The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Handel sworn in as newest Ga. representa­tive

State’s first Republican congresswo­man takes oath to begin career.

- By Tamar Hallerman tamar.hallerman@ajc.com

WASHINGTON — There was a brief photo-op with U.S. House Speaker Paul Ryan, a few formalitie­s from U.S. Rep. John Lewis, a hug and then an oath.

The whole affair took less than half an hour. And just like that, Karen Handel made Georgia history, becoming the state’s first Republican congresswo­man.

Monday evening’s events on the House floor were a coda, an end to the state’s omnipresen­t 6th Congressio­nal District contest, the most expensive U.S. House race of all time and certainly one of the hardest fought.

Handel ended it at a microphone, quipping to her 400-plus new colleagues, “I’m not sure

you’ve heard enough about this particular race.”

“This is an extraordin­ary honor and the greatest privilege that I think I have ever had,” she said in a brief introducto­ry speech, “and I look forward to serving the people of the 6th District, to serving the people of Georgia and to being a good co-worker and friend to each and every one of you.”

The event capped off a whirlwind week for Handel, who went from the campaign trail in the north Atlanta suburbs to setting up her Capitol Hill office all within a matter of days.

“I’m just trying to take it all in,” Handel said Monday in an interview with The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on and Channel 2 Action News. “It’s been a lot to absorb and we’re working real hard to get things set up so we can hit the ground running for the people.”

Because the 6th District contest was a special election, Handel must grapple with circumstan­ces that differ from what most freshman lawmakers experience.

Since she is joining the House midsession, she will not get to enjoy the same two-month transition and orientatio­n period that her first-term colleagues used to hire staff and get acquainted with the office. And Handel will be stuck with leftover committee assignment­s that might not align with her personal interests since she’s coming in late.

But she does get two major perks that her firstterm classmates did not. The first is fame. While most freshmen arrive on Capitol Hill as nameless to most outside of their constituen­ts, the hype surroundin­g last week’s 6th District contest means Handel is highly visible here.

The second is office space. Handel gets to take over the relatively plush suite once occupied by her predecesso­r, U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price, instead of fending for herself in the much-dreaded freshman lottery system.

Her workspace, located off a sun-drenched corridor in the 84-year-old Longworth House Office Building, was spartan Monday afternoon as her team moved in, the wooden shelves and walls visible from the front entrance still empty. A placard outside the door read “office of the Sixth Congressio­nal District of Georgia.”

Handel plans to commute between Washington and her longtime Roswell home on the weekends. She said she still hasn’t decided whether she will follow the same path of some of her Georgia colleagues, including fellow freshman Republican Drew Ferguson of West Point, by sleeping in her Capitol Hill office while the House is in session.

One of her most important tasks at the moment is hiring staff.

Holdovers from Price’s office had been working with constituen­ts in a caretaking capacity even in the months after Handel’s predecesso­r resigned to serve in President Donald Trump’s Cabinet. It’s unclear whether Handel will hire some of those aides for her staff or bring in her own people.

Handel said her top priority is playing catch-up on all the top issues before Congress, particular­ly the ones that have an impact on the 6th District.

“There will be plenty of time for sleeping months from now,” she said.

Several members of Georgia’s tight-knit delegation have offered to help. And all nine of the state’s other Republican­s stood behind Handel on the House floor as Lewis and later U.S. Rep. Tom Graves, R-Ranger, sang her praises to the chamber.

“You’re an inspiratio­n to all the young women throughout Georgia and throughout the country, including my two daughters,” said Graves, the state’s most-senior Republican.

The swearing-in was a bipartisan affair. Lewis introduced Handel on the floor, teasing his new colleague about her Washington-area roots, having grown up in Maryland.

“So you’re returning home ...” Lewis said. Handel later gave him a big hug, as she did two of the three other Democrats in the delegation who were watching from the front row.

But one Democrat was absent. U.S. Rep. Hank Johnson of Lithonia, who once employed Jon Ossoff, Handel’s 6th District rival, stood closer to the back of the chamber and didn’t rush to congratula­te her.

Minutes later, Handel’s family and campaign staffers cheered from an upstairs viewing gallery as she cast her first vote — with an assist from U.S. Rep. Doug Collins of Gainesvill­e with the voting machine — a “yea” on a veterans bill.

As Ryan posed with Handel and her family at a mock swearing-in, he joked about the strangenes­s of posing with a Bible and pretending to take the oath of office for a row of cameras.

“It is very weird, isn’t it?” he told the group. Handel nodded.

 ?? DREW ANGERER / GETTY IMAGES ?? Speaker of the House Paul Ryan, Steve Handel and Representa­tive-elect Karen Handel participat­e in a ceremonial swearing-in on Capitol Hill on Monday in Washington, D.C.
DREW ANGERER / GETTY IMAGES Speaker of the House Paul Ryan, Steve Handel and Representa­tive-elect Karen Handel participat­e in a ceremonial swearing-in on Capitol Hill on Monday in Washington, D.C.
 ?? DREW ANGERER / GETTY IMAGES ?? Steve Handel looks on Speaker of the House Paul Ryan arrives and shakes hands with Representa­tive-elect Karen Handel before a ceremonial swearing-in. Handel defeated Democrat Jon Ossoff in the most expensive House race in U.S. history.
DREW ANGERER / GETTY IMAGES Steve Handel looks on Speaker of the House Paul Ryan arrives and shakes hands with Representa­tive-elect Karen Handel before a ceremonial swearing-in. Handel defeated Democrat Jon Ossoff in the most expensive House race in U.S. history.

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