Rep. Barry Loudermilk is the latest House Republican not to seek reelection in 2026 — and his exit is fueling the sense that the House retirement wave is building faster than usual this cycle.
Loudermilk, who’s held Georgia’s 11th District since 2015, says he still has strong support back home — but he’s ready to serve “in other ways.”
Wednesday’s announcement comes amid unusually high turnover on Capitol Hill. An Associated Press analysis has found that more than 10% of House members have already said they won’t run again, with departures coming earlier than in several recent cycles.
#BREAKING: GOP Rep. Barry Loudermilk becomes 29th House Republican to not seek reelectionhttps://t.co/nyfi5dXM3k
— The Hill (@thehill) February 4, 2026
As Fox News reports:
Loudermilk released a statement announcing his retirement, saying it has been a “tremendous honor” to represent the people of Northwest Georgia for six terms.
He said that during his tenure he focused on upholding the U.S. Constitution and representing the 11th Congressional District.
“I first ran for election to Congress in 2014 and, as I stated then, representing the people in Congress is a service, not a career; and although I continue to have strong support from the people of the 11th Congressional District, I believe it is time to contribute to my community, state, and nation in other ways,” he said. “Therefore, I have decided not to seek reelection at the end of my current term in Congress.”
Loudermilk said he learned throughout his life that doing what is right is not always easy, popular or convenient, and that he and his wife prayed and discussed the decision extensively.
Georgia’s 11th District — anchored in fast-growing Atlanta suburbs and extending into northwest Georgia — remains strongly Republican on paper. The Cook Political Report rates the district R+12, and in 2024, Donald Trump carried it 61%-38%, according to district-level compilations used by major election analysts, though it has shifted leftward in the Trump era.
GA-11 (northwestern Atlanta exurbs/suburbs) voted Trump +22.9 in 2024.
— VoteHub (@VoteHub) February 4, 2026
The district has shifted nearly 17 points left since 2012. https://t.co/XxU0IX3qeK pic.twitter.com/DwEEN2Fts5
Loudermilk also routinely won by comfortable margins. In 2024, he won reelection with about 67% of the vote.
With Loudermilk out, the real contest is expected to be the Republican primary. So far, the only Republican listed as running in the GOP primary is Chris Mora.
On the Democratic side, multiple candidates are already listed as running, including Chris Harden, Chase Laminack, Iris Medina-Elston, Christopher Dale Vines, and Barry Wolfert. An independent candidate, Natalie Richoz, is also listed for the general election.
Notably, no marquee Republican officeholder (state senator, state representative, or countywide official) has publicly declared in widely cited race trackers as of Loudermilk’s announcement — a sign the GOP field may still be in its early “testing-the-waters” phase.
Translation: the seat likely remains Republican, but the contest could turn into a real fight once recognizable state and local names decide whether to enter.
Democrats can win a R+12 congressional district this year. Democrats just won a Texas state senate district (which is larger than a congressional district) that is R+17. https://t.co/58FYuZ6LXE
— Ted Lieu (@tedlieu) February 5, 2026
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