Bob Ott won’t seek re-election to Cobb commission for 4th term

Bob Ott
Bob Ott, the longest-serving member of the Cobb Board of Commissioners,  won’t be seeking a fourth term. (ECN file)

Cobb commissioner Bob Ott, who has represented part of East Cobb since 2009, announced Tuesday he won’t be seeking re-election to a fourth term.

Ott, a Republican who is the longest-serving member of the commission, made his announcement at the end of the board’s business meeting on Tuesday.

He rattled off a long list of developments and accomplishments in District 2—which includes part of East Cobb and the Cumberland-Vinings area—during his tenure, reading from prepared remarks.

(READ: Ott’s announcement that he’s retiring)

His announcement appeared to have caught his colleagues by surprise.

“Wow,” said commissioner JoAnn Birrell, who represents Northeast Cobb.

Chairman Mike Boyce said “I for one will miss you, and I say that with all genuineness. . . . I’m sure there will be time for accolades later,” but Boyce said he looked forward to working with Ott through the end of the year.

Speaking later to East Cobb News, Ott said he decided a couple months ago he wouldn’t be running again.

“It just seemed like the right time,” said Ott, a Delta Air Lines pilot who turns 63 this year and must retire by the age of 65.

Ott, who travels on long haul routes to San Juan, Hawaii and Rome, said he wanted to enjoy the rest of his flying days as much as anything.

Ott said he told outgoing County Manager Rob Hosack and a few other people of his decision, but not his commission colleagues before Tuesday’s announcement.

Ott got involved in civic affairs in East Cobb through the East Cobb Civic Association, which he served as president, was a member of the Cobb Board of Zoning Appeals and was appointed to the Cobb Planning Commission by former commissioner Joe Lee Thompson.

Ott challenged Thompson in the 2008 Republican primary and defeated the incumbent. He didn’t have any opposition in seeking a second term in 2012. In 2016, Ott was opposed by attorney Jonathan Page, but prevailed in the Republican primary and did not have a Democratic foe.

Ott said his main reason for seeking a third term was to “see through” the opening of the new Atlanta Braves stadium in 2017.

This fall, Ott declined to indicate his future plans, saying he would make an announcement after the first of the year.

He’s occasionally been regarded as a possible candidate for chairman, including for the upcoming 2020 election, and sparred regularly with Boyce and previous chairman Tim Lee.

He said he thought “a little bit” about running for chairman this year but decided against it. Boyce and South Cobb Commissioner Lisa Cupid have announced they’re running for chairman.

Larry Savage, an East Cobb resident who ran for chairman as a Republican in 2012 and 2016, is running for chairman for a third time.

Ott said he understands why some have thought he’s harbored larger political ambitions, but cited a quote from Ronald Reagan, about what can be accomplished without caring who gets the credit.

“This has never been about me,” Ott said. “It’s been about serving the people of this district.”

“I’m not surprised that he’s looking for some downtime after three pretty intense terms as commissioner,” said Linda Carver, outgoing chairwoman of the East Cobb Civic Association. “We appreciate the positive things he’s done for District 2 and the county.”

In recent months, Ott also has deflected speculation that he might be interested in running for mayor in a possible City of East Cobb (in what’s now a stalled cityhood effort).

Former 6th District U.S. Rep. Karen Handel, who’s close to Ott, called him “one of the finest public servants I have ever known. He leads with integrity and great care, always putting the interests of the people he serves first.”

She cited his work in addressing Cobb’s opioid crisis (the county has the highest overdose rate in the state) with awareness and prevention programs.

During his remarks, Ott recalled entering office just as major flooding hit Cobb County, along with the recession that forced budget cuts and prompted staffing furloughs he says he opposed.

He pointed to the creation of the Cobb Citizens Oversight Committee to recommend budgeting and spending priorities in the wake of the recession, and touted the creation of the first citizen-led master plans in the county, including the Powers Ferry, Johnson Ferry and Shallowford-Johnson Ferry corridors.

Addressing growth and revitalization in those and other areas and improving communications with constituents are among what Ott said are his most satisfying accomplishments.

