Isakson to give farewell speech in U.S. Senate Tuesday

From U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson’s office this morning comes word that he’ll speak for the last time on the floor Tuesday afternoon, around 2:30 p.m. You can can watch on C-SPAN or the Senate floor webcast by clicking here.Sen. Johnny Isakson

Other senators will be offering tributes after his remarks, led by Georgia Sen. David Perdue.

Isakson announced in August he would be stepping down at the end of the year due to health issues. He has been battling Parkinson’s Disease and fractured ribs this summer in a fall in his Washington apartment.

Praise for the East Cobb Republican has been bipartisan, including his embrace with U.S. Rep. John Lewis in November during a House floor tribute.

But the process for filling Isakson’s post through next year’s election grew ugly over the Thanksgiving holiday weekend.

This week Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp is expected to appoint Atlanta businesswoman Kelly Loeffler, and recently flew with her to Washington to meet with President Donald Trump.

Trump wanted Georgia Congressman Doug Collins, a strong Trump ally, to get the post. On Twitter, another Trump backer, Florida Congressman Matt Gaetz, threatened to find a primary opponent for Kemp if he chose Loeffler, who has never held public office.

Kemp and one of his advisers answered back on Twitter, as the discourse dwindled down to insults over Gaetz’ jorts attire.

Some critics of Loeffler—an executive with a bitcoin company and the co-owner of the Atlanta Dream women’s pro basketball team—don’t think she’s conservative enough. She served on the board of directors at Grady Memorial Hospital, which one pro-life advocate called “an abortionist training hub.”

Others want Collins because he would be a vocal defender of the president if the Senate conducts a trial following possible impeachment in the House.

Kemp, who got a big boost from Trump last year to win the GOP nomination for governor, is said to prefer Loeffler to appeal to moderate and female voters in the Atlanta suburbs, which has become a partisan battleground.

That includes the East Cobb area and the 6th Congressional District, where a 2017 special election was won by Republican Karen Handel, who in turn was defeated by Democrat Lucy McBath, a gun control advocate, last year.

Isakson is among the GOP establishment who’s endorsed Handel as she attempts to win back her seat next year.

Loeffler will become only the second woman from Georgia to serve in the Senate. Her seat will be contested in a jungle primary and possibly a runoff late next year, with the winner to fill the final two years of Isakson’s term.

Related stories

 

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Iskason’s colleagues pay tribute as he leaves U.S. Senate

Submitted information and video from the office of U.S. Sen Johnny Isakson:

“Johnny has a long political history, he has a long successful business history, but he also has a history of being known as being a compassionate person,” said former U.S. Senator Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., in the video.

As a family man first and foremost, Isakson explains his perspective. “Our children are the message you and I send to a time we’ll never see,” he said. “It’s a cycle, and you have to continue to invest in that cycle and improve it.”

“He will always be remembered for honesty and integrity, and setting an example of intellectual honesty for a younger generation of people who are going to be our leaders tomorrow,” said former U.S. Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., founder and co-chair the Nuclear Threat Initiative.

In a recent syndicated column published widely in Georgia, Dick Yarbrough wrote“With Johnny Isakson, what you see is what you get: A man who has always done what he thought was the right thing to do, not what was politically expedient.”

Isakson explains his personal approach in the video, saying for him, “It’s about relationships. It’s about respect. It’s about motivation, and it’s about getting things done. So make friends. Be a friend, and know how to be a friend. It makes all the difference in the world…” said Isakson. “It’s not about me, it’s about them. It’s about us, and that’s always the way I’ve felt about it.”

The December 2019 edition of Georgia Trend magazine included a column about Isakson, written by Dr. Kerwin Swint, award-winning author, commentator and Kennesaw State University political science professor.

In “An Inspiration,” Swint writes, “As a political science professor and an administrator, I’m often asked by students if good people can serve in government and keep their integrity. Johnny Isakson is always the first example I come to. It’s very often a shocking revelation to most people – that good people can, and often do, serve in government for long periods, fight hard for what they believe in, and remain true to themselves and their principles. And they don’t have to sell their souls to do it. It’s a great lesson, really.”

Isakson’s faith has guided his entire life. He taught sixth-grade Sunday school at Mount Zion Baptist Church in Marietta, Georgia, for more than 30 years. Isakson is a regular attendee of the weekly Senate prayer breakfast with Senate Chaplain Barry Black and served as co-chair of the National Prayer Breakfast in 2010.

“He was a Sunday school teacher for over 30 years. So here is a man who not only has a biblical worldview, but also knows the bible pretty, pretty thoroughly,” said Chaplain Black. “He has a tremendous amount of contentment, as I have learned to have as well, in the fact that ‘God’s got this.’”

The Senate video includes positive remarks about Isakson’s legacy from Republican and Democrat U.S. senators, an administration official and a member of the U.S. House of Representatives, who have each worked closely with Isakson on an array of policy areas.

“Johnny always came to prayer breakfast, and he was always one of the gentlemen who would be there and had an interesting message. Cared about other people and wanted to know what everybody else was doing, and he wanted to know what he could do to help you,” said U.S. Sen. Mike Rounds, R-S.D.

“Goes without saying that Johnny Isakson is hands down the nicest person to ever serve in the U.S. Senate. Nicest person to ever walk the halls of Congress,” said U.S. Sen. John Thune, R-S.D.

“He has an innate humility that is so natural,” said U.S. Sen. Jim Inhofe, R-Okla.

“Johnny Isakson has always appealed to our better angels,” said U.S. Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa.

“Johnny doesn’t think that just because he has senator in front of his name, that he needs to get anything special,” said U.S. Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont. “Johnny’s the guy who says, ‘just because I’ve got senator in front of my name, I’ve got work to do,’ and he rolls up his sleeves, and he gets it done.”

“I think if there was a ‘Mr. Congeniality’ award in the U.S. Senate, [Isakson] would win it hands down, no question about it,” said Sen. John Hoeven, R-N.D.

“There are very few members of the Senate who I feel are as selfless and have smaller egos than Johnny Isakson,” said Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va.

“When Johnny said, ‘I’m going to get this done,’ you could believe him, and you’d know it would get done,” said Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash.

“He has an ability to make you feel like he’s not only listening, but caring about what you think. And that is what has always struck me about Johnny Isakson: He listens,” said Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn.

“Johnny was outspoken for somebody who didn’t have a voice at the table,” said Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C.

Current and former staff also commented in the video on Isakson’s style as an employer and on his positive outlook. Staff recounted an expression used regularly by Isakson, “Friends and Future Friends,” to explain his outlook on meeting new people and building relationships.

“He wants [the door to his office] open. He wants to see staff, he wants to talk,” said Adam Reece, staff director of the Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs.

“He really lives the motto of ‘friends and future friends.’ There’s no enemy to Johnny Isakson,” said former deputy chief of staff Edward Tate.

