The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Why once- calm state Senate went a bit crazy

- Bill Torpy

More than 20 years ago, a veteran lobbyist explained how stuffff works at the Gold Dome: “They pass a bill in the House because they know eventually someone in the Senate is gonna read it.”

The state Senate, with fewer than a third of the bodies ( 56) of the 180- member House, was said to be less cacophonic, a place where reason could thrive and bad legislatio­n could be smothered or at least be made less bad. You remember civics class? The U. S. Senate was dreamed up as the saucer to cool hot tea boiling over in the House.

Well, the roles have flflipped in Georgia, as the Senate is where the better conspiracy theories are played out in committee meetings, and harsher legislatio­n is dreamed up to limit voting.

Last week, senators passed a bill to end no- excuse absentee voting, as Republican­s in the two legislativ­e chambers race to come up with bills in response to Donald Trump’s Big Lie that his election was stolen. The bill was popular with most Senate Republican­s, although four dodged the vote, unable to hold their noses and vote “yes” but not nutty enough to vote “no” and get the # Stoptheste­al voters shout

ing at them.

State Sen. Kay Kirkpatric­k, from Marietta, was one of those four. As a doctor, I suppose she remembered the oath to “first, do no harm.” After her nonvote, she told an AJC reporter she opposes eliminatin­g no- excuse absentee voting, especially since changes were being made to ID requiremen­ts.

“For that reason,” she said, “I was not comfortabl­e voting for it, but I wanted the bill to move forward in the process and get to a compromise bill.”

In the House, that is. That same day, state Rep. Scott Holcomb, an Atlanta Democrat, told the AJC that the chambers’ roles had flipped. “The Georgia House is becoming the more deliberati­ve body akin to what the U.S. Senate is supposed to be: a chamber that focuses on important, weighty issues,” he said. “While partisansh­ip exists on certain bills, we also frequently come together to work in a bipartisan manner.”

The Georgia Senate is now the place for hijinks, drama and a healthy splash of crazy.

If you want to witness the budding civil war in Georgia’s GOP take place — the battle between the ardent Trumpies and the “Let’s move on” crowd — then visit the Senate.

As the debate on the Senate bill raged, Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan left the room in protest and talked to the media from a darkened office while watching the proceeding­s on TV. You remember Duncan as the fellow who pushed back very publicly on Trump’s incessant whining about election fraud and the repeated insane conspiraci­es being floated by the faithful.

Duncan, who declined

to speak with me, was one of the triumvirat­e of Georgia pols ( along with Gov. Brian Kemp and Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger) who frequently pushed back against the president.

In fact, Duncan was so public — there were appearance­s on CNN and “Meet the Press,” among others — that Republican­s think he is up to something. And that he really likes TV makeup.

A few weeks after the November election, Duncan got on CNN and referred to the mass hysteria, saying, “I think we’re better than this.”

“No, we’re not!” responded senators, who clung to Trump’s narrative as if it were a security blanket.

Rudy Giuliani was called in to testify — twice — at

Senate hearings, as were other conspiracy theorists. ( Rudy did one hearing for the House via Zoom.) Also, a foursome of GOP senators sought a special session to “address structural issues with our voting system before the January runoff ” election and maybe even “take back the power to appoint electors.”

Kemp shot that down, so at least 16 GOP state senators joined in on the outlandish Texas lawsuit to toss out Joe Biden’s victory in the Peach State. ( Just a dozen of the 103 Republican­s in the House joined in .) The U.S. Supreme Court quickly tossed that. Then at least five state senators signed a letter to Vice President Mike Pence urging him to delay congressio­nal certificat­ion of the Electoral Col

lege votes. The letter was not delivered.

Senators have told me that they are merely responding to the wave of angst and anger from their constituen­ts. However, much of that anger and angst was inflamed by them. A perfect circle.

Why is this? First, the state Senate is like AA- ball in the minor leagues ( the House being A- ball), and many senators see themselves as destined for major league greatness. For instance, state Sen. Burt Jones, who was in the midst of much of the postelecti­on doings, sees himself as a governor or something else grand. The AJC’S retired political columnist Jim Galloway said if you go into the state Senate and yell, “Hey, Congressma­n!” 56 heads will swivel.

Also, the GOP in the

state Senate has a more comfortabl­e margin over the Dems, 34- 22, compared with 103- 77 in the House, so they can be less worrisome regarding compromise.

Biden’s victory, however, followed by Jon Os so ff’ sand Raphael Warnock’s U.S. Senate wins, has given state Republican­s a fatalistic view of the future, hence the nipping and tucking of election code to gain an electoral edge and delay the inevitable Democratic takeover of Georgia.

To get a sense of what is going on, I called a few people who’ve been around.

Fran Millar, a Republican from Dunwoody who sat — and often stood — in both chambers until leaving office in 2019, was the lone Republican in the Dekalb County delegation ( there are none now) and thrived on a mixture of sharp elbows and compromise. He was not a fan of Sunday voting and was criticized about it in 2014 by Warnock, who was then fulltime pastor at Ebenezer Baptist Church. On the other hand, Millar supports no- excuses absentee voting.

“The Senate has been more ‘ you fight your battles, and then civility returns when you walk out,’ but some of that is gone,” said Millar. “In politics, ‘ compromise’ is a dirty word. That filters down from Washington.”

Democratic state Rep. Mary Margaret Oliver represents central Dekalb and has been in the Capitol, off and on, for nearly 35 years, serving in both chambers.

“The Senate is a lot stranger than I’ve seen in a long time,” she said. “Duncan doesn’t care what ( the senators) think, and they don’t care what he thinks.”

She thinks the antics are mostly theater for the folks back home. “I have a hard time believing those guys ( the GOP senators, that is, and almost all are guys) believe what they say,” she said.

Wayne Garner was a state senator in the 1980s and 1990s, when most of the rural Democrats like him were conservati­ve. He later headed the state prison system and now lobbies a bit.

“I don’t know what’s going on in the Senate,” said Garner. “The House has become more deliberati­ve than the Senate. I think ( House Speaker David) Ralston keeps a pretty good finger on things.”

Ralston has said he’s reluctant to kill no- excuses absentee voting. So the senator who said the House will straighten out things just might be on to something.

 ??  ??
 ?? ALYSSA POINTER/ ALYSSA. POINTER@ AJC. COM ?? State Senate Majority Leader Mike Dugan ( left), R- Carrollton, is congratula­ted March 8 after SB 241 passed in Senate Chambers on Crossover Day in the legislativ­e session at the Georgia state Capitol in Atlanta.
ALYSSA POINTER/ ALYSSA. POINTER@ AJC. COM State Senate Majority Leader Mike Dugan ( left), R- Carrollton, is congratula­ted March 8 after SB 241 passed in Senate Chambers on Crossover Day in the legislativ­e session at the Georgia state Capitol in Atlanta.

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