He’s held many town hall meetings, launched a newsletter and has hosted a TV show on Cobb’s public government access channel and a podcast on the county website.

Ott said he doesn’t have any future civic activities lined up for now, but that “you don’t just walk away. I don’t plan on moving.”

Ott said another reason for stepping aside now is that he feels that “you want to leave with things better than when you got it. Some things are a lot better than when we got them.”

Among the lingering challenges for the commission is grappling with public safety staffing shortages and county employee pension obligations.

Declared candidates for the District 2 seat include Democrat Jerica Richardson, who announced in July and who has not run for office before, and Lloyd “Shane” Deyo of East Cobb, who did not indicate a party affiliation.

An Ott appointee said Tuesday he’ll be seeking to replace him.

Republican Andy Smith of East Cobb, named to the Cobb Planning Commission in 2018, has not formally declared his candidacy.

The owner of a commercial interior construction company in East Cobb, Smith said he’s previously told Ott—with whom he attended high school in New Jersey—of his desire to run for commissioner at some point.

Smith, who’s been involved in community service work through Mt. Bethel United Methodist Church, said he doesn’t have a specific set of priorities for his campaign for now.

“I have the desire, and I think I have the time,” Smith said. “I see this as an opportunity to give back to the community.”

Smith also has served on the Cobb Neighborhood Safety Commission.

Candidates for office in Cobb must qualify in early March, and Smith would have to resign from the planning board upon filing his paperwork.

 

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Proposed Cobb precinct changes would move away from schools

The Cobb Board of Elections and Registration will consider a proposal next week to relocate nine voting precincts from schools for the 2020 elections, including three in East Cobb.

The precincts at Dickerson and Dodgen middle schools and Lockheed Elementary School are among those to be considered for relocation by the five-member board next Monday.

Under the proposal the Dickerson precinct would move to Lutheran Church of the Incarnation (1200 Indian Hills Parkway), and the Dodgen precinct would move to the Episcopal Church of St. Peter and St. Paul (1795 Johnson Ferry Road).

The Marietta 6A precinct at Lockheed would be moved to the Redeemed Christian Church of God-Heaven’s Gate Church (816 Pickens Industrial Drive).

Most of the other proposed precinct changes elsewhere in the county also involve moving from schools to churches or community centers.

Per Cobb Elections:

“Any objections must be filed in writing before the time of the hearing or presented orally during the hearing. If no objection is made, the Board will adopt this change at that time.”

Also on Tuesday’s elections board agenda is a proposal to divide the Bells Ferry 3 precinct in northeast Cobb and create Bells Ferry 4.

Here’s a proposed map of the two precincts; voters remaining in Bells Ferry 3 would continue to vote at Noonday Baptist Church (4120 Canton Road). Voters in the new Bells Ferry 4 precinct would vote at Shiloh Hills Baptist Church (75 Hawkins Store Road).

Two members of board of elections are appointed by the Cobb legislative delegation, and one each are chosen by the Cobb Democratic and Republican parties and the Cobb Commission Chairman.

The elections board meets Jan. 13 at 4 p.m. in the conference room at West Park Government Center, 736 Whitlock Ave., in Marietta.

Any precinct changes made by the elections board are subject to final approval by the Cobb Board of Commissioners next Tuesday, Jan. 14.

 

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East Cobb school board post draws another GOP candidate

Another Republican challenger has emerged as a candidate for the Post 5 seat on the Cobb Board of Education.Shelley O'Malley, Cobb school board candidate

Shelley O’Malley, a Delta Air Lines pilot and U.S. Navy veteran, filed paperwork on Dec. 26 with the Georgia Government and Transparency and Campaign Finance Commission declaring her intent to accept campaign contributions.

She is seeking the seat currently held by third-term GOP incumbent David Banks. Post 5 includes the Pope and Lassiter attendance zones.

O’Malley has been involved as a parent in the Rocky Mount Elementary School, Simpson Middle School and Lassiter High School communities.

Banks has not formally declared whether he’s seeking re-election.