In his popular commencement address and most frequently requested speech, Isakson shares his “Six Silent Secrets” to a happy, successful and fulling life. The elements of learning, respect, ethics, love, faith and dreaming have served as Isakson’s guiding principles.

“If you’re willing to continue to learn throughout your life, if you’re willing to respect your fellow man and treat everybody with ethics and principle, if you’re willing to love those who’ve gotten you to where you are and are going to take you to where you want to be, if you find a deep and abiding faith that gets you through the difficult times, and if you’re willing dream, you can do anything in America that you want to do,” said Isakson in his 2014 University of Georgia commencement address shown in the video. “Think about this – this is a stadium full of parents; you are their dream and they love you very much.”

After Isakson announced on Aug. 28 that he would be stepping down from the Senate at the end of the year due to mounting health challenges, tributes poured in from newspapers and columnists across Georgia. A few of the headlines illustrative of Isakson’s value-led career included, “Johnny Isakson sets bar high for integrity,” “We could use more Johnny Isaksons in the Senate, not fewer,” “Isakson a politician worth emulating,” and “Johnny Isakson: A true statesman.”

Yarbrough’s Nov. 8 column concluded, “I have written a number of columns over the years about Johnny Isakson. I have been trying to decide how to end this one. Then I remembered a quote the late Hall of Fame baseball player, Roberto Clemente, who said, ‘Any time you have an opportunity to make a difference in this world and you don’t, then you are wasting your time on Earth.’ Johnny, my friend, you have not wasted a day.”

To view the video, produced by the Senate Republican Conference, click here. For additional information about Isakson’s lifetime commitment to his values, click here.

 

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Isakson endorses Handel as another GOP candidate bows out

U.S. Rep. Karen Handel
Karen Handel at a town hall meeting at the Sewell Mill Library when she was in Congress. (ECN file)

Retiring U.S. Sen Johnny Isakson has endorsed former Congresswoman Karen Handel in her bid to regain the 6th District seat held by Democrat Lucy McBath.

Isakson, a Republican from East Cobb who represented the 6th District from 1999-2005, said in a statement that Handel is “who I trust to represent us in Congress, and I’m proud to support Karen to be our next representative” for the seat that includes East Cobb, North Fulton and North DeKalb.

Here’s the rest of Isakson’s statement, released by the Handel campaign:

“Karen Handel is one of the hardest working people I know. Karen has proven time and again that she is a problem solver who focuses on results rather than politics. In Congress, she established herself as a leader on the issues we care about—reducing taxes, and helping small businesses; combating the opioid crisis; protecting those with pre-existing conditions and expanding health care options for all.”

Handel said “it is humbling to receive his support and endorsement of my campaign to represent the district he once held.”

Isakson’s endorsement comes a week after State Sen. Brandon Beach of North Fulton withdrew his candidacy in the GOP primary and said he would run for his current post, citing persuasion from Gov. Brian Kemp to provide “bold leadership under the Gold Dome.”

The GOP field also was reduced on Monday when Nicole Rodden of North Fulton, a former officer in the U.S. Merchant Marine and Navy reserves, announced she was dropping out. She said in a statement that she was doing so “in the name of unity:”

“It became evident to our team that without the proper resources to spread our own campaign message, we had no positive pathway to the general election.”

Rodden had raised $167,000 since April, with $98,000 coming from the candidate in the form of a loan. That’s far behind Handel, Beach and Milton businesswoman Marjorie Green, who is still campaigning and who also has loaned her campaign most of the $500,000 she has raised.

McBath edged Handel in one of the more hotly-contested U.S. House races in 2018 as Democrats gained control of the chamber.

McBath has raised more than $1.7 million to $712,000 for Handel through the end of September, according to Federal Elections Commission disclosure reports.

National Republicans have targeted the 6th District in their attempt to recapture the House in 2020.

UPDATE: Georgia’s junior U.S. Senator, David Perdue, and Gov. Brian Kemp also have endorsed Handel.

 

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Cobb Democrats to hold debate watch party in East Cobb

Submitted information for Wednesday’s Democratic presidential debate taking place in Atlanta. The following events all begin at 7 p.m.:Cobb Democrats debate watch party

The November Democratic debates are coming down to Georgia and if you aren’t able to get a coveted ticket to attend the real deal, join the Cobb County Democratic Committee for a fun and spirited Debate Watch Party. We are hosting Debate Watch Parties in three locations. Choose the location most convenient to you.

East Cobb/Cumberland: The Monticello (21 yrs+ only) 2000 Powers Ferry Road, Marietta, GA 30067 (Valet parking available, a self-park garage also located behind the venue).

West Cobb: Taco Mac 2650 Dallas Hwy Ste 100, Marietta, GA 30064

Acworth/Kennesaw: Huey Luey’s Mexican Kitchen & Margarita Bar 3338 Cobb Pkwy N, Acworth, GA 30101

Spirited discussions are guaranteed as we all cheer on our favorite candidates. Play Debate bingo and win a free ticket to our Dems After Dark Holiday Edition, t-shirts, magnets, so much more. Snacks will be provided by Cobb County Democratic Committee. Buy your own drinks and dinner.

 

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6th Congressional District candidate Brandon Beach quits race

State Sen. Brandon Beach

Georgia State Sen. Brandon Beach, who announced his candidacy for the 6th Congressional District earlier this year, said Thursday he will campaign to retain his current North Fulton-based seat instead.

Beach, who was first elected to the senate in 2013, was one of several Republican candidates seeking to defeat incumbent Democratic U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath.

In a statement announced by his campaign, Beach said:

“During this campaign, I have come to realize that a calling to public service does not always mean running for higher office. After speaking with Governor Kemp this weekend, I believe that, at this time, I can help more Georgians in the positions I currently hold and be more effective in the State Senate than in Congress.”

Here’s Kemp’s response in a statement also released by the Beach campaign:

“I applaud Senator Beach for his willingness to serve in Congress but respect his decision to remain in the State Senate. Quite honestly, we need bold leadership under the Gold Dome to continue our success and keep Georgia the best place to live, work, and raise a family.”

Beach, the president of the Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce, has been in the senate since 2013, representing District 21, which includes some of North Fulton and Cherokee counties. A resident of Alpharetta, he is the chairman of the Senate Transportation Committee.

The 6th Congressional District includes East Cobb, North Fulton, Sandy Springs and North DeKalb.

Until 2018, it had been in Republican hands for 40 years, when McBath defeated Karen Handel, who had won a 2017 special election.

Handel is running to regain that seat, along with Marjorie Taylor Greene, owner of a Milton commercial construction company, and Nicole Rodden, a former Merchant Marine.

The latest federal campaign finance reports had Handel raising $712,000 through Sept. 30 of this year, compared to $625,000 for Greene (most of that coming from the candidate) and $525,000 for Beach.

