Each year, The Hill – a website covering policy, politics and elections in the U.S. – puts out a list, counting down the Top 50 Most Beautiful People who work on Capitol Hill.

Those eligible include congressmen and women, congressional staffers, lobbyists and anyone else who works regularly on Capitol Hill.

In 2017’s list, released Wednesday, three Georgia natives were included. They are Mallory Hunter, Leah LeVell and Carlton Norwood.

Hunter, of Johns Creek, is 28-year-old married Republican who works as an executive assistant to President Donald Trump's chief of staff, Reince Priebus. Hunter said she moved to Washington to intern for then-Rep. Tom Price. Hunter's husband Zach was on The Hill's 2012 list.

LeVell is a 22-year-old Atlanta native who works as a communications specialist in the White House. A Republican, she told The Hill that she was an amateur boxer before she started working in D.C.

Norwood, the grandson of former Georgia 9th District Rep. Charlie Norwood, is a 24-year-old Republican who works as a press assistant for Rick Allen, the House representative for Georgia's 12th District. Typical for an Augusta native, he told The Hill that there is nowhere he'd rather be more than at the Masters.

Others featured in the ranking included U.S. Senator and California Democrat Kamala Harris, First Lady Melania Trump and First Daughter Ivanka Trump.

Like North Fulton County News Now on Facebook | Follow on Twitter and Instagram

AJC CARTOONIST DRAWS TRUMP...

AJC editorial cartoonist Mike Luckovich comments on President Trump and O. J. Simpson. (Video and edit by Armani Martin/ AJC)

About the Author

Keep Reading

Chris Van Beneden, left, who worked at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for 25 years, and Julie Edelson, who worked there for 10, protest in support of the CDC in front of its Atlanta headquarters on Tuesday, April 1, 2025, after layoffs were announced. (AP Photo/Ben Gray)

Credit: AP

Featured

People join a rally in support for U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention employees on Tuesday afternoon, April 1, 2025, at the Atlanta headquarters after federal cuts triggered significant layoffs. (Photo: Jenni Girtman for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution)

Credit: Jenni Girtman