U.S. House of Representatives
Elections 2018 which included many of
Atlanta's northern suburbs, 2018 McBath credits her decision to run for office to a meeting with
State Representative Renitta Shannon, who urged her to run. Several other factors contributed to her decision, including the
election of Donald Trump and the undoing of previously enacted gun control measures. After initially planning to run for the
Georgia House of Representatives against incumbent
Republican Sam Teasley in 2018, she decided after the
Stoneman Douglas High School shooting to instead challenge
Karen Handel, the incumbent Republican in the
United States House of Representatives representing . The district, which was once represented by
House Speaker Newt Gingrich and
Senator Johnny Isakson, included many of Atlanta's northern suburbs, such as
Alpharetta,
Roswell,
Johns Creek,
Dunwoody,
Sandy Springs,
Brookhaven, and parts of
Tucker and
Marietta. Although the 6th has historically tilted Republican, Handel was thought to be vulnerable. Trump barely carried the district in 2016. Handel defeated
Jon Ossoff in a hotly contested 2017
special election that remains the most expensive U.S. House race in American history. In the
Democratic Party primary election on May 22, McBath led all challengers with 36% of the vote. She defeated Kevin Abel, the second-place finisher, in the July 24
runoff election with 53.7% of the vote. |upright McBath faced Handel in the November
general election and declared victory with 159,268 votes, surpassing Handel's 156,396 with 100% of precincts reporting. A number of reports described McBath as the first Democrat to represent this district since Gingrich won it in 1978. But for his first seven terms, Gingrich represented a district that stretched across a swath of exurban and rural territory south and west of Atlanta; he transferred to the reconfigured 6th after the 1990 census.
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution called McBath's victory "the biggest Georgia Democratic upset of the 2018 midterms."
2020 McBath was discussed as a possible candidate in the
2020 Georgia Senate special election. According to
The Hill, Democrats considered her "one of the top potential contenders" for the seat. But she declined to run for the seat, instead seeking re-election to her house seat. McBath raised $620,000 in the fourth quarter of 2019. As of the end of 2019, she had $1.3 million cash on hand for her reelection bid. 93% of her contributions came from small-dollar donors. She won the November 3 general election with 54.6% of the vote in a rematch against
Karen Handel. She got a significant boost from
Joe Biden carrying the district with 55% of the vote, the first time a Democrat had carried the district at the presidential level since it moved to Atlanta's northern suburbs.
2022 near Atlanta, 2023 In the 2021 redistricting session, McBath's district was significantly altered by the Republican-controlled state legislature. Its share of heavily Democratic
DeKalb County was cut out, replaced by conservative exurban counties such as
Forsyth and
Cherokee. The new configuration shifted the district from one that voted for Biden by double digits to one that voted for Trump by double digits, likely securing the seat for Republicans in the 2022 elections. Reports speculated that McBath could run in another district. In November 2021, McBath announced that she would run for reelection in the
7th district, held by fellow Democrat
Carolyn Bourdeaux. It had previously been based in
Gwinnett County, but had been pushed slightly westward to absorb the more Democratic portions of McBath's former territory in
Fulton County, making it significantly bluer than its predecessor. McBath defeated Bordeaux in the Democratic primary.
Tenure , 2023 McBath cosponsored the Honoring American Veterans in Extreme Need ("HAVEN") Act, which gives disabled veterans bankruptcy protections. McBath co-sponsored legislation to extend
Pell Grant eligibility to college students if their school closed or if school officials committed institutional fraud or misconduct. Before the
Trump–Ukraine scandal, McBath had been cautious about impeaching President
Donald Trump, or opposed it outright. For instance, in the aftermath of the
Mueller investigation, she was one of 137 Democrats to vote to kill an impeachment resolution. In October 2019, McBath voted in favor of launching an
impeachment inquiry into Trump. She sat on the
House Judiciary Committee, which was tasked with handling some impeachment-related business. During a town hall event, she said she had felt "furious" about "the lack of accountability" from the Trump administration, due to what she called a lack of responsiveness to congressional subpoenas. At the same event, she said, "I don't like having to [participate in the impeachment process]. ... I don't want to have to say this about our President of the United States and the White House." In December 2019, she voted for articles of impeachment against Trump on the House Judiciary Committee.
Committee assignments For the
119th Congress: •
Committee on Education and the Workforce •
Subcommittee on Health, Employment, Labor, and Pensions •
Subcommittee on Higher Education and Workforce Development •
Committee on the Judiciary •
Subcommittee on Crime and Federal Government Surveillance (Ranking Member)
Caucus memberships •
Black Maternal Health Caucus •
Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus •
New Democrat Coalition == Political positions ==