More: Impeachment divide grows between Georgia's Democrats

So far, McBath hasn’t joined the five Democrats in tight districts publicly calling for impeachment inquiries. Instead, she’s echoed House Speaker Nancy Pelosi by urging more congressional investigations before taking that step.

"We need to hear from the witnesses who can give us the truth as to what actually happened. We need to make sure that no entity, and no one person, is above the law," McBath said at a town hall in Dunwoody last month. "At the end of the day, the chips will fall where they may."

Republicans will likely try to paint her as a supporter of impeachment regardless. Handel's announcement video, for one, raised alarms about the pressure from the left to impeach Trump and tied her to other policies that liberals have embraced.

Some other findings from the Republican survey, which you can find here:

McBath trails Handel 46-42 in a head-to-head matchup, which is likely within the margin of error. (The polling memo didn't provide one.) About 40% of voters have no opinion of McBath, while one-third have a favorable image of her. About one-quarter do not.

About 65% of voters have an unfavorable view of socialism, and slightly more voters would support a Congressional candidate who backs an agenda pressed by Trump (47%) than an agenda pushed by Pelosi (42%).