Georgia Democrats Seek Majority on Public Service Commission
Democrats are seeking to gain control of the Georgia Public Service Commission in November elections. The five-member body regulates electric utilities including Georgia Power, which serves 2.7 million customers. Two seats are on the ballot this year.
theyeshivaworld.comGeorgia Public Service Commission elections historically received limited public attention and turnout. That changed last year, when voters ousted two Republican members of the utility regulator, previously made up entirely of Republicans. This year, Democrats have a chance to flip control of the five-member commission.
The Georgia Public Service Commission regulates utilities across the state, most notably Georgia Power, which supplies electricity to roughly 2.7 million customers. The commission approves rate hikes, oversees long-term energy planning and decides how utilities recover costs from customers.
Republicans have controlled the body for decades, but with two of the five seats on the ballot this year, that grip on power may be slipping. Last year, Alicia M. Johnson and Peter Hubbard became the first Democrats elected to statewide office in Georgia since 2006.
Johnson won a full six-year term, while Hubbard won a temporary one-year term and is now running for reelection to a full term. The second seat up for grabs belongs to Republican Tricia Pridemore, who is not seeking reelection as she runs for Georgia’s 11th Congressional District seat.
Edwards secured her party’s nomination Tuesday night. Her Republican opponent will be decided in a runoff because no candidate won a majority of the primary vote, a requirement under Georgia election law. The seat represents PSC District 5, which includes counties in northwest Georgia.
Candidates must live within the district, but voters statewide cast ballots in each PSC race. Edwards previously won the Democratic PSC primary in 2022 before the general election was canceled amid voting-rights litigation over how commissioners are elected.
She previously served as executive director of the Georgia House Democratic Caucus and as district director for former U.S. Rep. David Scott. Her campaign has centered on affordability and utility oversight. Since her first run in 2022, Georgia Power customers have seen rates rise by more than 40 percent through a series of PSC-approved increases tied to higher fuel costs, storm recovery, grid investments and the completion of the Vogtle nuclear plant expansion.
As bills climbed, disconnections also surged. According to Georgia Power’s 2025 Bad Debt Report, nearly 280,000 customers experienced shutoffs for nonpayment.
On the Republican side, candidate Bobby Mehan, who received 31 percent of the primary vote, has pledged not to raise utility rates if elected. His runoff opponent, Joshua Tolbert, who earned 47 percent of the vote, has centered his campaign on technical expertise and the possibility of becoming the only engineer on the commission.
Republican candidate Mehan supports an “all of the above” energy approach. If Democrats gain a majority, they say they want to pursue renewable energy development and stronger community protections. Through votes on utility resource plans and rate cases, commissioners can influence how much solar, battery storage, energy efficiency and fossil fuel generation utilities like Georgia Power build.
The general election will be held in November, with winning candidates set to take office Jan. 1.
Key Facts
Story Timeline
4 events- 2025
Alicia M. Johnson and Peter Hubbard elected as first Democrats to PSC since 2006.
1 sourceInside Climate News - Tuesday night
Shelia Edwards secured Democratic nomination for PSC District 5.
1 sourceInside Climate News - November
General election for two PSC seats scheduled.
1 sourceInside Climate News - January 1
Winning candidates set to take office.
1 sourceInside Climate News
Potential Impact
- 01
Commission decisions on rate cases would continue to affect Georgia Power customer bills.
- 02
A Democratic majority could shift commission votes on renewable energy and data center oversight.
Transparency Panel
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