Among Beach’s campaign donors is former Atlanta Braves and Baseball Hall of Fame pitcher John Smoltz, who gave $2,000.

McBath, a high-profile proponent of gun-control, has raised $1.7 million this year for her re-election campaign, according to the Federal Elections Commission. That’s the 28th-highest money-raising total among U.S. House candidates, and the most for any Georgia congressional candidate.

McBath defeated Handel by less than 4,000 votes in 2018 in a race that helped the Democrats win control of the House.

The 6th District campaign figures to be hotly contested again in 2020, as Democrats have been making inroads in Republican strongholds in the north metro Atlanta suburbs.

Last month, McBath voted with House Democrats to begin an impeachment inquiry against President Donald Trump. Hearings began on Wednesday by the House Intelligence Committee.

 

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McBath votes to formalize impeachment process against Trump

U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath of Georgia’s 6th Congressional District voted with the Democratic House majority on Thursday to move forward with an impeachment process against President Donald Trump.U.S. Rep Lucy McBath, gun violence research funding, McBath border-funding vote

The vote, which passed 232-196, is not a vote to impeach, but to set forth procedures for conducting an impeachment inquiry.

(You can read a draft of the resolution here.)

Only two Democrats voted against the resolution, which followed some fierce floor debate. All House Republicans, among them Barry Loudermilk of the 11th District of Georgia, which includes some of Cobb County, voted against the measure.

The vote comes after revelations of the president’s communications with the government of Ukraine. Specifically, Trump is alleged to have told Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky in a July phone conversation that U.S. military aid to that Eastern European nation was contingent upon conducting an investigation into Democratic presidential candidate and former vice president Joe Biden.

The White House has denied what has been referred to as a “quid pro quo,” and Republican members of Congress last week stormed a closed-door impeachment meeting held by Democrats, delaying a deposition by several hours.

McBath, a first-term Democrat from Marietta, is a member of the House Judiciary Committee. She voted September in favor of an impeachment inquiry based on information presented in special prosecutor Robert Mueller’s report on Russian interference in U.S. elections.

That report could not conclude that Trump or his campaign colluded with the Russian government.

Since then, Trump supporters have protested in front of McBath’s district headquarters in Sandy Springs.

Last fall, McBath edged Karen Handel to win the 6th District, which includes most of East Cobb, a flip that helped the Democrats take control of the House.

The 6th District is considered a swing seat for 2020, and it’s where Trump won with only 51 percent of the vote in the 2016 presidential race.

In a statement issued by her press office, McBath said Thursday afternoon that “I voted to formalize the rules for the inquiry process and continue to support the responsibility of this Congress to secure the truth and defend the Constitution.”

Handel, one of several Republicans who’s announced for the 2020 race, said that “today’s resolution continues the illegitimate sham process that has been underway in the House for some 37 days. It’s a process that denies fairness, denies due process, and provides for selective leaks and secret interviews.”

State Sen. Brandon Beach, another GOP candidate, said “Lucy McBath finally showed her true allegiance to Speaker Pelosi & ‘woke’ Democrats who have been working for three years to remove a DEMOCRATICALLY ELECTED President and undo his economic policies.”

Only two presidents have been impeached: Andrew Johnson, Abraham Lincoln’s successor, in 1868, and Bill Clinton in 1998. Both survived Senate trials that would have removed them from office.

In 1974, the House Judiciary Committee returned three articles of impeachment against Richard Nixon during the Watergate scandal, but he resigned before a full House vote.

Should Trump be impeached, he also would be tried in the Senate, which has a Republican majority, including Johnny Isakson and David Perdue of Georgia.

But a trial would likely come after Isakson’s retirement at the end of the year due to health reasons. Gov. Brian Kemp has not yet selected a successor who would serve through a special election next year.

 

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EDITOR’S NOTE: Tim Lee and the transformation of Cobb County

Tim Lee

I drove past Sun Trust Park a couple weeks ago, hours before the Atlanta Braves would clinch the National League East title.

To say that was a happy occasion was an understatement; I trace my Braves’ fandom to 1969, when I first attended a game at Atlanta Stadium and the year they won the West with Henry Aaron. Their opponents that day were the San Francisco Giants and Willie Mays.

During the years to follow, the Braves struggled to solidify the changing business of baseball in an economically challenged area of downtown Atlanta.

Little did I or many of my Cobb County neighbors have any idea, that after only 20 years at Turner Field, the next home of the Braves would be rather close to our homes.

It’s been six years since it was revealed that the Braves had worked out an agreement with Cobb County to jointly finance a new stadium, in the Cumberland area, on Windy Ridge Parkway and visible from I-75.Tim Lee dies

In that late summer of 2013, Tim Lee became a household name not just in Cobb County, but the metro Atlanta area and the baseball world. As the Cobb Commission Chairman at the time, he was approached by the Braves, and discussions were kept secret for months until the last minute.

Even other commissioners weren’t told until it was clear the word was going to get out. What’s more, they had exactly two weeks before they would be asked to formalize a Memorandum of Understanding that would commit the county to nearly $400 million in public financing.

Lee talked a good game about the money not coming from property taxes. Two of his colleagues, Helen Goreham and JoAnn Birrell, were ecstatic. After some grim years of tax increases and budget cuts due to the recession, here was a big fat piece of economic development, plopped right in Cobb County’s lap.

Anyone who would look this gift horse in the mouth, it was suggested by those doing the rah-rah for the stadium, is a fool.

But two weeks was no time to thoroughly review a 30-year commitment for snags, fine print and other potential issues bound to come up for such a complicated, long-term deal.

It’s not a secret that subsidized sports stadiums and arenas rarely yield the jobs and economic benefits they promise, and quite often come with unexpected costs. But Lee, the Cobb Chamber of Commerce and other civic boosters were undeterred.

Lee rammed the Braves’ stadium deal through with a 4-1 vote, with only Lisa Cupid of South Cobb raising questions about the process, and some of the details of the MOU.

That’s how Lee, who died last week from cancer at the age of 62, got some big things done during his six years as chairman. During the recession, he threatened to close down Cobb library branches, to get commissioners to the table to raise taxes and cut services.

That ploy worked, but I came away with a dim view of how Lee operated. The lack of transparency with the Braves’ deal only confirmed that impression a few years later.

Lee lost his bid for re-election in 2016 to Mike Boyce, an East Cobb resident, who drove home the faulty process of how Cobb got the Braves.

Regardless of how Lee swung the deal, what it has represented since then is a kind of transformation of Cobb County.

As the county went from rural to suburban in the late 1960s and 1970s, Cobb is changing again, to an increasingly urban area in many places, including more pockets of East Cobb.

What county officials like to call the “halo effect” of development stemming from Sun Trust Park and The Battery has spilled over to the nearby Powers Ferry Road corridor.

The tax benefits of the Braves’ relocation to Cobb County look like they’re going to pay off. That’s a good thing.

