ranking second with 21% of the vote, with only 198 votes more than third-place finisher James Marlow, a Democrat. Broun won a plurality of just four counties:
Oconee (47%),
Jackson (42%),
Oglethorpe (37%), and
Morgan (31%). In the runoff campaign, Whitehead angered some voters by failing to appear at a debate held in Athens and then by referring to his
alma mater, the University of Georgia, as a "liberal bastion" that should be eliminated, save for the football team. In the July 17, 2007 election, Broun upset Whitehead by a margin of just 0.8%, a difference of just 394 votes. After the votes were certified, Whitehead declined to ask for a recount despite the narrow margin. ==References==