Tomlinson took in roughly $520,000 during the first three months of her campaign, when she was the only candidate in the race, and that haul might have encouraged other rivals to jump in. Since then, business executive Sarah Riggs Amico and Clarkston Mayor Ted Terry have both entered the contest.

Ossoff’s total includes about $500,000 he transferred from his 2017 congressional campaign, a race that shattered U.S. House fundraising records at the time. He lost the contest, viewed as an early referendum on President Donald Trump in suburbia, by about four points to Republican Karen Handel.

He and other Georgia Democrats in high-profile races have pledged not take money from corporate PACs, limiting their fundraising potential. Ossoff also recently held his first campaign event, a voter registration rally headlined by U.S. Rep. John Lewis.



The financial figures will be closely scrutinized by outside groups, high-dollar donors and national Democrats trying to hash out which candidate stands the best chance of defeating Perdue, a former Fortune 500 chief executive with deep ties to Trump and the Georgia GOP establishment.

The Republican incumbent also has not yet disclosed his latest fundraising total, but he previously reported nearly $5 million in his account.

Georgia is destined to attract even more attention next year with the retirement of U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson, who plans to step down because of medical issues. Gov. Brian Kemp is sorting through hundreds of GOP applicants for the post, including several high-profile politicians.

Not only will Kemp's pick share the ballot with President Donald Trump and Perdue in 2020, he or she would also be on the same ticket with the governor in 2022 if Republicans hold the seat. Meanwhile, about a dozen well-known Democrats are considering a run for the seat.

The outcome has vast implications. Even before Isakson’s retirement, Democrats considered Georgia a must-win to flip control of the Senate, where Republicans have a 53-47 edge. A second Senate race means even more attention and money trained on Georgia.