The high-density residential and commercial development that’s popping up all around the county, even possibly to the Sprayberry area, was likely to come whether a stadium was built or not.

However, Sun Trust stands, not just as the home of our Local Nine, but as a symbol that Cobb County is not just the bedroom community that attracted many of us here. The ranch-style homes once built on big, wooded lots a generation ago are increasingly being plowed under for McMansions on postage stamps and upscale townhomes.

Mixed-use developments are replacing standard strip shopping centers as the retail industry goes through major upheavals. Tax incentives for corporate relocations promising new jobs have become more frequent and controversial.

Some of those trends were already in motion when Lee, seeking his first full term as chairman, won a close Republican runoff in 2012. In that election, he had to fend off a former chairman, Bill Byrne, who raised the idea of a City of East Cobb to get votes.

At his watch party at a hotel near Kennesaw State, Lee breathed a sigh of relief when the voting returns finally went his way. He wiped his brow, thanked his supporters and hugged his wife.

Deep down, he was humble and hard-working, from his involvement with the East Cobb Civic Association, to representing an East Cobb district on the Board of Commissioners and as chairman.

Pragmatism was his hallmark, and as much as I disliked the way the Braves deal went down—ends should never justify the means—Lee never regretted it, even if it cost him his political career.

A few hours after Lee’s memorial service Friday at First United Methodist Church in Marietta, the Braves rallied to win a playoff game against the St. Louis Cardinals at Sun Trust.

It’s a shame he didn’t get to enjoy the renaissance of the team and the area where it now plays. My condolences go out to his family, and in lieu of flowers donations were asked to benefit the Atlanta Braves Foundation.

Lee’s actions helped shape a new evolution for Cobb County, one that may be more dramatic than what has come before.

 

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Former Cobb Commission Chairman Tim Lee dies of cancer

Former Cobb Commission Chairman Tim Lee, who lived in East Cobb and was best known for stadium negotiations to bring the Atlanta Braves to the county, died Sunday after a battle with cancer.Tim Lee dies

He died early Sunday afternoon at the Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Gainesville, according to multiple reports.

Lee, who was 62, had been diagnosed with cancer last year. The MDJ reported that the esophageal cancer had returned, and that there was a dinner in Lee’s honor at the Delta Club at SunTrust Park on Monday that included political and Braves luminaries.

The report said Lee had been hospitalized this week but that he hoped to be released.

Current Cobb Commission Chairman Mike Boyce said Sunday that flags at all county government facilities will fly at half-staff this week through Lee’s funeral. Those arrangements have not been announced.

“The county has lost a true leader and statesman who will long be remembered for his accomplishments and love of Cobb County,” Boyce said in a statement issued by the county.

Lee was first elected to the Cobb Board of Commissioners from District 3 in Northeast Cobb in 2002, when Sam Olens left that post to become chairman. In 2010, he stepped down from that post to run for chairman when Olens resigned to campaign for Georgia Attorney General.

Lee won a full four-year term as chairman in 2012, staving off former chairman Bill Byrne in the Republican primary.

It was during the summer and fall of 2014 that Lee became a central figure in the controversial Braves deal.

He announced a partnership with the Braves, contingent upon commission approval of a memorandum of understanding to provide $300 million of public financing.

But commissioners had only two weeks from the time of the announcement before voting, prompting questions about secrecy. The vote to approve the financing passed 4-1, but the Braves deal ultimately led to Lee’s departure from office.

The process over the Braves deal was a leading campaign issue in the 2016 chairman’s race for Boyce, a retired U.S. Marine colonel who lives in East Cobb and who ran for chairman in 2012.

Boyce overcame a lack of name recognition and was outspent, but defeated Lee in the Republican primary.

In 2017, Lee was named executive director of economic development for Habersham County in the North Georgia mountains.

District 2 commissioner Bob Ott of East Cobb had plenty of differences with Lee, including the latter’s push for a property tax increase in 2011, during the recession.

On Sunday, Ott said in the Cobb government statement that “Tim guided Cobb County through some difficult economic times.

“His love for our county was seen from his early days as a commissioner and was even more evident when he became chairman. He always wanted the best for Cobb, and it is a true tragedy his life has been cut short.”

Said current District 3 commissioner JoAnn Birrell, who succeeded Lee: “He was a great leader and visionary for Cobb County. He always had the county’s best interest at heart and served with his entire being.”

 

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McBath to hold town hall meeting Sunday in Sandy Springs

U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath will hold a town hall meeting Sunday afternoon in Sandy Springs to meet with 6th Congressional District constituents.U.S. Rep Lucy McBath, gun violence research funding, McBath border-funding vote

The meeting is from 1-2 p.m. Temple Emanu-El, 1580 Spalding Drive.

McBath, a first-term Democrat from Marietta, said the the town hall will be about “hearing about the issues that matter most in our community. ”

McBath has taken a visible role in gun-control issues, and during the August recess took part in a “Protect Our Care” bus tour in Georgia to advocate for greater health care access.

She also sponsored the Honoring American Veterans in Extreme Need Act, which allows disabled veterans greater relief from financial hardship by amending bankruptcy laws. That bill passed Congress and recently was signed by President Donald Trump.

If you’re interested in attending the town hall, you’re asked to RSVP here. Seating is limited.

McBath is the only Democrat thus far who’s declared an intention to run for the 6th District seat in 2020. Her win last year helped tilt control of the House to the Democrats, and the 6th District—which includes East Cobb, North Fulton and Sandy Springs and north and central DeKalb—is considered a battleground race again for next year.

Former Rep. Karen Handel, whom McBath defeated last year, is one of four Republicans vying to regain the seat that had been in GOP hands for 40 years. Also running are State Sen. Brandon Beach of Alpharetta, Nicole Rodden, a former Merchant Marine and Marjorie Taylor Greene, owner of a Milton commercial construction company.

According to the latest federal campaign finance reports, McBath has raised $1.15 million for her re-election bid this year.

Among the individual contributors include actress Jane Fonda, who made contributions of $2,200 and $2,800 in June, and former Gov. Roy Barnes of Marietta, who contributed $1,800 in June.

She also has received political action committee contributions from the American Federation of Teachers ($5,000), NARAL Pro-Choice America ($5,000) and the campaign committees for various House Democrats, including Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

Greene has raised $523,351 (with $500,000 coming from the candidate), Handel $460,132, Beach $359,067 and Rodden $158,926.

 

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EDITOR’S NOTE: The admirable legacy of Johnny Isakson

Sen. Johnny Isakson and his wife Dianne in Normandy in June for the 75th anniversary of the D-Day landings. (Isakson office photo)

As the legacy of Johnny Isakson was being assessed this week by statewide media, and in Washington, D.C., news outlets, the view from home isn’t all that different, but with a few parochial twists.

