Rep. Steve Stivers (R-Ohio), chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee, said that the committee’s independent expenditure has plans to get involved in the nationally watched Georgia special election just weeks before the primary, according to Politico.

The move comes as Sabato’s Crystal Ball changed its rating of the April 18 race for the traditionally Republican seat from "likely Republican" to "toss-up."

The race to fill the seat left open by Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price has garnered national attention as Democrats coalesce behind 30-year-old investigative filmmaker Jon Ossoff in an attempt to make the race a referendum on President Trump and try to flip a typically conservative seat that Trump only carried by 1 point in 2016.

Ossoff’s high-dollar fundraising and lead in the polls have prompted concerns from Republicans, who want to protect the seat that Price has easily won for years.

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Stivers didn’t specify how much the investment would be and said it won’t benefit a particular candidate and will be used to boost turnout. There are nearly a dozen GOP candidates, including former Georgia Secretary of State Karen Handel, former Councilman Bob Gray and some state senators.

“Special elections are special, and the Democrats and some Independents are excited, so we need to make sure Republicans are just as excited about voting. I feel confident that we’ll get there,” Stivers told Politico. “But we know that Ossoff is real.”

The April 18 “jungle primary” features 18 candidates who are running regardless of party. If no candidate receives 50 percent of the vote, the top two vote getters will compete in a runoff on June 20. Polls have shown Ossoff inching closer to the threshold to avoid a runoff, but he’s still about 10 points away in most recent surveys.

“Our job is to make sure we keep him below 50 [percent],” Stivers said. “Then we coalesce and unite our forces around one candidate in June.”

The planned investment comes after Congressional Leadership Fund, a super PAC aligned with House GOP leadership, has already pumped $2 million into ad campaigns targeting Ossoff. The group has sought to frame him as a “30-year-old frat boy” and has accused him of “inflating” his resume and national security experience.

Democrats have also poured money and resources to help Ossoff. The House Democrats’ campaign arm sent nine staffers to the suburban Atlanta district, while progressive groups have raised millions of dollars for his campaign.