Matt Harper, an IT manager and former Murdock Elementary School teacher, has announced his candidacy as a Republican, as has attorney Rob Madayag, who’s been critical of how the Cobb County School District handles bullying issues.

O’Malley’s community service work includes serving as a vice president of the Cobb Veterans Memorial Foundation, which formed in 2015 to build a memorial to honor veterans in the county.

Her husband Brian is also a Navy veteran and they have three children: Shannon, a former swim captain at the University of Georgia, Lauren, a graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, and Luke, a freshman at Lassiter.

O’Malley is a graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, where she was the captain of the varsity basketball team and was president of the tennis club while earning a mechanical engineering degree.

She also has volunteered with the Stringrays Swim Team and is a church school co-teacher at Transfiguration Catholic Church.

 

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As Isakson retires, U.S. Senate colleagues pay tribute

Video and text submitted by the office of U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson:

In his 45-year public service career spanning from the Georgia general assembly to the U.S. Senate, U.S. Senator Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., has made a lasting impact on countless areas of public policy. As he prepares to leave the Senate on Dec. 31, much of Isakson’s Senate legacy is highlighted in a video released today focusing on his impact on veterans, federal and state business policy, foreign policy and global leadership, education, and health care and how he has served more effectively by living his compassionate, bridge-building conservative values daily.

Isakson holds the distinction of being the only Georgian ever to have been elected to the state House, state Senate, U.S. House and U.S. Senate. In addition, in 2016 he became the first Georgia Republican ever to be elected to a third term in the U.S. Senate.

“Every day since I was first sworn in to the U.S. Senate on Jan. 4, 2005, it has been a privilege to serve Georgia in this role. I’ve done my very best to make sure Georgians’ best interests are reflected in my votes and policy work,” said Isakson. “Traveling our beautiful state and working with Georgians from Rabun Gap to Tybee Light to represent commonsense, conservative values and deliver meaningful results has been a joy, regardless of the political climate or season.

“I thank Georgians who have trusted me and the colleagues who have worked with me from the bottom of my heart. I thank my wife Dianne, and my family, my staff and many friends for their support. Without them, none of this would have been possible.

“I also thank our service members, veterans and their families for protecting the United States. It has been an honor to pay my gratitude through policy and constituent service work, which I hope has improved their lives.

“I look forward to remaining as active as possible in Georgia after my retirement from the U.S. Senate on Dec. 31.”

Veterans

Isakson, a veteran himself, served in the Georgia Air National Guard from 1966-1972. Isakson has been a member of the Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs since he joined the Senate in 2005.

Isakson became chairman of the Senate VA Committee in January 2015. From 2015 to 2019, under Isakson’s leadership, the Senate passed 63 pieces of legislation, and 57 of which have become law. These include significant reforms to improve accountability at the VA, expand VA education benefits, modernize the process for veterans’ appeals of benefit determinations, and overhaul the VA’s community care programs.

For a full list of Isakson’s accomplishments for veterans, click here.

Businessman

Applying the lessons learned throughout his 33-year real estate career, Isakson has aided Georgia communities during his 45 years in public service through planned development and by protecting Georgia’s transportation, energy and water interests, as well as job creators and employees.

For a full list of Isakson’s business-related accomplishments, click here.

Values

Isakson has earned a reputation as a compassionate, honest and bridge-building public servant throughout his long political career. 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 has been a regular attendee at the weekly Senate prayer breakfast with Senate Chaplain Barry Black and served as co-chair of the National Prayer Breakfast in 2010.

For additional information about Isakson’s lifetime commitment to his values, click here.

Global Leadership and Foreign Policy

Isakson, who previously served as the top Republican on the Senate Subcommittee on African Affairs, has been a long-term member of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. The U.S. Global Leadership Coalition recently honored Isakson with its Lifetime Achievement Award for his longstanding commitment to advocating for a strong U.S. foreign policy and strengthening America’s development and diplomacy tools across the globe.

For a full list of Isakson’s foreign policy-related accomplishments, click here.

Education

Isakson has served as chairman of the Georgia Board of Education and on the education committees in the Georgia general assembly and in Congress. He has helped write some of the most significant federal education policies in recent history and has always focused on bettering the lives of future generations through quality education.