Even before he became Georgia’s senior senator, a key leader in an emerging Republican majority in the state and a political elder statesman, Isakson was known simply as “Johnny.”

A personable, eager, hardworking real estate agent, he moved to what was to become East Cobb under the auspices of Northside Realty, founded by his father. This was in the mid-to-late-1960s.

He got involved in many business and civic activities, including the Marietta-Cobb Jaycees, the younger division of the Cobb Chamber of Commerce.

That’s how my father became acquainted with Isakson during that time, as Cobb County was going through its first boom period. The Jaycees also included George Lankford, later to become the first Republican elected to the Cobb County commission.

The Jaycees attracted many aspiring and ambitious types, some drawn to seeking political office. Isakson ran for the commission but lost in his first stab at elected office. My dad volunteered in the Lankford campaign but didn’t get involved in politics after that, as he built his own successful career as a home contractor.

Isakson continued taking an active role in community leadership as Northside Realty became a cornerstone of an East Cobb residential market that was just beginning to lay the foundation for the desirable homebuying market that it is today.

He took to politics like he took to selling real estate, utterly determined to succeed. That doggedness would serve Isakson well as a Republican because of the Democratic stranglehold on state, local and federal politics.

As a young legislator, he benefitted from Democrats who weren’t afraid to work across the aisle. When Republicans became the majority party, Isakson returned the favor without hesitation.

After losing a nasty battle for governor to Zell Miller, Isakson was called upon by Miller to head up a state board of education in disarray. Isakson took on the job.

Bipartisanship was never a dirty word to Isakson, a rarity given the increasingly polarized times that paralleled his ascent.

He would succeed combative Speaker Newt Gingrich in the East Cobb-based 6th U.S. House District.

After losing a U.S. Senate GOP primary, Isakson in 2004 won the first of three elections to that body, becoming the first Georgia Republican to ever do so.

That he won’t be able to finish out that third term due to health reasons has saddened many, including those who don’t agree with him politically.

That’s because for Isakson, a person’s politics aren’t a reflection of who they are as a human being. He’s unlike too many of his Congressional colleagues in both parties, as well as the current commander-in-chief, who exploit those differences for the purpose of intentional division.

Isakson is a committed conservative, to be sure, and he has fought hard for those positions and has been a loyal member of his political party. Some observers, especially those with a more liberal perspective, think he could have done more to publicly decry the tenor of the Tweets and other outbursts coming from the White House, among other things.

Earlier this year, Isakson did give Trump a tongue-lashing for comments about the late Sen. John McCain, one of Isakson’s closest colleagues and friends. That the president didn’t Tweet something in return, or respond in any other way, is noteworthy.

In an age of political showhorses, Isakson has always been a workhorse.

Treating people with respect has been a hallmark of his service as an elected official, something he cultivated as a young real estate agent in East Cobb many decades ago.

Eight years ago this month, on the 10th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks on the United States, Isakson stood in the pulpit at East Cobb’s Mt. Zion United Methodist Church, where he has taught Sunday School for many years.

He delivered remarks during an ecumenical service there that summed up so much of what Isakson has embodied in public life. He was resolute about U.S. objectives in cracking down on terrorism, but in doing so reached out to the Christian, Jewish and Islamic faithful in attendance.

That was one set of remarks among the many thousands of speeches he has given in more than four decades on the public stage, but it’s one I heard as so thoroughly decent and devoid of an agenda.

It was refreshing, as was Isakson’s example in so many other ways. He spoke out against an anti-gay resolution adopted by the Cobb commission in the early 1990s that prompted Atlanta Olympic organizers to cancel related events in the county.

The county has come a long way since Isakson stepped into the spotlight, and that’s not a coincidence.

Whether you agreed with his votes and politics or not, his humble leadership style and the personal values he put into practice every day will certainly be missed, especially in these fractious times.

More on Isakson from the AJC‘s Jim Galloway and with MDJ editors. Isakson also spoke this week to longtime Atlanta newsman Denis O’Hayer at WABE-FM.

 

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Sen. Isakson retiring due to ‘mounting health challenges’

The office of U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson announced Wednesday that due to health reasons, he will be resigning his seat with three years left in his term.Isakson blisters Trump

Here’s the message from Isakson, 74, an East Cobb Republican, who’s been rehabbing from a fall in his Washington apartment and has been battling Parkinson’s disease.

He also announced he had kidney surgery this week:

“After much prayer and consultation with my family and my doctors, I have made the very tough decision to leave the U.S. Senate at the end of this year. I have informed Georgia Governor Brian Kemp today that I will resign my Senate seat effective December 31, 2019.

“I am leaving a job I love because my health challenges are taking their toll on me, my family and my staff. My Parkinson’s has been progressing, and I am continuing physical therapy to recover from a fall in July. In addition, this week I had surgery to remove a growth on my kidney.

“In my 40 years in elected office, I have always put my constituents and my state of Georgia first. With the mounting health challenges I am facing, I have concluded that I will not be able to do the job over the long term in the manner the citizens of Georgia deserve. It goes against every fiber of my being to leave in the middle of my Senate term, but I know it’s the right thing to do on behalf of my state.

“I look forward to returning to Washington on September 9 when the Senate goes back into session. And after December 31, I look forward to continuing to help the people of Georgia in any way I can and also helping those who are working toward a cure for Parkinson’s.”

Isakson’s term ends at the end of 2022. Under Georgia law, the governor will appoint a successor until a special election in 2020.

That means both Georgia senate seats will be on the ballot next November. Republican Sen. David Perdue, the junior senator, has indicated he will be seeking a second term.

The winner of the special election for Isakson’s seat would serve two years, with that office then being up for a six-year term in 2022 elections.

Here’s the letter Isakson wrote to Kemp.

Walton High School

An East Cobb civic icon

Isakson was a pillar of the East Cobb business and civic community before he ever ran for public office. The founder and president of Northside Realty, Isakson was called upon by Cobb school superintendent Kermit Keenum in the early 1970s to help the district find land for a badly needed middle school and high school in fast-growing East Cobb.

As he noted in 2017 at the ribbon-cutting for the new Walton High School building (in photo above), the properties he located on Bill Murdock Road for what were to become Walton and Dodgen Middle School cost less than $5,000 combined.

He and his wife Dianne, whom he married in 1968, raised three children, who attended school in the Walton cluster. They have eight grandchildren and are members of Mt. Zion United Methodist Church on Johnson Ferry Road.

When Isakson was elected to the Georgia House in 1976, he was one of the first Republicans in what was becoming known as East Cobb to win public office. While in the lower house, he ran for governor in 1990 but lost.

Two years later, he won a seat in the Georgia Senate, where he served for one term, then left to run for the U.S. Senate. Isakson lost a GOP runoff to succeed the retiring Sam Nunn, who was followed by Max Cleland.

