The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Georgia Legislatur­e gets down to work

Dozens of new lawmakers sworn in, face lots of key tasks.

- By Maya T. Prabhu maya.prabhu@ajc.com and Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com

Crowds packed the Georgia Capitol on Monday for the first day of this year’s legislativ­e session, when 40 newly elected lawmakers took office and the majority Republican­s prepared to work with a growing caucus of Democrats.

The day was filled with ceremony, celebratio­n and hopes for bipartisan­ship before contentiou­s debates begin during the Georgia General Assembly’s annual session. Lawmakers plan to consider proposals to give teachers pay raises, replace the state’s voting machines, allow medical marijuana dispensari­es and subsidize rural internet constructi­on.

While the main event Monday was the inaugurati­on of Gov. Brian Kemp at Georgia Tech, every lawmaker at the Capitol was sworn in after winning two-year terms in November’s election. Their families and friends packed House and Senate chambers before the lawmakers got to work.

State representa­tives re-elected David Ralston to be House speaker, a post he has held since 2010. Ralston will have considerab­le influence on legislatio­n while working with Georgia’s other elected leaders, Kemp and Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan, who serves as president of the state Senate.

Ralston called on lawmakers to avoid harming Georgia’s reputation and focus on initiative­s that help create jobs. He didn’t mention specifics, but Ralston has previously said he’s cautious about “religious liberty” and gun rights measures.

“It is a state that is too busy moving forward to unnecessar­ily and harmfully divide us against each other,” Ralston, a Republican from Blue Ridge, said as he was interrupte­d by applause in the House chamber. “The loudest and angriest voices are not always right but oftentimes are simply that: loud and angry.”

Across the hall, state senators changed the chamber’s rules to require that allegation­s of sexual harassment be made within two years of an alleged incident or they won’t be considered. Previously there had been no time limit.

The changes created a testy first legislativ­e day, though Senate Republican Leader Mike Dugan of Carrollton tried to keep things light.

“Good morning,” he said as he began to explain the changes. “This is starting off well.”

The rule change came less than a year after a lobbyist accused a senator of sexually harassing her. A Senate panel meeting in secret ended up dismissing the complaint.

All the chamber’s Democrats voted against the change, as well as Republican state Sen. Renee Unterman of Buford.

Senate Democratic Leader Steve Henson said he was “regretfull­y” urging his colleagues to vote against the changes to the rules, saying senators had less than a day to review the proposal.

“We’re not doing this as some partisan thing for one side or the other,” Henson said. “This is the most important document that we will pass this session, and we should get it right even if it takes a little time.”

Democrats gained 11 seats in the state House and two in the state Senate in November’s elections. Republican­s now control 58 percent of seats in the General Assembly and every statewide elected office, including governor, secretary of state, attorney general and state schools superinten­dent.

Freshmen legislator­s, many surrounded by family and friends as they were sworn in, said they were optimistic that lawmakers can find ways to work together and compromise. Two House seats remain vacant until special elections are held next month.

“We have this opportunit­y as new people in this building to really make a difference,” said state Rep. Houston Gaines, a Republican from Athens who unseated state Rep. Deborah Gonzalez in the general election.

State Rep. CaMia Hopson, a freshman Democrat from Albany, said she hopes lawmakers avoid divisivene­ss, but she said she understand­s that strong disagreeme­nts over bills are sure to arise as the legislativ­e session progresses.

“I’ve heard that it does get to be very chaotic and very tense at times,” Hopson said. “I’m anticipati­ng that but hoping that at the end of the session we’ll all come out on a positive front.”

It was easy for lawmakers to stay positive on the first day because few bills have been introduced and debate hasn’t really begun.

Many committee leaders have yet to be named, and new representa­tives don’t have offices assigned yet until their committee assignment­s are decided. That could come sometime this week.

For now, the difficult process of making and repealing laws is just starting. Those battles will come in the months ahead before the General Assembly adjourns, probably in late March or early April.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER PHOTOS / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Senate majority leader Mike Dugan (center), R-Carrollton, listens as his Senate colleagues discuss a bill during Monday’s opening session at the State Capitol building in Atlanta. The current term is expected to last until late March or early April.
ALYSSA POINTER PHOTOS / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Senate majority leader Mike Dugan (center), R-Carrollton, listens as his Senate colleagues discuss a bill during Monday’s opening session at the State Capitol building in Atlanta. The current term is expected to last until late March or early April.
 ??  ?? Gwinnett County Judge Ronda Colvin Leary (left) swears in newly elected Georgia State Senator Sheik Rahman, a Democrat, at the State Capitol building on Monday. Rahman is the first MuslimAmer­ican to be elected into the Georgia State Senate.
Gwinnett County Judge Ronda Colvin Leary (left) swears in newly elected Georgia State Senator Sheik Rahman, a Democrat, at the State Capitol building on Monday. Rahman is the first MuslimAmer­ican to be elected into the Georgia State Senate.
 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Georgia State Rep. Sharon Beasley-Teague (left), D-Red Oak, is sworn in with other members of the House during the first session on Monday in the House chambers at the State Capitol building.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Georgia State Rep. Sharon Beasley-Teague (left), D-Red Oak, is sworn in with other members of the House during the first session on Monday in the House chambers at the State Capitol building.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States