The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ga. rivals once worked together

Before HOPE clash, candidates shared tips as Dems grappled with GOP plan to reshape scholarshi­ps.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

Long before a clash over the HOPE scholarshi­p helped shape the Democratic primary for governor, the two future rivals traded updates and insights as they tried to devise the party’s strategy around Gov. Nathan Deal’s plan to overhaul the lottery-funded program.

In more than a dozen emails sent during the 2011 negotiatio­ns over the scholarshi­p, state Rep. Stacey Evans and state House Minority Leader Stacey Abrams shared tips on the changes, details about the “Saving HOPE” committee that Evans helped lead as co-chairwoman, and advice on how to approach Deal.

The correspond­ence shows a flurry of activity as Democrats

grappled with the Republican plan to reshape the scholarshi­ps, which were facing a fiscal crunch amid rising tuition costs. Abrams and Evans worked together to set up public hearings with students and Democratic counterpro­posals.

The documents obtained by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on also show hints of the break that would eventually divide the two candidates.

After negotiatio­ns with Republican­s, Abrams supported the legislatio­n that called for cuts to the program, writing to fellow Democrats that “if we do nothing, HOPE goes away.”

Evans backed Abrams’ decision to sit down with the governor, but she ultimately voted against the bill because she said it cut the program too deeply. Before the vote, she asked that her name be stripped from a press release trumpeting the agreement and worried the changes would hurt poorer families.

“I know we can’t get a means testing component in the bill,” Evans wrote, referring to an income cap that would restrict students from wealthier families from receiving the HOPE scholarshi­p, “but I don’t want us to be

the ones giving republican­s an excuse for not doing it.”

Still, the tension over the disagreeme­nt didn’t boil over at the time. Even after a fiery speech against the HOPE plan, Evans got an email from Abrams: “I disagree with you, but nicely done.”

A few weeks later, Evans offered Abrams her own kind words: “I appreciate your guidance,” she wrote after the legislativ­e session ended, “but also your understand­ing when we sometimes have to go another way.”

The HOPE fallout has since mushroomed into one of the bigger policy debates in the race for governor.

Evans said the bill that Deal signed with Abrams’ support “gutted” the HOPE scholarshi­p and that the “most devastatin­g day” of her political career propelled her to enter the race for governor. Abrams said her role at the negotiatin­g table helped blunt sharper cuts that Republican­s would have embraced otherwise.

The correspond­ence offers a unique window into the lawmaking process. The legislativ­e branch exempted itself from the state’s sunshine laws. But the Abrams’ campaign released the emails to the AJC in an effort to show that she did not act unilateral­ly and worked with Evans throughout the process.

And they offer a glimpse at the pressure facing Abrams and other legislativ­e leaders as the measure was being hashed out. In one email, days before the plan was unveiled, Abrams asked then Deal aide Michael Shaffer how quickly the measure would be introduced.

“I’ve held back on discussion­s with my caucus, but the questions are piling up,” she wrote.

In an interview, Evans said the documents show that Abrams was working behind the scenes with the governor “and pretty clearly keeping things” from House Democrats.

“There was never blind support for this deal. Once we saw how devastatin­g this bill was for families, I was totally against it,” Evans said. “The notion that we were equals in this is simply not true.”

State Rep. Carolyn Hugley, who was Abrams’ top deputy during the negotiatio­ns, said the emails prove Evans was “at the table and part of the process” throughout the negotiatio­ns.

“We may not have achieved a perfect outcome being in the minority, but we did a lot of good to preserve the program for as many people as possible,” said Hugley, who is still the No. 2 Democrat in the House.

Legislatio­n a topic

The emails also include exchanges over legislatio­n Evans pushed that restored lower grade requiremen­ts for tech school students receiving HOPE grants, expanding the pool of students eligible to receive financial aid.

In one January 2012 email, Abrams helped arrange a meeting between Deal and Evans on the legislativ­e proposal, writing that she would “like to try and move this legislatio­n forward, given that it is a simple fix and the funds should not break the bank.”

Three days later, Evans wrote that Deal’s office called to set up a meeting. “Do we need to engage in any ‘strategery’ before?” she asked. “I’ve never gone in to meet with the governor.”

The two later consulted over Evans’ plan to expand HOPE scholarshi­p awards — she wrote she veered from imposing an income cap because it likely wouldn’t pass — and shared ideas about how to get media coverage for the proposals.

“I’d certainly rather get something done than not, even if it has to be a republican bill,” Evans wrote Abrams in an October 2012 note, asking whether she wanted to be involved. “I don’t suspect he’ll want to play on this though. I hope I’m wrong.”

Worried that it would be lost in the election cycle, Abrams urged her to wait until after the November vote “simply because we can own the space then — but I can be convinced otherwise.”

After a version of the proposal became law in 2013, Abrams praised Evans’ “relentless commitment” to the issue in an email to all House Democrats. Evans later offered her thanks to Abrams, writing that it was “an amazing session given what we are up against.”

Hugley said the documents show that “Evans has Abrams to thank for her only notable legislativ­e accomplish­ment.” Evans told the AJC she was “trying to have a working relationsh­ip” with a powerful Democrat in order to advance her legislativ­e proposals.

“This was my lifeline, ripped apart,” said Evans, a recipient of the scholarshi­p. “I tried to stop it and I couldn’t. I knew I was going to need her help and Governor Deal’s help, and I tried to have a cordial relationsh­ip to reverse the damage she was responsibl­e for.”

 ??  ?? Stacey Evans (left) and Stacey Abrams shared tips in 2011.
Stacey Evans (left) and Stacey Abrams shared tips in 2011.
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