The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Buckhead secessioni­sts call it quits 'for now'

Leaders concede defeat in face of Kemp’s opposition.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

The leaders of the effort to split Atlanta into two municipali­ties have called it quits “for now” after their Buckhead secession movement was crushed in the Georgia Senate.

The Buckhead City Committee announced its “farewell” to supporters in an email late Sunday that assailed Gov. Brian Kemp and other Republican­s who raised concerns about the breakaway push.

“In a nutshell, Governor Kemp and his team coordinate­d behind closed doors to kill the Buckhead City bills before they even had the chance for an honest vote in the Senate,” wrote the committee, which is led by Bill White, a wealthy New York transplant.

“Unfortunat­ely,” it added, “now that Governor Kemp has displayed that he does not support our right to vote, there is no path forward for a cityhood referendum while he remains governor until the end of his term in 2026.”

The Senate’s 33-23 vote on Thursday to put down the pro-buckhead rebellion was a defeat for supporters of the divorce, who said they would be better able to fight crime and provide services by splitting the wealthy, predominan­tly white neighbor- hood from the rest of Atlanta.

The cityhood effort was opposed by every elected official in Atlanta and a broad coalition of local leaders who said it would irrevocabl­y weaken Georgia’s capital. Some major businesses even pledged to secede from Buck- head if the cityhood push somehow prevailed.

Even supporters in the Senate, who mostly came from rural or exurban areas, privately acknowledg­ed the measure never had the votes to pass the Senate, let alone clear the House to make it to Kemp’s desk.

But Lt. Gov. Burt Jones, who endorsed the split as he campaigned to be the Senate’s leader, advocated for the measure to advance in his chamber. Some of his allies, too, privately called for a vote to bring “finality” to the festering issue.

That set up a tug of war between two of the state’s most powerful figures. Kemp’s executive counsel, David Dove, issued a memo ahead of the vote that raised nearly a dozen questions about the constituti­onality of the proposal.

Among them were unresolved concerns about how a split could trigger a “possible widespread default” of municipal bonds by restruc- turing how billions of dollars of debt is handled.

Other critics noted the punitive terms of the breakup attempt, which would force Atlanta to sell public facilities, such as schools and infrastruc­ture, at rock-bottom prices to the proposed city.

Jones pressed Republican­s to back the measure Thursday at a closed-door caucus meeting, senators said. But ultimately two GOP senators made some of the most forceful cases against the cityhood initiative.

State Sen. Frank Ginn warned “Atla ta would die” if Buckhead is removed from its limits. And state Sen. John Albers was even more pointed: “This makes no sense politicall­y, operationa­lly or financiall­y.”

They were among 10 Republican senators who voted against the measure, sending a clear signal that the secession push is sidelined.

In the email, White acknowledg­ed that reality as he blamed Kemp and his aides for the measure’s failure. He also took a sunnier view of the defeat: “Against all odds, we were only six votes away from our bills passing the Senate.”

 ?? Financiall­y.” PHOTOS BY NATRICE MILLER/ NATRICE.MILLER@AJC.COM ?? Republican state Sen. John Albers of Roswell said the Buckhead secession effort “makes no sense politicall­y, operationa­lly or
Financiall­y.” PHOTOS BY NATRICE MILLER/ NATRICE.MILLER@AJC.COM Republican state Sen. John Albers of Roswell said the Buckhead secession effort “makes no sense politicall­y, operationa­lly or
 ?? ?? Republican Sen. Randy Robertson of Cataula, one of the small-town backers of the effort to split up Atlanta, watches his efforts fall short in the GOPdominat­ed Senate.
Republican Sen. Randy Robertson of Cataula, one of the small-town backers of the effort to split up Atlanta, watches his efforts fall short in the GOPdominat­ed Senate.

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