ROME, Ga. — When President Donald Trump endorsed Clay Fuller for Congress more than a month ago, the move was supposed to winnow a crowded Republican field in the race to replace retired Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene. Instead, it’s produced a test case for the durability of Trump’s endorsement power in Republican primaries. As voters head to the polls in Georgia’s 14th Congressional District on Tuesday, 17 candidates remain in the special election — including a dozen Republicans who declined to step aside despite the president’s public backing of Fuller, a state district attorney. The crowded fi
ROME, Ga. — When President Donald Trump endorsed Clay Fuller for Congress more than a month ago, the move was supposed to winnow a crowded Republican field in the race to replace retired Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene. Instead, it’s produced a test case for the durability of Trump’s endorsement power in Republican primaries. As voters head to the polls in Georgia’s 14th Congressional District on Tuesday, 17 candidates remain in the special election — including a dozen Republicans who declined to step aside despite the president’s public backing of Fuller, a state district attorney. The crowded fi