Serving in Washington

After U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich announced in 1998 he would not seek re-election, Isakson ran for and won the 6th District seat that includes East Cobb, serving until he won his first U.S. Senate term in 2004.

While in the Senate, Isakson has been chairman of the Veterans Affairs and Ethics committees.

In 2015, Isakson announced he had Parkinson’s disease, but ran for a third term the following year and won the general election with 54 percent of the vote.

He is the first Republican in Georgia history to win three U.S. Senate terms and is the only Georgian to be elected to the Georgia House and Senate, as well as the U.S. House and Senate.

Isakson also has served as chairman of the Georgia Board of Education.

Georgia has become a more competitive state politically since his last election. The 6th District seat that had been in GOP hands since 1979 was narrowly won by Republican Karen Handel in a special election in 2017 that was the most expensive race in U.S. House history.

But she lost last year to Democrat Lucy McBath. Statewide, Democrats ran close races, including governor.Sen. Johnny Isakson

A fiscal and social conservative, Isakson has been hailed for his moderate temperament and earned a reputation for working across the aisle during his political career.

Earlier this summer, Isakson led a bipartisan Senate delegation to Normandy to observe the 75th anniversary of the D-Day landings.

Perdue has been a staunch and unapologetic defender of President Donald Trump. Earlier this year, Isakson blistered the president for his comments about late Sen. John McCain, a close friend of Isakson, making good on remarks from the Senate floor he had made earlier that anyone who “tarnishes the reputation of John McCain deserves a whipping.”

“I never worry about what I’m doing politically or practically in the Senate as long as I think I’m doing what’s right,” Isakson said in an interview on Georgia Public Radio.

In 2017, Isakson was named the East Cobb Citizen of the Year by the East Cobb Area Council of the Cobb Chamber of Commerce.

Isakson was unable to attend due to duties in Washington, but then-Chamber president David Connell remarked that “if you looked up a definition of a statesman and a public servant, you’ll see a picture of Johnny Isakson.”

Local, state, national reaction

McBath issued the following statement about Isakson Wednesday afternoon:

“Sen. Johnny Isakson’s last 4 decades in public service show his deep commitment to serving the people of Georgia and this country. He will be missed in our delegation & Sen. Isakson and his family are in my prayers.

Gov. Kemp’s office issued this statement with First Lady Marty Kemp, the daughter of a former legislative colleague of Isakson, that says in part:

“Georgia should be most thankful for is the high standard that Johnny held as a true gentleman, a fighter for his constituents, a trusted advocate for our nation’s veterans, and one of the greatest statesmen to ever answer the call of service to our country. Marty and I are forever grateful for the friendship that Johnny and Dianne have shown us over the years and wish them the very best in the years to come. I will appoint Senator Isakson’s replacement at the appropriate time.”

Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr, Isakson’s former chief of staff and a possible appointee to fill his seat:

“I will be forever grateful that he was willing to take a chance on me in 2004 and that he has served as a mentor to me ever since. Whenever I am confronted with a tough decision, I often ask myself, ‘What would Johnny do?'”

New York Democrat Chuck Schumer, the Senate Minority Leader, issued this statement:

“One of the many fine adjectives to describe Johnny Isakson is a word not used enough in the halls of Congress these days: kind. Not only is Johnny a diligent and successful legislator, he is one of the kindest, most thoughtful senators. Independent of any party or politics, everyone will miss Johnny.” 

We’ll add more reaction from elected officials and others as we get it.

 

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Loudermilk: Solution to gun violence won’t be in Washington

After nearly being the victim of a mass shooting two years ago, Georgia Congressman Barry Loudermilk says he’s been asked frequently about whether he would support more stringent gun control legislation at the federal level.U.S. Rep. Barry Loudermilk, gun violence

“I’m a survivor,” Loudermilk says in reference to the attempted assassination of Republicans in June 2017 at a Congressional baseball practice in Alexandria, Va.

A gunman who supported Democratic presidential candidate and Sen. Bernie Sanders opened fire with a military-style weapon, seriously wounding then-House Majority Whip Steve Scalise and five others before being shot by U.S. Capitol Police.

During the 10-minute shootout, Loudermilk took cover behind an SUV, and figures he was shot at around 20 times by the gunman, who later died and was identified as James Hodgkinson.

“He knew what he was doing,” said Loudermilk, recalling the incident as the guest speaker at the East Cobb Business Association luncheon on Tuesday. “He didn’t have mental health issues. He was radicalized.

“And there wasn’t a single thing we could have done to change that.”

Law enforcement later found that Hodgkinson had left behind some strident social media messages against President Donald Trump and was particularly upset about Republican efforts to repeal Obamacare.

“He had no respect for the law,” Loudermilk said about the shooter. “He intended to commit mass murder.”

In light of recent mass shootings in El Paso, Texas and Dayton, Ohio, Loudermilk still believes federal legislation won’t properly address issues of gun violence and mass shootings.

“We have a cultural crisis and a moral crisis in this country,” said Loudermilk, a third-term Republican from Cartersville who represents the 11th Congressional District of Georgia that includes part of Cobb County.

“There’s nothing that we in Washington can do about that.”

He made his remarks in the 6th District, where first-term Marietta Democrat Lucy McBath narrowly won last November with a strict gun-control message. McBath’s son was shot and killed by a motorist at a Florida gas station, sparking her activism.

She’s been a sponsor of federal background check and related legislation, and secured $50 million in federal funding for the Centers for Disease Control to study the effects of gun violence.

But Loudermilk says background check measures and “red-flag” proposals—in which law enforcement can confiscate guns from those considered to be a a danger to others or themselves—will be more effective at the state and local levels.

A total of 15 states have such red-flag laws, but Georgia is not one of them.

‘The George Patton of presidents’

In wake of the attempted shootings that affected him, Loudermilk has called for greater civility in American life, and not just politics.

He said that given the “unusual time” in the country, and especially in Washington, he’s also asked a lot about a figure who’s at the center of much of that divisive rhetoric—Trump.

“He says some things that I wish he would say differently,” Loudermilk said of the president. “I don’t always like the way he does things. But I try to judge Trump by what he is actively doing.”

Loudermilk says he thinks that Trump—”the George Patton of presidents”—will go down as an effective president, and that his “shock and awe” approach is part of the reason why.

On the subject of the Mueller Report—an investigation into alleged Russian government influence on the influence American elections—Loudermilk is certain the 2016 Trump campaign didn’t act in collusion, as many of the president’s opponents still believe.

“If he had colluded with the Russians,” Loudermilk said of Trump, “he would have already bragged about it.”

The Trump Administration’s renegotiating trade policy with China includes the threat of tariffs because, Loudermilk said, “that is the stick he has to use.”

He said the benefits of tax cuts in 2017 pushed by the White House are continuing to boost the economy. While some changes had to be made to address the concerns of small-business owners, Loudermilk said “I want to think it’s because it’s nothing we did. We got out of the way, so you can do what you do.”

