Rolling Stone

Keisha Lance Bottoms

How the mayor of Atlanta and rising star in the Democratic Party led her city through a tumultuous year

- By Tessa Stuart

Atlanta’s mayor led her city through a tumultuous year.

The pasT year of Keisha Lance Bottoms’ life has been, to borrow one of the Atlanta mayor’s favorite euphemisms, interestin­g. When she’s got nothing nice to say about a situation, Bottoms, diplomatic Southerner that she is, reaches for this damningly anodyne descriptor. It’s all in the delivery. Consider, for example, the fact that in the middle of a pandemic killing black Georgians by the thousands, Republican Gov. Brian Kemp had the nerve to sue to block a mask mandate from going into effect in the city of Atlanta — and only the city of Atlanta. “He sued me, personally, which was interestin­g,” Bottoms says. “And what was really interestin­g about that is the fact Van Johnson, the mayor of Savannah, had gone out first with the mask mandate.”

Over the past 12 months, Bottoms has not only had to shepherd her city through a deadly virus while battling a governor determined to undermine the public-health measures she put in place, she also had to negotiate a fragile peace between protesters and police when demonstrat­ions over the death of George Floyd turned destructiv­e in late May. Bottoms issued an emotional plea to the community, only to see the detente shattered barely two weeks later when an Atlanta police officer shot Rayshard Brooks, an unarmed black man, in a Wendy’s parking lot. Through it all, she’s been raising four children, dealt with a Covid-19 outbreak in her own home, and been vetted to be Joe Biden’s vice president, while conducting the other business that comes with running the biggest city in Georgia.

Bottoms acquired the kind of resilience needed to reckon with the highs and lows of a year like 2020 early in life. She was born in Atlanta in 1970, the daughter of the R&B singer Major Lance, an American Bandstand performer and opener for the Beatles. She remembers watching women jump up onstage to rip her father’s clothes off at the Torch, a club in England, and tagging along with him to daytime meetings at the Blue Flame, a legendary Atlanta strip club.

Despite his fame, Lance struggled to make money off of his music, and eventually it just wasn’t enough for the family to survive on. When that happened, Bottoms’ mother took two jobs and went to cosmetolog­y school at night to help keep the family afloat, while her father turned to selling cocaine. When she was eight years old, she came home to a police raid from which her dad was led away in handcuffs.

When she eventually set her sights on law school, and entertainm­ent law specifical­ly, it was with the idea of avenging the injustices visited on her father — or at least making sure that other artists didn’t suffer a similar fate. “My dad and I would talk about that,” she says. “I would go back and I would get all of the money from the record company that he never made.” Instead, she ended up working first in juvenile court, representi­ng children, then as a magistrate judge, before she got the idea of running for superior judge. Bottoms lost that race but mounted and won a bid for the Atlanta City Council. In 2017, she emerged from a crowded field of candidates to become mayor.

In her first year, Bottoms was left to contend with a federal corruption investigat­ion left over by her predecesso­r, a high-stakes fight for the city to retain control of Atlanta’s airport, and a massive cyberattac­k that virtually shut down the city government for nearly a week. She managed it all while shoring up progressiv­e bona fides — issuing an executive order refusing to house ICE detainees at the city jail and later appointing the city’s first director of LGBTQ Affairs.

Even as that first year felt like a baptism by fire, it couldn’t have prepared her for 2020. Bottoms recalls the surreal moment in early March when she realized things were about to change. She was hosting a briefing on the virus with one of the top infectious-disease experts in the country offering a sober assessment of the situation facing Atlanta.

“I just remember looking around the room, and I wish I had a more descriptiv­e word, but the room looked shook,” Bottoms says. “He essentiall­y said to us, ‘If you don’t close the city down within the next 48 to 72 hours, it will be too late.’ ”

In July, Bottoms’ family was touched personally by the virus. She knew something was wrong when her husband was abnormally fatigued. “He couldn’t complete a sentence without drifting off to sleep,” she says. A testing backlog in the city meant it took almost a week to confirm they’d contracted the virus. Her teenage son was asymptomat­ic, she herself only had mild symptoms (“a little coughing here and there”), but months later, her husband is still feeling the lingering effects. “He lost 20 pounds in probably four days. He still has the fatigue and the headaches, and his sense of smell didn’t leave when he had Covid, but it now comes and goes. You know, the long-hauler stuff.”

If all of that weren’t enough, Bottoms is now grappling with a sharp rise in violent crime on the heels of a police strike last June. With 157 homicides, 2020 was the deadliest year in decades. Figuring out how to turn things around will be the biggest challenge of 2021 — the last year of Bottoms’ first term. She’s pledged to run for re-election, a commitment reinforced by her recent decision to turn down a position as the head of the Small Business Administra­tion for Biden.

SBA administra­tor is a slightly lower-profile job than the other one Bottoms was in considerat­ion for — the job that ultimately went to Kamala Harris. “The vet was quite interestin­g,” Bottoms says, before admitting, more bluntly: “It was quite uncomforta­ble. You are asked about everything — I even got asked questions about high school . . . the address that I used in high school: Whose address was it?” She was determined to see the process through, convinced that if she was on the ticket, she could put Biden over the top. “I kept telling him, ‘If you put me on the ticket, I am sure we will win Georgia,’ ” she says, laughing. “So, obviously, he didn’t need me on the ticket to win Georgia.” Still, she says, when the results came in, “I had a nice smile on my face because I thought, ‘I told you we could win this state!’ ”

“I remember looking around the room, and I wish I had a more descriptiv­e word, but the room looked shook,” Bottoms says of an early Covid-19 briefing last March.

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