Special elections for District 2 and District 4 for the Cobb Board of Commissioners will include a primary on Tuesday.

The polls are open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday.
District 2 includes a portion of the East Cobb area along Interstate 75 and the Powers Ferry Road corridor.
Precincts in East Cobb that are partly or all in District 2 include East Piedmont 01, Marietta 6B, Marietta 6A, Sewell Mill 03, Marietta 7A, Powers Ferry 01, Terrell Mill 01 and Chattahoochee 01.
If you live in one of those precincts and are unsure of your commission district, check the My Voter page at the Georgia Secretary of State’s office website.
Democratic candidates for District 2 include former Cobb Board of Education member Jaha Howard, former State Rep. Erick Allen and Marietta resident Tracy Stevenson.
Another Democratic candidate, Taniesha Whorton, dropped out but her name is still on the ballot.
If a runoff is needed, it would be held on March 11.
The winner of the Democratic primary will face Alicia Adams, the only Republican to qualify, in the April general election.
Early voting in the primaries took place last week, and Cobb Elections reported light turnout—around 3,300 votes in both races.
The special elections were ordered by a Cobb judge after May 2024 primaries were invalidated due to electoral maps that were ruled to be in violation of the Georgia Constitution.
District 2 was held until last week by Jerica Richardson, a first-term Democrat who was drawn out of her East Cobb home by the Georgia legislature during reapportionment in 2022.
She and her two fellow Democrats on the commission voted to honor electoral maps drawn by the Cobb legislative delegation, then headed by Allen, that would have kept her in office.
Those “home rule” maps never received a vote in the legislature, but they were also used by the Cobb Board of Elections for the primaries.
Howard defeated Whorton in a Democratic runoff. At the same time, Adams appealed her disqualification under the “home rule” maps and won her legal challenge, setting off another wave of court battles involving Richardson.
Her last-ditch appeal to the Georgia Court of Appeals to stay in office was ignored last week, for now the commission has only four of its five members.
Cobb Elections estimates the special elections will cost around $1.5 million.
The District 4 seat also is getting a do-over. First-term incumbent Monique Sheffield easily won the 2024 primary for the South Cobb seat, and Yashica Marshall once again is challenging her.
There are two Republicans on the ballot in that race, Matthew Hardwick and Julien Grhas.
Related:
- Richardson removed from office after appeals court rejection
- Richardson resumes seat as Cobb commission drama continues
- Richardson’s Cobb commission seat declared vacant by judge
- East Cobb-area resident qualifies for special election
- MORE: Visit the East Cobb News Politics & Elections Page
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