East Cobb 2020 Elections Preview: Georgia House District 43

District 43 Georgia House, Sharon Cooper, Luisa Wakeman

After having little to no opposition in many of her previous re-election bids, one of the Georgia legislature’s most influential members got a real run for her money in 2018.

State Rep. Sharon Cooper, an East Cobb Republican who is the chairwoman of the House Health and Human Services Committee, got only 51 percent of the vote against a first-time candidate, Democrat Luisa Wakeman.

Prior to that, Cooper had not had a general election opponent since 2010, when she won with 67 percent of the vote.

Wakeman, part of a wave of newcomers challenging Cobb’s Republican establishment, is running against Cooper again in House District 43, after both women were unopposed in their respective primaries in June.

With Republicans holding a 16-seat majority in the House, the stakes have risen on a number of races, particularly in the Atlanta suburbs, where Democrats see opportunities to flip seats.

The District 43 race has become unusually expensive for a state house campaign. According to campaign disclosure reports filed in early October, both candidates have raised well over six figures.

Cooper reported $364,219 in total 2020 contributions through July, and picked up $77,000 in donations in the third quarter that ended Sept. 30. She is reporting $189,896 in cash on hand.

Wakeman has raised $218,594 overall and $104,460 in the third quarter, with $115,571 on hand.

Here are the latest campaign disclosure reports filed by Cooper and Wakeman respectively.

Candidate websites

Cooper, who was first elected in 1996, touts her longtime service and advocacy of health-care legislation as well as assisted living homes, maternal mortality and landlord evictions in the 2020 session.

Wakeman said she’s running again as she did two years ago, as alternative to what she called “failed leadership” in the state.

At an East Cobb Business Association forum this week, the specific reference was the state’s response to COVID-19.

Cooper, a supporter of Gov. Brian Kemp, said that while she hasn’t agreed with him on everything, he has “protected our most valuable citizens” as the state tries to move forward.

She tried to rebuff Democratic efforts to tie her to state responses to the virus, saying “I’m not in charge of health care in this state.”

While Kemp has followed the advice of Georgia Department of Public Health Director Dr. Kathleen Toome, Cooper noted that changing guidelines that have come down to the state level on such things as mask-wearing and lockdowns have caused confusion.

“No wonder people are upset about it,” said Cooper, a retired nurse.

Wakeman, also a nurse, was critical of Kemp’s steps toward reopening the economy that she said prioritized “tattoo parlors over the safe reopening of schools. We need people who will listen to health care experts.”

Both candidates discussed other health care issues. Cooper said she was proud to work for $20 million in funding in a budget-challenged year to improve maternal mortality rates in Georgia.

That’s to expand a Medicaid waiver to provide coverage for low-income mothers from two to six months after giving birth.

“It’s a start,” she said. “Kemp is the first governor to make that kind of commitment.”

But Wakeman said Georgia’s ranking near the bottom of the nation—46th in all—is evidence that the state needs to do more to provide insurance and expand Medicaid coverage for mothers at the bottom rungs of the economic ladder.

“Stop-gaps in an election year are not real solutions,” Wakeman said.

Cooper and Wakeman are both against East Cobb cityhood (see previous post here).

Cooper also supported tax reform measures that reduced both individual and corporate rates and efforts to curb regulations on small businesses.

At the forum, she mentioned her efforts to secure state dollars for local projects, including East Cobb Park and the Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center.

“I have a proven track record at the capitol and in the community,” she said.

Wakeman’s other priorities include working to overturn $1 billion in K-12 education funding cuts this year (including nearly $60 million in reductions for the Cobb County School District). She also favors same-day and online voter registration.

At the forum, Wakeman said Cooper gets only two percent of her campaign funds from contributors inside the district, with most of the rest coming from lobbyists.

Cooper’s filings show many contributions from political action committees—especially in the the health-care and medical fields—while Wakeman has a good number of small-amount contributors from within the East Cobb district.

