The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Partisan politics enter Tucker mayoral race

- By Zachary Hansen zachary.hansen@ajc.com

The race for mayor in one of metro Atlanta’s youngest cities is beginning to take on the tone of a statewide or federal race.

Tucker’s mayoral candi- dates are on opposite sides of the political spectrum. The incumbent, Frank Auman, is the former chairman of the Dekalb GOP, while his chal- lenger, Robin Biro, was a field director for Democratic Pres- ident Barack Obama’s 2008 campaign.

Residents have favored Democratic candidates since Tucker was chartered in 2016, but those political leanings haven’t carried over to local races. This November, Dekalb County’s Democratic party is trying to see if it can elect more openly liberal candidates in Tucker, starting with the mayor’s seat.

“Tucker is becoming more blue. It’s becoming more more progressiv­e,” Biro said. “And frankly the best that the Republican­s can do right now is to hide the fact that they’re Republican­s.”

Neither candidate will have an “R” or a “D” by their names on local ballots, but the mayor’s race will test whether political affiliatio­n is a deal breaker for Tucker residents. Auman said political party should not be a primary factor when supporting local politician­s, adding that the focus on partisansh­ip is a risky bet to capitalize on Dekalb’s status as one of Georgia’s bluest counties.

“They’ve concluded that’s the winning strategy,” Auman said. “I think it’s a bad strategy because it’s bad for Tucker.”

Policy disagreeme­nts

Auman, a business owner, beat out two opponents in 2016 with roughly 70% of the vote to become Tucker’s founding mayor. He ran unop- posed the next year to begin his first four-year term. He said he’s proud of how Tucker has quickly set itself up and taken on several in-house services while remaining financiall­y stable under his leadership.

Biro said Auman has done some important things for the city, but he said a few controvers­ial policy decisions led him to enter the race. Specif- ically, he cited the city’s fail- ure to adopt a nondiscrim­i- nation ordinance.

Tucker has considered adopting legislatio­n that would outlaw discrimina­tion by local businesses on the basis of sexual orientatio­n, gender identity or other factors. Biro, a businessma­n who says he was the first openly gay U.S. Army Ranger, said he’d bring the policy to the City Council for a vote within his first 60 days in office if elected.

“It became obvious to me that the only people who would find an NDO divisive were people who were seek- ing legal shelter to discrimi- nate against others,” Biro said.

Auman has repeatedly said he has reservatio­ns about the legislatio­n. He said he understand­s why some people want this type of a policy in place, but he’s not sure the ordi- nance, as it was proposed, is the solution.

“There’s just no consensus in Tucker with it,” he said. “(It’s unclear) if it’s something we can involve ourselves in, and if we do, it’s a divisive thing that’s going to gener- ate litigation immediatel­y.”

John Jackson, chairman of Dekalb Democrats, said Tucker and north Dekalb have changed a lot over the past five years.

Jackson said the nondiscrim­ination ordinance and Auman’s refusal to issue a mask mandate made his seat vulnerable. Biro openly admits he was recruited to run against Auman by Dekalb Democratic leaders, including Jackson.

“The Democratic Party of Georgia is targeting this race,” Jackson said. “... I would say this is our centerpiec­e (election).”

In state and federal elections, Tucker has slowly moved to the left since its incorporat­ion. In the 2016 Presidenti­al election, Republican Donald Trump received about 35% of the city’s votes, and that shrank to 29.4% in 2020. More than 70% of Tucker voters chose Democratic candidates Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock during this year’s senate runoffs.

Marci Mccarthy, the Dekalb GOP chairman, said the partisan opposition to Auman’s reelection bid shows how much the nationwide political divide has seeped into every level of government. She expects the effort to backfire.

“It’s really the Democrats that are stirring the pot as it relates to the party lines ... But what I’m hearing is that it’s not really going over very well,” she said.

Biro said the emphasis on partisansh­ip is for the sake of informing residents — not about solely trying to recruit party-line voters. He argues his politics makes him more representa­tive of Tucker’s interests.

Auman’s pitch to voters is reelect him if they’re happy with the direction Tucker has been going, not with whether they share the same political party.

“If you’re happy with the success Tucker has seen … let’s keep it going,” Auman said.

Early voting begins Oct. 12, and election day is Nov. 2. In addition to the mayor’s race, Tucker residents will vote to fill four City Council seats.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States