Jon Ossoff
The youngest U.S. senator when elected at 33, Ossoff's January 2021 runoff win alongside Raphael Warnock flipped the Senate and enabled Biden's legislative agenda — an unlikely outcome in a state that had been reliably Republican for decades.
Pantheon Standing
| List Name | Rank | Combined |
|---|---|---|
| Most Influential U.S. Senators | #1 | 96.0 |
The Age Divide
Voters under 30 and over 35 rank Jon Ossoff significantly differently across lists.
The Cultural Record
Discography
No entries on record.
Awards & Recognition
No Grammy data on record.
—
D-GA
youngest senator at election (33)
Jan 2021 runoff co-winner
documentary filmmaker background
Judiciary and Banking Committees
2017 House special election national fundraising record
Georgia election flip architect
The Case For Jon Ossoff
“The longevity argument alone puts them in a category of one. While others burned bright and faded, this figure consistently reinvented and dominated across decades, eras, and cultural shifts that would have destroyed lesser talents.”
“Technically unmatched. The craft here is evident in every performance, every work — the kind of effortless execution that only comes from thousands of hours of mastery made invisible. They make the impossible look inevitable.”
“Commercial success should never be held against artistic legacy. The ability to dominate charts while maintaining critical respect is a skill unto itself — one that this figure has mastered better than any peer in the conversation.”
Rank History
Ranking history will be available once voting opens for Jon Ossoff.
Often Compared To
Raphael Warnock
#2Senator / Democrat (GA) — Savannah, Georgia · 2021–present
The first Black senator from Georgia, elected in a January 2021 runoff that also flipped Senate control — Warnock's historic win as the pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church (MLK's church) carried enormous symbolic weight.
Sam Nunn
#3Senator / Democrat (GA) — Perry, Georgia · 1972–1997
The greatest defense expert the Senate has ever produced — Nunn's hawkish national security views led him to oppose the Gulf War authorization but made him the definitive voice on nuclear proliferation and military preparedness for two decades.