Once in Congress, Isakson brought his experience to the U.S. House education committee, where he took part in writing the No Child Left Behind Act – comprehensive education reform enacted in 2002 to strengthen America’s public schools. In the Senate, Isakson became a member of the Senate education committee, and more a decade after No Child Left Behind was enacted, Isakson played a key role in the rewrite of the law to bring about much-needed updates to the country’s education policies.

For a full list of Isakson’s education-related accomplishments, click here.

Health Care

Isakson has sought common ground to improve the health of Americans and people throughout the world. Isakson’s efforts come amid his own challenges with Parkinson’s disease – a diagnosis that has not slowed down his commitment to helping others.

Isakson serves on two committees with jurisdiction over Americans’ health care: the Senate Finance Committee and the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions. During his Senate career, Isakson has worked tirelessly on bipartisan legislation to improve health care for veterans and for seniors with chronic conditions, fund research for rare diseases and combat the opioid epidemic – all while fighting his own battle with Parkinson’s disease.

For a full list of Isakson’s health care-related accomplishments, click here.

Related story

 

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Top East Cobb stories for 2019: Sen. Johnny Isakson retires

After a career of public service spanning more than four decades, U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson announced in 2019 he would be retiring at the end of the year.Isakson farewell speech

The Republican former real estate agency owner from East Cobb suffered continuing health issues during the year. In addition to his battle with Parkinson’s Disease, he fractured ribs during a fall at his Washington apartment.

He underwent rehabilitation at WellStar Kennestone Hospital said in August he could not complete his third term that ends in 2022.

Read the stories

Isakson, the first Georgian to serve in both houses of the state legislature and Congress, made bipartisanship and his role as the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee Chairman his hallmark.

Along the way, he endeared himself to colleagues in both parties, who paid tribute late in the year.

In a moving scene on the floor of the U.S. House, Democratic Congressman John Lewis of Atlanta hailed Isakson, who was sitting nearby in a wheelchair, and the two men warmly embraced.

In his final speech on the Senate floor, Isakson called his 15-year tenure in the U.S. Senate “the most enjoyable thing I’ve ever done in my life.”

He implored his colleagues to “find a way to find common ground.” He said, “America, we have a problem,” but that “we can do anything” by dropping hard party labels. “Bipartisanship will be the way you accomplish things, the way you live.”

Earlier in 2019, Isakson lashed out against President Donald Trump for his criticisms of the late Sen. John McCain, one of Isakson’s closest friends.

Isakson said “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.”

In June, Isakson led a bipartisan Congressional delegation to France to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the D-Day invasion during World War II.

Gov. Brian Kemp appointed Buckhead businesswoman Kelly Loeffler, a political novice, to succeed Isakson through the elections next November. The winner of a “jungle primary” then would fill the remaining two years of Isakson’s term.

 

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McBath votes with House Democrats as Trump is impeached

U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath voted with her fellow House Democrats Wednesday as DonaldTrump became the third president in U.S. history to be impeached.U.S. Rep Lucy McBath, gun violence research funding, McBath border-funding vote

The 6th District Congresswoman, who represents most of East Cobb, voted for both articles of impeachment that she also had supported last week in the House Judiciary Committee.

The vote on Article 1, abuse of power, was 230-197; and for Article 2, obstruction of Congress, the vote was 229-198.

Trump was charged on the first article for allegations that he threatened to withhold foreign aid to the government of Ukraine if it did not investigate former Vice President Joe Biden, a Democratic presidential candidate.

The second article alleged that the president impeded its investigation in the Ukraine matter.

Only two Democrats voted with the Republican minority. Another Democrat, Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii, who’s running for president, voted “present” on both articles, saying she preferred that the House censure and not impeach Trump.

Barry Loudermilk, a Republican who also represents Cobb County and is a strong Trump supporter, noted in floor remarks before the votes that:

“One week before Christmas, I want you to keep this in mind: When Jesus was falsely accused of treason, Pontius Pilate gave Jesus the opportunity to face his accusers. During that sham trial, Pontius Pilate afforded more rights to Jesus than the Democrats have afforded this president in this process.”

