The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Residence

- Staff writer Greg Bluestein contribute­d to this article.

The numbers come as a surprise given the blowback against Ossoff for not being able to vote for himself in his 4-point loss to Republican Karen Handel. And it’s an issue rivals have already highlighte­d to emphasize their local roots.

In the 7th Congressio­nal District, which covers parts of Gwinnett and Forsyth counties, state Sen. Renee Unterman has quickly bestowed a nickname upon GOP primary opponent Lynne Homrich on social media: “that Buckhead lady.” (Homrich, a former Home Depot executive, recently began renting a home in the district.)

And in the neighborin­g 6th, which spans from east Cobb County to north DeKalb County, Republican Nicole Rodden wants voters to look past the fact that she lives four miles outside the district so she can unseat U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath, D-Marietta.

Rodden and the other outof-district candidates who responded to the AJC’s inquiries downplayed the distance and highlighte­d their ties to the districts. Some, such as 7th District contender Mark Gonsalves, pointed to the fact that they live mere yards from the boundary.

“His house is on the market and he’ll be relocating into the 7th upon its sale,” campaign spokesman Garrison Douglas said. “When he does, Mark will be exactly the same person he is right now.”

‘Skin in the game’

It’s not illegal for U.S. House candidates to live outside their districts. The Constituti­on stipulates only that congressio­nal hopefuls “be an Inhabitant of that State in which he shall be chosen.”

Indeed, nearly two-dozen members of the House, or at least 5% of the body, lived outside their districts in 2017, according to a Washington Post analysis. That includes U.S. Rep. David Scott, a Democrat who has long lived in east Atlanta — a few miles outside his district. And he’s been elected to nine terms in Congress, though primary challenger Michael Owens is seeking to emphasize Scott’s residency this year.

The issue can be a powerful political tool. Ossoff, a former congressio­nal aide who owns an investigat­ive journalism firm, was constantly forced to answer for his residency just outside the 6th District during the 2017 race. At the time he was living near Emory University while his then-fiancee was finishing medical school, a fact that GOP groups leveraged to frame him as a carpetbagg­er even though he grew up in the district. Handel later credited it as one of the main factors that fueled her victory.

It also resonated with some voters. An AJC poll ahead of the special election found that 32% of 6th District voters considered Ossoff ’s residency a “major factor” in determinin­g their vote, and an additional 19% determined it to be a minor one.

The longtime residents running for office are playing up their ties to the community. Nabilah Islam, a Democrat in the 7th District contest, showcases on her website her diploma from Central Gwinnett High School and previous jobs working at local grocery stores.

“If the 2018 cycle showed us anything with Ossoff’s race, living in the district you’re running to represent is important to Georgia voters,” she said.

It’s also a contrast she’s trying to draw in a packed primary. Marqus Cole and state Rep. Brenda Lopez Romero, two of her opponents, live outside district lines. In addition to Gonsalves, the same appears to be true for Republican hopefuls Ben Bullock and Joe Profit.

Others candidates made sure their moves were well-documented. John Eaves, a former Fulton County Commission chairman, posted a photo pointing to his new Gwinnett license plate shortly before filing paperwork to succeed retiring U.S. Rep. Rob Woodall.

“I’m excited about where I live,” Eaves said in a recent interview. “I have skin in the game because I actually live here and I’m invested.”

The compact nature of some metro Atlanta’s congressio­nal districts, where sometimes living on the opposite side of a street can put a candidate in another district, has created challenges for some candidates.

Take Lopez Romero, who has represente­d a Norcross-area district in the Georgia House since 2017 and has lived at various Gwinnett addresses for the past 15 years. Portions of the city fall within the 7th, but her current Norcross apartment is in the 4th District.

Lopez Romero said she and a friend are living there on a month-to-month basis as she house hunts. In the meantime, her current job requires her to live in her Georgia House district. (Her federal paperwork listed a previous Norcross address located in the 7th.)

Cole, a first-time congressio­nal candidate, said he lives outside the district because he’s raising a family in the same Snellville house where his wife grew up. But he said he practices law, attends church and sends his daughter to school in the 7th District. “I sleep a couple of miles away, but my community is in the Georgia 7th,” he said.

A Homrich spokesman said the Republican has a residence in Duluth but clarified she did not live there full-time. The campaign would not speak on the record about how much of Homrich’s time was spent at that 7th District address, and The AJC could not find a record of a property sale in Gwinnett County, suggesting that Homrich is renting. (The address listed in Homrich’s campaign filing is a post office box in Atlanta.)

Two other 7th District candidates who live outside the district did not respond to requests for comment: Bullock, whose federal paperwork indicates he lives in Buckhead, and Profit, whose address was listed in Marietta. Bullock told the Forsyth News in June that he plans to move inside the district soon.

Profit ran unsuccessf­ully against U.S. Rep. Hank Johnson in the 4th Congressio­nal District last year. He is registered to vote at the same Marietta address he used to file to run for the 7th District seat.

Residency redux

Nowhere is the residency issue more head-scratching than in the 6th District.

Rodden, a political newcomer and one of five Republican­s seeking to take on McBath, lives in a portion of Cobb County that falls in the neighborin­g 11th Congressio­nal District. Her campaign said voters shouldn’t let “four miles come between them and the best candidate” to defeat McBath.

Handel has made her home in Roswell a key part of every bid for higher office. And she’s raised repeated questions about McBath’s residency, both before and after Cobb County revoked three years of the Democrat’s homestead deduction earlier this year.

McBath’s husband lives in Tennessee, and the congresswo­man said she briefly moved there to help him during a family emergency in 2016 before switching her residency back to Georgia the following year. That became a source of controvers­y as Handel and her allies used the homestead deduction and McBath’s 2018 federal financial disclosure that listed her husband’s Tennessee-registered cars as assets to paint the Democrat as an occasional Georgia resident.

The McBath campaign has rejected the attacks as “baseless” and emphasized the congresswo­man’s long-standing ties to the 6th District.

McBath said she moved to Georgia in 1990, raised her son in the 6th and has lived in her Marietta home since 2008.

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