John barrow sheriff miami
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BARROW, JOHN J.
Financial summary
Total raised
Browse receiptsCoverage dates: 01/01/2013 to 12/31/2014
Total receipts | $3,550,177.63 |
Total contributions | $3,530,416.27 |
Total individual contributions | $1,322,472.07 |
Itemized individual contributions | $1,202,936.05 |
Unitemized individual contributions | $119,536.02 |
Party committee contributions | $9,933.11 |
Other committee contributions | $2,198,011.09 |
Candidate contributions | $0.00 |
Transfers from other authorized committees | $0.00 |
Total loans received | $0.00 |
Loans made by candidate | $0.00 |
Other loans | $0.00 |
Offsets to operating expenditures | $19,607.59 |
Other receipts | $153.77 |
Newly filed summary data may not appear for up to 48 hours.
Total spent
Browse disbursementsCoverage dates: 01/01/2013 to 12/31/2014
Total disbursements | $3,536,271.13 |
Operating expenditures | $3,530,665.51 |
Transfers to other authorized committees | $0.00 |
Total contribution refunds | $4,805.62 |
Individual refunds | $2,405.62 |
Political party
Athens’ John Barrow Is Pro-Roe and Running for Georgia Supreme CourtFormer congressman John Barrow, an Athens native, campaigned in his hometown last week in a longshot bid for a seat on the Georgia Supreme Court. No Supreme Court justice has ever lost a race since the court was created in 1845, but if anyone can knock off an incumbent, it’s Barrow. After serving 14 years on the Athens-Clarke County Commission, Barrow became the first Deep South Democrat to beat a Republican incumbent in a quarter-century when he defeated U.S. Rep. Max Burns in 2004. “As a reward, I became the most gerrymandered man in the history of the republic,” he told Athens-Clarke County Democrats last week. First Republican state legislators removed his hometown from his district, forcing him to move to Savannah. When that didn’t work, they took out Savannah, and Barrow went to Augusta. Nevertheless, the Blue Dog Democrat triangulated his way to victory four times until Rick Allen finally unseated him in 2014. Four years later, Barrow outperformed the top of the ticket in forcing a run
John Barrow (Democratic Party) was a member of the U.S. House, representing Georgia's 12th Congressional District. He assumed office on January 3, 2005. He left office on January 3, 2015. Barrow ran for election for judge of the Georgia Supreme Court. He lost in the general election on May 21, 2024. Barrow completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2024. Click here to read the survey answers. BiographyJohn Barrow was born in Athens, Georgia. He earned a degree in political science and history from the University of Georgia in 1976 and a J.D. from Harvard Law School in 1979. Barrow's career experience includes working as an attorney.[1][2] Elections2024See also: Georgia Supreme Court elections, 2024 General electionEndorsementsBallotpedia did not identify endorsements for Barrow in this election. 2020
Barrow declared his candidacy for Justice Robert Benham's seat on the Georgia Supreme Court. The seat was expected to be on the ballot on May 19, 2020. Benham retir Copyright ©backaid.pages.dev 2025 |