Republicans have charged the impeachment process has been motivated entirely for partisan reasons, and that it’s being done to subvert the 2016 presidential election.

McBath is among a few dozen House Democrats who represent districts that voted for the president. Trump carried the 6th District, which also includes North Fulton, Sandy Springs and North DeKalb, but only with 51 percent.

McBath, who last year became the first Democrat to win the district in 40 years, is being targeted again nationally.

The two Republicans running for the seat, former Rep. Karen Handel and Marjorie Greene Taylor, have been critical of McBath on impeachment.

Last weekend, Trump supporters protested outside her Sandy Springs office.

Trump joins Andrew Johnson (1867) and Bill Clinton (1998) as presidents who’ve been impeached in the House. Both were acquitted in trials in the U.S. Senate and served the remainder of their terms.

The current Senate has a Republican majority. Georgia Sen. David Perdue is a strong defender of Trump, and incoming Sen., Kelly Loeffler, who succeeds the retiring Johnny Isakson in January, blasted the House process as an impeachment “scam.”

Trump has been Tweeting his displeasure with the impeachment vote, calling it a “hoax,” and retweeting others critical of the Democrats. He also Tweeted this:

 

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Trump supporters protest ‘sham impeachment’ at McBath’s office

Trump protestors McBath's office
Trump supporters wave to motorists during Saturday’s protest at U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath’s Sandy Springs office. (Photo courtesy Trump Victory Committee)

Supporters of President Donald Trump protested outside the 6th Congressional District office of U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath Saturday afternoon in Sandy Springs.

McBath, a Marietta Democrat, voted with her party Friday when the House Judiciary Committee returned two articles of impeachment against Trump, who is accused of abuse of office and obstruction of Congress.

The Trump protestors got approving social media messages from U.S. Sen. David Perdue and U.S. Rep. Doug Collins of Georgia, both strong Trump supporters, as well as the Cobb Republican Party.

Danielle Alvarez, regional communications director for the Trump re-election campaign, said around 50 people turned out for the protest.

Trump is accused of threatening to withhold U.S. foreign aid to Ukraine if it didn’t investigate former Vice President Joe Biden, a Democratic presidential candidate. House Democrats also charged the president with obstructing their investigation.

Republicans and Trump supporters have been charging that the Democratic-led House investigation is a “sham impeachment” process. Former U.S. Rep. Karen Handel, who’s campaigning to win back the seat McBath claimed from her in last year’s elections, has used similar language.

After Friday’s committee vote, Handel said “that since the beginning of this sham process, Lucy McBath has been purely partisan and has had no interest in finding the facts. She promised us she would be independent and bipartisan, but it is obvious that promise was empty.”

Handel was at a North DeKalb Republican women’s event on Saturday.

Saturday’s rally wasn’t the first time Trump supporters have gathered outside McBath’s office.

The 6th District includes East Cobb, North Fulton and Sandy Springs and North DeKalb, and it is being eyed as another battleground seat in House elections in 2020. McBath is the first Democrat to represent the district in 40 years.

The full House is expected to vote on the impeachment articles next week.

The protest was organized by Stop the Madness, which is supported by the Republican National Committee.

 

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McBath votes for Trump impeachment articles in committee

In a strict party-line vote, U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath of the 6th Congressional District of Georgia sided with fellow Democrats Friday as the House Judiciary Committee voted in favor of two articles of impeachment against President Donald Trump.U.S. Rep Lucy McBath, gun violence research funding, McBath border-funding vote

The vote was 23-17, and the full House, which is controlled by Democrats, is expected to vote next week, before breaking for the Christmas and New Year’s holidays.

The impeachment proceedings center around allegations that Trump threatened to withhold foreign aid to Ukraine if it didn’t investigate former Vice President Joe Biden, a Democratic presidential candidate.

The first article of impeachment defined that as an abuse of power, and the other article accuses the president of obstructing Congress by trying to impede a House investigation into the Ukraine claims.

