The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

One of longest-serving female legislator­s persists

Decatur Democrat uses bridge-building to earn post in Gop-led House.

- By Taylor Reimann

Georgia state Rep. Mary Margaret Oliver, a long-time Democratic lawmaker, surprised a lot of people when she applied for a committee chair position in the Gop-controlled House earlier this year.

But it was Oliver’s turn to be surprised when the speaker appointed her to chair the joint committee with the Senate overseeing the Metropolit­an Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority’s budget.

“I didn’t think I really had a shot, but I did have a shot,” said Oliver, who has represente­d Decatur off and on since 1987. “When do you take your opportunit­y? When do you really push for it?”

All House committee chairs have been Republican­s since the GOP won control of the General Assembly in 2005, but House Speaker David Ralston said he chose Oliver because “she has earned the trust of colleagues in both political parties.”

Her appointmen­t was the latest leadership position for a politician who has served more than 30 years in the Legislatur­e, making her the second-longest-serving female lawmaker (after the late Dorothy Felton of Sandy Springs). There were 26 women in the General Assembly when she arrived. Now there are 80 out of 236, or 33.9%, making Georgia 18th in the country for the highest percentage of female legislator­s.

Young lawyer takes her shot

Oliver received her law degree from Emory University in 1972 and, early in her career, practiced law in rural north Georgia with the Georgia Legal Services Program, an organizati­on that seeks to provide legal aid to those who cannot afford it and who often live in rural areas without easy access to lawyers.

She said in a 2009 interview for a Georgia Politics oral history project at the University of Georgia, that her work with the Georgia Legal Services Program first exposed her to advocacy and politics. She was a lobbyist with that organizati­on when she first set foot in the Georgia Capitol.

“I was amazed. I’d never been in the Capitol before I was about 30 years old,” Oliver said in a recent interview. “Being a practicing lawyer gave me a huge access to the members who were serving.”

Later, she entered private practice with Pierre Howard, who, at the time, was a state senator and later became Georgia’s lieutenant governor from 1991 to 1999. When her House district’s representa­tive suddenly passed away, she took the opportunit­y to run a campaign and won a special election in the summer of 1987.

Oliver said she believes her 15 years of law experience prior to her election to the House gave her an edge.

“I think because I was the only woman lawyer, I got extra opportunit­ies in the beginning, and then I had to perform,” she said.

After serving as a representa­tive from 1987 to 1992, Oliver was elected to the Georgia Senate, where Howard appointed her to chair the Judiciary Committee in her freshman term, which was unheard of for a female lawmaker.

She said chairing the Judiciary Committee gave her “a very good opportunit­y to pass legislatio­n I personally care about,” including Georgia’s anti-stalking law, which defined and criminaliz­ed stalking behaviors. Oliver said that at the time, stalking was becoming more prevalent as other states created laws criminaliz­ing it, and as a lawyer with previous experience in stalking cases, she was well-positioned to research and author it.

Oliver left the Senate in 1998 to launch a campaign for lieutenant governor. To date, Georgia has only elected six women to state executive positions, and at that time, there had only been one. While she led in the Democratic primary, she wasdefeate­d in a primary runoff, and Georgia has yet to elect a female lieutenant governor.

“In a very tough loss, I never once regretted making the effort,” she said with a smile. “I’m really pleased that I never regretted taking my shot.”

Returning to the House

After a few years out of office, Oliver was reelected to the House in 2003. Her work since has been focused on children and families, and she authored laws addressing the foster system, domestic violence and child abuse.

In her personal life , Oliver teaches Sunday school at All Saints’ Episcopal Church in Atlanta and still lives in Decatur, the city where she grew up.

Oliver’s long-time friend Melita Easters, the executive director of the Georgia WIN List, a political action committee that backs Democratic female candidates in Georgia, said she is always one of the smartest people in the room and is a natural leader with a big heart.

“I think she has a very collaborat­ive leadership style,” Easters said. “She knows what it takes to get something done, and she works with others to make it happen. She doesn’t have to have the spotlight.”

Politicall­y, Easters said she believes both Republican­s and Democrats respect Oliver because of her knowledge of the law and her seniority in the General Assembly.

“I mean, she wouldn’t be the chair of the MARTOC Committee, and as the lone Democratic chair in the House, if the Republican­s didn’t respect her,” Easters added.

Rep. Shaw Blackmon, a Republican from Bonaire, serves on the Metropolit­an Atlanta rapid transit Overview Committee under Oliver and agrees that she is well-respected by many lawmakers.

“She is a dear friend of mine and a great legislator, even though we don’t necessaril­y agree on issues all the time,” Blackmon said.

Oliver said she believes her appointmen­t to the MARTOC committee was a move toward bipartisan­ship.

“I applaud him for it,” she said of Ralston. “The Senate has always had chairmen of committees that were in the minority party, but the House never had.”

 ?? BOB ANDRES/ROBERT.ANDRES@AJC.COM/2020 FILE ?? State Rep. Mary Margaret Oliver, a Democrat from Decatur, was chosen by House Speaker David Ralston, one of the most powerful leaders of the Georgia General Assembly, to chair the joint committee with the Senate that oversees MARTA’S budget.
BOB ANDRES/ROBERT.ANDRES@AJC.COM/2020 FILE State Rep. Mary Margaret Oliver, a Democrat from Decatur, was chosen by House Speaker David Ralston, one of the most powerful leaders of the Georgia General Assembly, to chair the joint committee with the Senate that oversees MARTA’S budget.

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