“We have an opportunity to stand up for the community with a grassroots campaign,” Wakeman said.

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Senior care safety bill gets quick passage in Georgia House

A bill sponsored by an East Cobb legislator to increase protections for residents of senior care homes and require stronger training measures for employees at those facilities easily passed the Georgia House on Friday.

State Rep. Sharon Cooper
State Rep. Sharon Cooper

HB 987, introduced last week by State Rep. Sharon Cooper (R-East Cobb), passed by a vote of 160-1 and will now go to the Senate.

You can read the bill here. Cooper, a retired nurse, is the chairwoman of the House Health and Human Services Committee.

Her bill increases safety regulations for nursing homes and other senior care facilities, and raises maximum penalties for abuse and neglect cases.

Under HB 987, senior care facilities with memory care services must be certified. They also must make more detailed financial reports and provide more training for caregiving staff and administrators.

The bill was heavily pressed by senior advocates, including the Alzheimer’s Association of Georgia, following an investigative series by the AJC about injuries and deaths of senior-care residents due to abuse and neglect.

One of those deaths took place August 2017, when Adam Bennett, a 91-year-old resident at the Sunrise at East Cobb facility on Johnson Ferry Road, was found badly injured in his room. He later died at WellStar Kennestone Hospital due to what the Cobb Medical Examiner’s Office concluded was blunt force trauma.

Landon Terrel, a caregiver at Sunrise, was charged with elder abuse and also was tried for murder. A mistrial was declared on the murder charge, but he was sentenced to serve five years in prison and five on probation for elder neglect.

During the trial, some of Terrel’s coworkers testified he had been the subject of complaints from other residents and the court heard he had been fired from other caregiving jobs for neglecting patients.

Bennett’s family has sued Sunrise Senior Living, which operates more than 300 senior facilities in the U.S., Canada and the United Kingdom.

 

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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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East Cobb legislative candidate disqualified for owing back taxes

Just days before the primaries, an East Cobb legislative candidate has been disqualified by Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp for owing more than $20,000 in federal taxes. 

Kevin James, East Cobb legislative candidate
Kevin James

Kevin James is listed on the ballot in the Republican primary against longtime State Rep. Sharon Cooper in House District 43, which covers much of East Cobb. No other Republican candidates qualified.

On Friday, Kemp’s office issued the decision (here’s the full ruling). James’ name will remain on the ballot in Tuesday’s primary, but any votes cast for him (as well any cast during advance voting, which ended Friday) will not count. 

The challenge was filed on March 21 by Greg Clark, who was identified only as being “qualified” to make such a challenge. 

The Georgia Constitution states that anyone who is in default for taxes and hasn’t paid them back or agreed on a payment plan is ineligible to run for or hold public office.

Kemp’s office’s findings included several instances of delinquent federal and state taxes owed by James going back to 2006, including liens filed against him.

According to the ruling, last year James provided to the Secretary of State’s office a letter acknowledging he owed state taxes, and asked to have that obligation forgiven due to hardship. 

The Georgia Department of Revenue declined that request, according to the ruling, and James accepted a counteroffer to pay $4,862 over 60 months, or $80.87 a month, for state taxes. He initially owed $5,825 to the state for the years 2012 and 2016.

Sharon Cooper
State Rep. Sharon Cooper

James asked the Internal Revenue Service for the save forgiveness for $20,995 owed in federal taxes in seven years combined, according to the ruling, but James did not provide any information that the debt had been paid or that he had agreed to a payment plan. 

Kemp’s office ruled that while James’ ineligibility was removed over state taxes, he remains ineligible “since the Internal Revenue Service has not agreed to an Offer of Compromise at this time.”

James is a self-described businessman who was making his first run for office. On his campaign website, he said his prime motivation for running was legal reform, with “RICO running rampant in our Family Law Judiciary.”

Cooper will face Democrat Luisa Wakeman, a Delta flight attendant, in the Nov. 6 general election. 

 

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