Trump is the fourth U.S. president to have articles of impeachment returned against him. Andrew Johnson in 1867 and Bill Clinton in 1997 were impeached by the House, but were acquitted in subsequent Senate trials.

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

If Trump is impeached by the House, a trial in the Republican-held Senate could come early next year.

McBath, a first-term Democrat from Marietta, made remarks on Wednesday referencing her teenage son, shot dead at a Jacksonville, Fla., gas station, which prompted her run for Congress on gun-control issues, and also cited legislation she’s supported to protect veterans that was signed by Trump:

But, I am not proud of the President’s actions that bring us here tonight.

For months, we have carefully and methodically explored the facts.

I have listened to our witnesses. I have examined the evidence from our intelligence community. I have heard from the brave men and women who have dedicated their lives in service to our country, both at home and abroad.

I am greatly saddened by what we have learned, and I am forced to face a solemn conclusion.

I believe the President abused the power of his office, putting his own interests above the needs of our nation—above the needs of the people I love and serve.

For that, I must vote my conscience.

I do so with a heavy heart and a grieving soul.

This is not why I came to Washington.

Her full statement can be seen and heard in the video below:

 

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East Cobb cityhood bill sponsor draws Democratic opponent

State Rep. Matt Dollar, who filed the East Cobb cityhood bill in the Georgia legislature earlier this year, has at least one announced opponent in 2020.Sara Tindall Ghazal

She’s Sara Tindall Ghazal, an attorney who has headed a voter access project for the Georgia Democratic Party since last year.

On her campaign website, Ghazal said she’s running for several reasons, including improving voter access, health care and education.

Ghazal and her husband Patrick are raising two daughters who attend public school in East Cobb. She opposes cityhood and says that “Georgians deserve better policy when it comes to common sense gun safety.”

Ghazal was hired last year by the Georgia Democratic Party as the first full-time director for voter protection by a state party.

The move was made as Georgia Democrats challenged voter access when current Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp was Secretary of State.

She’s been an elections monitor for the Carter Center in Jamaica, Liberia, Nigeria, Zimbabwe, and the Cherokee Nation. Ghazal is a graduate of the University of the South and earned a law degree from the Emory University School of Law.

According to Dollar’s latest financial report, filed on June 30 with the Georgia Government Transparency and Campaign Finance Commission, he has nearly $50,000 in cash on hand.

The same agency indicates that Ghazal registered her campaign committee, Friends of Sara Tindall Ghazal, on Nov. 27, and that her campaign chair is Charisse Davis, who represents the Walton and Wheeler clusters on the Cobb Board of Education.

East Cobb News has reached out to Ghazal seeking more information about her candidacy.

Related stories

She’s the latest Democratic political novice to seek elected office in Republican-heavy East Cobb.

Dollar, who’s represented District 45 since 2003, has had little opposition from opponents in either party. Last year, he defeated Democrat Essence Johnson with 60 percent of the vote.

Democrats fielded candidates in every federal, state and local race involving East Cobb constituencies last year, and they won in the 6th Congressional District (Lucy McBath), Cobb Board of Education Post 6 (Charisse Davis) and Georgia State House 37 (Mary Frances Williams).

Democrats also ran close in Cobb Commission District 3 and State House 43. Those candidates seeking office again in 2020. Caroline Holko, who ran against commissioner JoAnn Birrell, is running for State House District 46, where Republican John Carson is the incumbent.

In State House 43, Republican incumbent Sharon Cooper, the chairwoman of the House Health and Human Services Committee, is being challenged again by Democrat Luisa Wakeman, who got 48 percent of the vote against Cooper in 2018.

In addition to the area of East Cobb shown below, District 45 also includes a small portion of Sandy Springs.

Georgia House District 45 map
For a larger view, click here. (Georgia Elections map)

 

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Critic of Cobb schools on bullying issues running for school board

An East Cobb attorney who has been critical of the Cobb County School District on bullying issues is running for Post 5 on the Cobb Board of Education in 2020. Robert Madayag, Cobb school board candidate

Robert Madayag is seeking the seat currently held by David Banks, whose third term ends next year. Post 5 includes most of the Pope and Lassiter high school attendance zones, as well as part of the Sprayberry cluster (see map at the bottom).