 

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Isakson recuperating at home after being discharged from Kennestone

After less than a week in physical rehabilitation at WellStar Kennestone Hospital, U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson is recuperating at his home in East Cobb.Isakson blisters Trump

His office said he was discharged Friday after undergoing physical therapy. He fractured four ribs in a fall at his apartment in Washington.

The Republican, Georgia’s senior senator who is 74 years old, said the following in a statement issued by his office:

“I am doing much better thanks to the excellent medical care and rehabilitation services I have received. I’m looking forward to sleeping in my own bed and will remain focused on making a full recovery so I can get back to work. All of the thoughtful messages of support have kept my spirits high, and I thank everyone who has lifted me up during this time.”

His spokeswoman said Isakson is expected to return to Washington in August, after a Congressional recess that includes work and appearances around the state.

 

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Jerica Richardson declares as Cobb commission District 2 candidate

Jerica Richardson, Cobb commission candidate

After working to get a new member of the Cobb Board of Education elected last year, East Cobb resident Jerica Richardson has decided to run for public office in 2020.

Richardson, who lives in the Delk Road area, is a candidate for the District 2 Cobb Board of Commissioners seat held by 11-year incumbent Bob Ott.

She said she’s formally launching her campaign in August (her campaign website is here) and is running “because it is time that the community has a seat at the table.”

On her personal website, Richardson describes herself as a “hacktivist” who’s writing a book on the subject. In it, she urges those who are “tired of being ignored” to “pick up those dreams again and inch closer to being who you were meant to be.”

In an interview with East Cobb News, Richardson didn’t offer many specifics about what her priorities would be for now. She admits to being a “firebrand” who dates her interest in politics to the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, which took place when she was 12.

“Running for office has always been something that’s been in the back of my mind,” she said. “The impact our elected representatives have can serve as an empowerment tool for the community.”

Richardson, who works in an enterprise transformation unit at Equifax, serves on the Facilities and Technologies Committee, a SPLOST advisory board, for the Cobb County School District. She was appointed by school board member Jaha Howard, whose campaign she worked on and who was elected last year to represent the Osborne and Campbell clusters.

Richardson, who’s running as a Democrat in what’s been long-held Republican territory, is the only declared candidate thus far in District 2. It includes most of East Cobb below Sandy Plains Road, as well as the Cumberland-Vinings area and portions of Smyrna.

(story continues below the map)

Cobb commission District 2
Map via Cobb Elections. For enlarged map click here.

Ott, a Republican and the dean of the five-member Cobb Board of Commissioners, has not yet indicated whether he’s running for a fourth term. He’s also downplayed speculation he’s interested in running for commission chairman, or possibly mayor of a proposed City of East Cobb should such a referendum be on next year’s ballot.

Current chairman Mike Boyce and South Cobb commissioner Lisa Cupid have announced their candidacies for chairman next year.

Richardson and her family moved to Atlanta from New Orleans in the wake of Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Her brothers attended Walton High School. She graduated from the North Springs arts and sciences charter school in Fulton County and earned a biomedical engineering degree from Georgia Tech.

She said that community “disconnections” between citizens and their elected officials promoted her to consider running. Who are those individuals?

“People who live and work here and who want to see Cobb grow,” she said.

As for specific issues, Richardson said “I’m keeping my finger on that. I want to be very careful how I look at these issues.

“It’s not about me being any kind of savior,” she said. “It’s about bringing people together. I want to be a real representative.”

Richardson declined to comment on what she thinks of Ott’s record, saying that “my campaign is fresh, and he hasn’t made a decision.”

Among the challenges she sees are those the commissioners are dealing with now, including getting a long-term handle on budgeting, taxes and public safety.

She said she will have more detailed comments on policy issues when she unveils her campaign next month.

“There’s a lot there,” Richardson said. “How to articulate what direction we need to go is very important to me. Words matter.”

In mid-June Richardson filed a campaign declaration form with the Georgia Government Transparency and Campaign Finance Commission. Since then, she said her campaign has raised around $10,000 (the current reporting period must be filed by the end of September).

Ott’s latest campaign disclosure form, dated July 1, indicates he raised $55,000 in the second quarter of 2019, and lists the office being “held or sought” as District 2.

 

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Isakson to continue recovery at WellStar Kennestone Hospital

After being released from a Washington hospital on Saturday, U.S. Sen. Johny Isakson will continue his recovery close to home. Isakson robocall legislation

That what the East Cobb Republican’s spokeswoman said Saturday afternoon. Isakson, who fractured four ribs in a fall in his D.C. apartment, will enter an inpatient rehabilitation program at Kennestone.

Isakson, 74, will receive “an intensive physical therapy program” to help regain stamina and mobility, according to his spokeswoman, Amanda Maddox.

“Part of the challenge that Isakson will face is the coupling of his injury with the symptoms of his Parkinson’s disease, which could lead to a longer recovery process,” according to her statement. “He is in good spirits and is determined to face this challenge head on so he can return to doing what he loves: representing Georgians in the Senate.”

Said Isakson:

“I’m on the mend and looking forward to fully healing my fractured ribs through intensive rehabilitation. I thank everyone who has lifted me up through prayer and well-wishes.”

 

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Isakson hospitalized in Washington after fracturing ribs

A spokeswoman for Georgia Sen. Johnny Isakson said Wednesday night the East Cobb Republican was taken to a hospital Tuesday after fracturing several ribs during a fall at his apartment in Washington.Isakson robocall legislation

Amanda Maddox said Isakson was admitted to George Washington University Hospital after fracturing four ribs. She said “he is in pain, but resting and doing well. Senator Isakson looks forward to fully recovering and getting back to work for Georgians.”

Isakson, who is 74, is in his third term in the Senate. He was diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease in 2015 and occasionally walks with the assistance of a cane.

He was re-elected in 2016, and the following year underwent two back surgeries for a stress fracture and to address spinal deterioration due to arthritis.

Congress is back in session after the July 4 holiday.

Isakson has kept a heavy schedule since his diagnosis, and is the only senator to lead two committees: Veterans Affairs and the Select Committee on Ethics. He also serves on the foreign relations and health, education, labor and pensions committees.

Last month, Isakson led a Senate delegation to France for the 75th anniversary of D-Day.

 

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McBath votes for border-funding bill that divides House Democrats

U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath, a Marietta Democrat who represents East Cobb, was one of 129 House Democrats to vote for $4.6 billion in supplemental funding this week for humanitarian aid for migrants along the U.S.-Mexico border and to address overcrowding at detention centers there.U.S. Rep Lucy McBath, gun violence research funding, McBath border-funding vote

The House supported the measure 305-102, after the Senate passed the special appropriations 84-8 (with Georgia Republican senators Johnny Isakson and David Perdue voting in favor).

