The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

GOP senator: Cagle linked bill, support

Sen. Lindsey Tippins resigned as panel chair over issue with Cagle.

- Gbluestein@ajc.com

A Republican state senator said Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle demanded the passage of a contentiou­s charter school measure because he said it would help him secure millions of dollars in outside help for his campaign for governor.

State Sen. Lindsey Tippins said in an exclusive interview with The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on that he resigned as chairman of the Senate Education Committee after Cagle insisted on the measure over his objections.

The interview echoed the secret recording made by his nephew, Clay Tippins, who finished fourth in the GOP’s May gubernator­ial primary.

In the audio, Cagle told his former adversary that he supported “bad publicpoli­cy” solely to thwart

the Walton Family Foundation from supporting former state Sen. Hunter Hill, who was also in the race.

But the state senator said Cagle went a step further in his private conversati­ons. He said Cagle directly tied the passage of legislatio­n that boosted funding for state charter schools to receiving generous financial support from the Walton Family Foundation.

“He said, ‘ I’ve got to do something for charter schools,’ ” said Tippins, describing a conversati­on with Cagle in the legislativ­e session’s closing days. “He said, ‘The Walton Family Foundation is fixing to put $2 million in Hunter Hill’s campaign. And he said, ‘If this bill passes, I’ll get it in mine.’ ”

Tippins added: “It was at that point I told him I’d rather be shot doing what was right than be lauded for doing what I believed to be wrong. I said, ‘If you’ve got to have this bill, you’re going to do it without me.’”

Cagle has said he was just repeating “rumor and innuendo” discussing the possible investment from the foundation, an influentia­l force in the school-choice movement. He faces Secretary of State Brian Kemp, who has said Cagle may have crossed ethical and legal lines with his comments in the recording, in the July 24 runoff.

“Some are calling for a criminal investigat­ion of Casey Cagle,” Kemp said Tuesday in a statement. “Clearly, he has a lot of explaining to do.”

In a statement Tuesday, Cagle campaign manager Scott Binkley did not deny Cagle made those remarks. But he said Tippins “stonewalle­d” efforts to expand education options and that Cagle “grew tired of getting blamed for the lack of progress” on boosting charter school funding.

“This year, Casey got it done and Senator Tippins was the only Republican who voted no,” said Binkley, who added: “That’s progress that got done over the objections of the education chairman because Casey Cagle delivered on his principles and his promises.”

Joe Williams of the Walton Education Coalition, the family foundation’s political arm, said the group has not spent any money in the primary and that “any speculatio­n about our potential involvemen­t in the governor’s race is unfounded.”

While Walton family officials said they weren’t involved in the race, they have put big money into school politics in Georgia. The family funneled $600,000 to an “independen­t committee” in 2012 in support of a proposed constituti­onal amendment that set up another pathway to create charter schools.

A member of the family gave the political action committee for the Georgia chapter of the American Federation for Children, a leading national advocate of charter and private schools, $55,000 last fall.

Walton family members put at least $400,000 into another committee supporting Gov. Nathan Deal’s 2016 proposed amendment allowing the state to take over failing schools. That measure failed after teacher groups poured big money into the opposition.

In all, family members and their foundation­s have put about $1.2 million into various Georgia campaigns since 2012, mostly involving school issues rather than candidates.

A betrayal?

The secret ly recorded conversati­on focused on Cagle’s demand for legislatio­n that raises the cap on tax credits for private school scholarshi­ps even though he said it was bad in “a thousand different ways .”

But the state senator said he felt equally betrayed by Cagle’s insistence on another measure, House Bill 787, that increased the per-pupil student allotment for state-sanctioned charter schools by about $17 million a year.

Tippins said he opposed themeasure in part because it gives some charter schools a higher rate of funding per student than dozens of public school systems. Charter schools are publicly funded but are free of many state and local regulation­s.

As Cagle stepped up his demand for the measure, Tippins threatened to resign as head of the chamber’s Education Committee.

The standoff seemed to thaw in one late March meeting, Tippins said, when Cagle told him to draft a bill hewas “comfortabl­e with” and that he would give it his blessing.

“When he toldme that, to fix the bill the way I wanted it — when I left his office I felt like a thousand-pound weight had been taken offff of me,” said Tippins, dabbing his eyes with a napkin. “I thought, ‘This is the guy I’ve known.’ ”

His committee soon passed a version of the legislatio­n that gave a more limited financial boost to charters. Within days, though, he learned of a new version of the legislatio­n making the rounds.

It passed on the secondto-last day of the legislativ­e session. Tippins was the only Republican in the Senate to vote against it.

“If he had told me what he was going to do, I would have said, ‘I resign,’ ” said Tippins, who soon did just that. “What I haven’t been able to say until now was, he told me he’d go with however I fixed it.”

In the recording, Cagle calls Tippins a “man of principle” and says he told the senator: “I’mnot going to let you re sign because you’ re too good a friend. And I don’t want this thing blowing up on you and I on this.”

He also says hemade Tippins his education chairman because thatwas the issue he was “most passionate about” and “Lindsey is the guy I can trust to get it done.”

Tippins endorsed Cagle late last year and stuckwith him even after his nephew got in the race. But he said he withdrew his support for his longtime friend because he was so hurt by his insistence on the measure.

“It was like the death of a real close friend,” he said. “It changed the dynamic so much.”

 ?? DOUG MILLS / NEWYORK TIMES ?? President Donald Trump (left) andNorth Korean leader KimJongUnw­alk after lunch Tuesday on Sentosa Island in Singapore. Trumpcalle­d the talks “honest, direct and productive.” ByGregBlue­stein
DOUG MILLS / NEWYORK TIMES President Donald Trump (left) andNorth Korean leader KimJongUnw­alk after lunch Tuesday on Sentosa Island in Singapore. Trumpcalle­d the talks “honest, direct and productive.” ByGregBlue­stein
 ??  ?? State Sen. Lindsey Tippins (right) had endorsed Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle, but has sincewithd­rawn support.
State Sen. Lindsey Tippins (right) had endorsed Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle, but has sincewithd­rawn support.

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