Madayag is the father of students at Sprayberry, Simpson Middle School and Kincaid Elementary School.

(For his campaign website, click here.)

Earlier this year, Madayag assisted parents, including some at Walton High School, who complained about how the district responded to their claims about their children being bullied. He thinks the district underreports data on the number of students who report bullying.

Madayag said in his announcement that “there is no doubt that the CCSD has done a great job of helping those students at the top,” but said he’s heard from “countless parents about how their kids were bullied, suffered racially charged language, and were forced to fight the school district to have their kids provided basic needs.”

His priorities include doing a countywide assessment about how bullying cases are handled, providing transparency to the public on how much the district spends on legal fees and creating the position of Chief Equity Officer.

Madayag also wants to address what he says are “stories upon stories of parents with special needs kids that have had to fight and fight with the CCSD, at their own great expense, just to get treatment that other school districts provide without fighting.”

East Cobb News has left a message with Madayag seeking more information about his candidacy.

Madayag, who is running as a Republican, is a former chairman of the Modern Whig Party of Georgia, which formed in 2009 with a centrist platform aimed at those disaffected with both Democrats and Republicans.

Currently the seven-member school board has four Republicans and three Democrats. Four seats are up next year, including Post 1 (North Cobb), Post 3 (South Cobb) and Post 7 (West Cobb).

Madayag is a U.S. Navy veteran who earned an engineering degree from Georgia Tech, then earned a law degree from Villanova University. He practices patent and corporate law in the Atlanta office of Lee & Hayes, a national firm.

He and his family have been involved in school and youth sports and music activities in their community. His wife Rebecca has been a member of the PTSA board at Simpson, and he has coached and served as an emcee for his sons’ football teams and at Sprayberry freshman and JV football games.

Banks, a Republican, has not indicated whether he’s running again. Matt Harper, an IT project manager, has announced his candidacy in the GOP primary (campaign website).

Harper taught science for three years at Murdock Elementary School and he and his wife Sharon have two daughters who attend Cobb schools. He also has served on the Murdock School Council.

Post 5 includes all or part of the following school zones:

  • High Schools: Pope, Lassiter, Sprayberry
  • Middle Schools: Hightower Trail, Mabry, Simpson
  • Elementary Schools: Davis, East Side, Eastvalley, Garrison Mill, Mountain View, Murdock, Powers Ferry, Sedalia Park, Shallowford Falls, Tritt
Cobb BOE Post 5
For larger map, click here.

 

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Ga. Democratic women’s PAC endorses East Cobb candidates

Mary Frances Williams, Georgia House District 37 winner
State Rep. Mary Frances Williams

A political action committee that supports Democratic women running for the Georgia General Assembly has endorsed to two candidates in East Cobb.

The Georgia WIN List announced that it has placed first-term State. Rep. Mary Frances Williams on its “protect” list of incumbents for the 2020 election and is supporting Luisa Wakeman, who is running again for the District 43 seat held by longtime Republican State Rep. Sharon Cooper.

Luisa Wakeman
Luisa Wakeman

Last year, Wakeman lost by less than 792 votes in a mostly-East Cobb district that Cooper, the House Health and Human Services Committee chairwoman, has represented since 1997.

Williams, who lives in Marietta, upset GOP incumbent Sam Teasley in 2018 in District 37, which includes some of Northeast Cobb. She was declared the winner in a recount, with a 137-vote margin.

Georgia WIN held an endorsement event Thursday at the Georgia state capitol, focusing on 12 candidates who either won seats from Republican incumbents in 2018 or who came close.

Qualifying for 2020 legislative campaigns will take place in early March.

 

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Isakson urges bipartisanship in U.S. Senate farewell speech

In his farewell speech in the U.S. Senate, Georgia’s Johnny Isakson issued a final call for bipartisanship, a theme that has been the hallmark of his 45-year public career, in the legislature and in Congress.Isakson farewell speech

“I never saw people get things done without agreeing to something,” the East Cobb Republican said Tuesday afternoon in a Senate chamber that included Vice President Mike Pence.