The Senate had earlier rejected a different House version of the bill.

The second House vote on Thursday was contentious, with more progressive Democrats accusing moderates in their caucus of child abuse. In one instance, there was a confrontation between Democrats on the House floor over heated social media messages.

The only Georgia House member to vote against the bill was John Lewis of Atlanta.

The Emergency Supplemental Appropriations for Humanitarian Assistance and Security at the Southern Border Act of 2019 (summary here) would fund operations for the departments of Homeland Security, Health and Human Services, Commerce and Defense in the following ways:

  • $2.88 billion for the HHS Unaccompanied Alien Children program for the safety and welfare of children under its care;
  • $1.1 billion for migrant care and processing facilities, medical care and transportation, and data systems;
  • $793 million for establishing and operating migrant care and processing facilities to improve conditions at border stations and ports of entry;
  • $220 million to hire additional personnel to expedite immigration court proceedings;
  • $209 million for medical care and transportation of unaccompanied alien children and migrants between facilities, counter-human trafficking operations, detention alternatives and migrant processing;
  • $145 million for Defense operations and maintenance in support of multiple missions at the border.

The bill is awaiting the signature of President Donald Trump, who is in Asia at the Group of 20 Summit.

 

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McBath applauds $50M in gun violence research funding

Submitted information: U.S. Rep Lucy McBath, gun violence research funding

U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath (D-GA) applauds the House passage of $50 million in funding she requested for important firearm injury and mortality prevention research at the Centers for Disease Control and the National Institutes of Health, including critical projects at the Centers for Disease Control National Center for Injury Prevention and Control in Chamblee that would improve understanding of the solutions to prevent gun deaths.

“I was proud to lead my colleagues in asking for this funding because I believe I have the responsibility as a survivor of gun violence to stand up to stop these tragedies,” McBath said. “The CDC and NIH need this funding to better understand how to prevent gun deaths. When I visited the Injury Center in my district, I was heartbroken to hear about the severe lack of funding for gun-related injury research. This critical funding will save lives.”

These federal dollars will provide for the first gun violence prevention funding in more than twenty years and allocates $25 million each to the Centers for Disease Control and National Institutes of Health to study firearm injury and mortality prevention. The funding passed as part of the Labor-Health & Human Services-Education Appropriations bill for Fiscal Year 2020.

 

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Isakson co-sponsors legislation targeting abusive robocalls

Submitted information:Isakson robocall legislation

U.S. Senator Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., cosponsored bipartisan legislation this week to combat illegal and intrusive robocalls.

Amid an ever-increasing number of robocall scams, the Telephone Robocall Abuse Criminal Enforcement and Deterrence (TRACED) Act, S.151, would give regulators more time to find scammers, increase penalties for those who are caught, promote call authentication technology, and bring relevant federal agencies and state attorneys general together to address delays in the criminal prosecution of robocallers.

“Beyond being a nuisance, robocalls can be dangerous when the callers are criminals trying to steal personal data and money. This legislation would help reduce the number of unsolicited calls and hold the perpetrators of these scams accountable,” said Isakson. “It is time for Congress to take action to provide relief for consumers.”

Specifically, the TRACED Act would:

  • Broaden the authority of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to levy civil penalties of up to $10,000 per call on people who intentionally flout telemarketing restrictions.
  • Extend the window for the FCC to catch and take civil enforcement action against intentional violations to three years after a robocall is placed. Under current law, the FCC has only one year to do so, and the FCC has told the committee that “even a one-year longer statute of limitations for enforcement” would improve enforcement against willful violators.
  • Bring together the Department of Justice, FCC, Federal Trade Commission, Department of Commerce, Department of State, Department of Homeland Security, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and other relevant federal agencies as well as state attorneys general and other non-federal entities to identify and report to Congress on improving deterrence and criminal prosecution at the federal and state level of robocall scams.
  • Require voice service providers to adopt call authentication technologies, enabling a telephone carrier to verify that incoming calls are legitimate before they reach consumers’ phones.
  • Direct the FCC to initiate a rulemaking to help protect subscribers from receiving unwanted calls or texts from callers.

The TRACED Act is supported by all 50 state attorneys general, board members of the FCC and the Federal Trade Commission, and a number of other industry associations and consumer advocacy organizations.

U.S. Sens. John Thune, R-N.D., and Edward Markey, D-Mass., led the legislation in the Senate. Full text of the legislation is available here.

To block telemarketing calls, register your number on the Do Not Call List at www.donotcall.gov. Legitimate telemarketers consult the list to avoid calling both landline and wireless phone numbers on the list.

The FCC has provided consumer tips to stop unwanted robocalls and avoid phone scams online at: https://www.fcc.gov/consumers/guides/stop-unwanted-robocalls-and-texts.

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Georgia ‘heartbeat’ abortion bill signed into law by Gov. Kemp

One of the most controversial bills to come up in the Georgia legislature this year was signed into state law Tuesday

State Rep. Sharon Cooper, Georgia heartbeat abortion bill
State Rep. Sharon Cooper

Gov. Brian Kemp signed HB 481, the Living Infants Fairness and Equality (LIFE) Act, to go into effect next January, amid promises that there would be legal challenges.

(Read the text of the bill here.)

The law bans abortions in Georgia once a doctor can detect a heartbeat, which is usually around six weeks from conception.

The exceptions are for rape and incest, if the life of the mother is endangered and if a doctor determines a fetus is not viable for medical reasons.

Women also must file a police report in the case of rape or incest.

Previous Georgia law, passed in 2012, banned abortions after 20 weeks. HB 481 was sponsored by Rep. Ed Setzler, an Acworth Republican, but two of his fellow GOP colleagues from East Cobb did not support it.

Both State Sen. Kay Kirkpatrick and State Rep. Sharon Cooper, who are pro-life Republicans, opposed the bill. Kirkpatrick was out of town attending a funeral when the bill came up for final Senate action and was excused from voting. Cooper, the chairwoman of the House Health and Human Services Committee, voted no on final passage.

They said the bill is unconstitutional, and as retired medical care providers, they opposed provisions to punish OBGYNs, physician assistants and nurses (women and pharmacists also could face criminal charges).

The bill included “personhood” language for fetuses, lets parents claim an embryo as a dependent on their taxes and could order fathers to pay child support for unborn children during pregnancy.

East Cobb’s other Republican state House members, John Carson, Matt Dollar and Don Parsons, voted for the bill. Mary Frances Williams, a Marietta Democrat who represents part of East Cobb, opposed HB 481, as did Democratic senators Jen Jordan and Michael Rhett, who have slivers of East Cobb in their districts.

Georgia is one of several states whose legislatures have enacted abortion legislation in anticipation of possible action regarding Roe v. Wade, the U.S. Supreme Court ruling in 1973 that legalized abortion nationwide.

Some of those laws have been struck down by courts.

 

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