who will replace marjorie taylor green
No one has replaced Marjorie Taylor Greene yet; her seat will be filled in a special election, so the eventual winner is still unknown.
What’s actually happening
- Marjorie Taylor Greene resigned her U.S. House seat for Georgia’s 14th Congressional District, effective early 2026.
- Under Georgia law, a special election is required to fill the remainder of her term rather than someone being directly appointed.
Special election details
- Georgia Governor Brian Kemp has set the special election for March 2026 (reported as March 10 by Atlanta News First) to choose who will replace her for the rest of the term.
- If no candidate gets more than 50 percent, a runoff between the top two is expected later in the spring, which is standard for Georgia special elections.
So, who will replace her?
- Several Republicans and at least some Democrats are expected to run or are already lining up, but there is no official winner yet.
- Greene herself has said she does not plan to endorse anyone in the special election to replace her, leaving the field more open inside the GOP.
Why people are asking now
- Her resignation followed a very public political split with President Donald Trump, including him yanking his endorsement and vowing to back a primary challenger in 2026, which turned her future in the district into a major national story.
- Because it is a Republican-leaning district, most observers expect a Republican to win, but the exact name of who will replace Marjorie Taylor Greene cannot be known until voters cast their ballots in the special election.
TL;DR: The answer to “who will replace Marjorie Taylor Greene” is: we don’t know yet —voters in Georgia’s 14th District will decide in a March 2026 special election (with a possible runoff).
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.