Politics & Government
Atlanta Election 2025: Overstreet Leads Race For City Council President
Atlanta City Council incumbents led the charge in the 2025 general election. See updated results.
Updated 9 a.m.
ATLANTA, GA — Marci Collier Overstreet clutched a commanding lead for Atlanta City Council president will all votes counted, the state elections site showed early Wednesday. (See results below.)
Overstreet and Rohit Malhotra, both candidates for Atlanta City Council, went head-to-head in a debate last month concerning matters of extreme federal overreach from the Trump administration, the Atlanta Public Safety Training Center, transit and the Atlanta Detention Center.
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Here are the results with advanced voting tallies and 100 percent of precincts reporting as of Wednesday morning. All results are unofficial until certified.
| Race | Candidates | Percentage | Votes |
| Atlanta City Council President | Rohit Malhotra Marci Collier Overstreet | 45.65 54.35 | 40,904 48,700 |
| Atlanta City Council - At-large Post 1 | Michael Julian Bond (i) Juan Mendoza Matthew Rinker | 60.23 20.41 19.36 | 52,570 17,811 16,895 |
| Atlanta City Council - At Large Post 2 | Matt Westmoreland (i) | 100 | 79,367 |
| Atlanta City Council - At Large Post 3 | Eshé Collins (i) | 100 | 78,213 |
| Atlanta City Council - District 1 | Jason H. Winston (i) | 100 | 8,044 |
| Atlanta City Council - District 2 | Kelsea Bond Alex Bevel Jones Jacob Chambers Courtney Smith James White III | 64 8.90 4.01 20.53 2.55 | 6,715 934 421 2,154 268 |
| Atlanta City Council - District 3 | Byron D. Amos (i) Perrin Bostic | 59.25 40.75 | 2,773 1,907 |
| Atlanta City Council - District 4 | Jason Dozier (i) DeBorah Williams | 68.96 31.04 | 3,781 1,702 |
| Atlanta City Council - District 5 | Liliana Bakhtiari (i) | 100 | 3,074 |
| Atlanta City Council - District 6 | Alex Wan (i) | 100 | 7,685 |
| Atlanta City Council - District 7 | Jamie A. Christy Thad Flowers Allen Daly Rebecca King Thomas Worthy | 19.29 26.39 10.36 16.79 27.17 | 1,357 1,857 729 1,181 1,912 |
| Atlanta City Council - District 8 | Mary B. Norwood (i) | 100 | 7,611 |
| Atlanta City Council - District 9 | Charles Bourgeois Dustin Hillis (i) | 40.67 59.33 | 3,304 4,819 |
| Atlanta City Council - District 10 | Andrea L. Boone (i) | 100 | 8,390 |
| Atlanta City Council - District 11 | Toni Belin-Ingram Harold Maurice Hardnett Curt Collier Wayne Martin Andre Burgin Nate Jester Steven Dingle Reginald Rushin | 15.88 10.22 4.23 33.23 6.28 20.69 3.44 6.04 | 1,447 931 385 3,028 572 1,885 313 550 |
| Atlanta City Council - District 12 | Delvin D. Davis Stephanie Flowers Antonio Lewis (i) | 10.95 31.08 57.97 | 800 2,270 4,234 |
Overstreet has served as Atlanta City Council District 11 member since 2018, working for residents in the city's southwest region. There, she focused on drawing a surge in access to fresh food and public transit while bettering emergency services in the district, according to her biography.
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Malhotra, founder of the Atlanta Civic Center for Innovation, has a background that includes social entrepreneurship, digital communications, open data and community organizing. His work consists of serving in a White House fellowship role specializing in social impact bond efforts for the Obama administration, according to his biography.
During the Atlanta Press Club's debate, the question arose of Atlanta's $30 million-plus deficit that led to layoffs at the Atlanta City Hall and other departmental cuts last year. Moderators said spending on police overtime was a contributing factor.
Overstreet said her plans are to adjust overtime, maintain the city's AAA bond rating (which indicates the strength of investments) and identify vacancies within the local police department. She noted Atlanta has established a vacancy review board.
"Serving on City Council for the past eight years has been a complete pleasure, and I have actually participated actively in the last eight budgets," Overstreet said. "The City of Atlanta is in excellent standing. We have a triple A bond rating, and I will continue to do the work to make sure that we remain triple A in our bond rating."
Malhotra, with no local government experience, said his career has lived in the world of public service. He noted the Atlanta Civic Center for Innovation has spent a decade partnering with the Atlanta City Council on multiple policies, including "dissecting the budget" for the council.
"I don't think your experience is measured by how long you've been in politics, but instead how long you've been doing the work," he said. " ... We can catch things like a $30-million dollar shortfall. We can catch those things ahead of time if we're able to look at the intricate details of the budget."
Overstreet was put in the hot seat when accused of not speaking up when a fellow councilmember was suspected of calling Black people in southwest Atlanta "thugs and felons."
Additionally, Malhotra said Overstreet hosted Black History luncheons with GOP Lt. Gov. Burt Jones, who Malhotra said strived to remove Black History from schools.
Other accusations involved Overstreet's senior campaign member, who was suspected of emailing threats targeting Malhotra and his family.
"Actually, none of that is accurate," Overstreet said. "I am a Black woman raised by the city that I love very much, and I actually have Black children and a Black husband, so I have not been one that would be silent about any type of racism that would happen around the City of Atlanta. ... I will always speak up for those that need us the most."
Flipping the question, Overstreet demanded Malhotra speak on his campaign's alleged divisiveness.
"Being divisive is a smokescreen, but you and no one else would ever be able to call me racist or staying silent when we're talking about people that I know well and I love, so that is incorrect," Overstreet said. "I would hope you do a little more research."
Her response did not sit well with Malhotra, who said the concern should be the issues at hand rather than identity. He denied wanting to be divisiveness.
Overstreet brought up the matter of Malhotra's company reported losing almost $400,000 last year, though he has secured a 200 percent raise for himself in past years. She questioned how Malhotra's initiatives "could not be considered public safety hazards."
"We have given out millions of dollars to Black-led organizations in this city who are working on issues of food insecurity, who are working on issues that really matter for people today," Malhotra said. " ... It is very important that we get our facts straight. I am proud of the endorsements that I have. I am proud to earn the support of community every step of the way and proud of the work of Atlanta Civic Center for Innovation."
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