He paid tribute to Georgia Democratic Congressman John Lewis, an icon of the Civil Rights Movement, “as one of my real heroes in life because I watched what he went through to help us see the light in the South, in my part of the South, Georgia.”

Isakson said bipartisanship is more than just a strategy for getting things done, but also “a state of mind . . . a state of being.”

He said his approach to accomplishing things for his constituents was a simple one: “I did what I thought was right. That’s the way to do it.”

The 74-year-old former real estate executive is leaving office Dec. 31 for health reasons stemming from his continuing battle with Parkinson’s Disease and after fracturing ribs in a fall last summer.

After stints in the Georgia House and Senate, as well as the U.S. House, Isakson said his 15-year tenure in the U.S. Senate “is the most enjoyable thing I’ve ever done in my life.”

In his most impassioned part of his speech, Isakson implored his colleagues to “find a way to find common ground.” He said, “America, we have a problem,” but that “we can do anything” by dropping hard party labels. “Bipartisanship will be the way you accomplish things, the way you live.”

Dozens of senators of both parties offered remarks from the floor in tribute, including Georgia’s David Perdue, who said Isakson is “the best partner anyone could ask for.”

Isakson’s departing a Washington that’s embroiled in impeachment hearings in the House against President Donald Trump, and as his own Republican Party is in an uproar over his successor.

Perdue’s new partner will be Atlanta businesswoman Kelly Loeffler, whose appointment was made official Wednesday by Gov. Brian Kemp. He was pressured by Trump and the president’s allies to choose Georgia Congresswoman Doug Collins.

Loeffler owns a bitcoin trading company and is co-owner of the Atlanta Dream of the Women’s National Basketball Association. A major Republican donor, she has not held public office.

Her term goes through next November’s elections, with the winner to fill the final two year’s of Isakson’s term.

On Wednesday morning, Isakson issued a statement congratulating Loeffler on her appointment:

“Kelly’s business experience and acumen will be an asset to Georgia and the Senate. The same tireless work ethic that has helped her succeed in business will also help her succeed in serving Georgians and our nation. It has been the honor of a lifetime for me to serve this great state in the U.S. Senate, and my staff and I will work closely with Kelly to ensure a smooth transition.”

 

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Georgia GOP submits only Trump’s name for 2020 primary ballot

Georgia Republican primary voters will have only one name to choose from in the 2020 primary next March: Incumbent President Donald Trump.Georgia GOP 2020 primary ballot

The state party’s executive committee on Monday submitted only Trump’s name for consideration on the March 24, 2020 ballot.

Georgia would be one of several states to exclude the names of other Republicans from primary ballots.

According to a release issued by Georgia GOP, state party chairman David Shafer said the vote was unanimous and that “Trump was the only candidate with any significant level of support among Republican voters in Georgia who ‘unambiguously’ pledged to support the Republican nominee for President.”

Five candidates were considered by the state party, including former Illinois Congressman Joe Walsh, now a talk show host, and former Massachusetts Gov. Bill Weld, the 2016 vice presidential nominee of the Libertarian Party.

The others were California businessman Roque De La Fuente and Fred Boddie-Yahshua of Atlanta, whose campaign is known as “President R19 Boddie.”

In a Twitter response on Monday, Walsh said:

“GaRepublicans just chose Trump over Georgians. Trump is a vulnerable criminal. Is the #GAGOP so scared they have to protect him from the ‘significant support’ they say he’d have in a contested primary?”

Weld chimed in similarly on his Twitter account:

“Apparently Trump’s bromance with Putin extends to emulating the Russian’s approach to elections. The #GAGOP just decided the Georgia Republican Presidential Primary ballot will have only one candidate on it: Donald Trump. What is DJT afraid of?”

According to The Hill, a political publication in Washington, the Minnesota GOP also has put only Trump’s name forward for its primary, while state Republican parties in Kansas, Alaska, South Carolina, Arizona and Nevada have cancelled their 2020 primaries or caucuses.

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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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