The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Elections chief back on job after dismissal

Fulton County Commission votes to overrule elections board’s decision.

- By Ben Brasch ben.brasch@ajc.com

The Fulton County Commission has rejected the firing of county elections director Richard Barron

— sending him back to answer to a majority of an elections board that does not want him.

And now, that elections board will have a new leader: Commission­ers voted to appoint former Atlanta City Councilman Alex Wan as a replacemen­t for chairwoman Mary Carole Cooney, who resigned this week due to a prolonged illness.

The elections board manages policy, but the director runs day-to-day operations.

While Barron’s fate appears settled, commission­ers continue to disagree on whether they or the elections board has final say on hiring and firing the director. Barron was retained by a party-line vote, with Democrats on the commission voting to keep him and Republican­s voting for his removal.

The Republican­s cited advice from a former

county attorney in arguing that elected officials should not have a say in the employment of the person responsibl­e for running county elections. It is unclear what advice the interim county attorney gave to commission­ers during their multiple hours of closed-door executive sessions, and the ordinance does not appear to address how to remove an elections director.

“The board of elections makes a recommenda­tion,” Commission­er Marvin Arrington Jr. said. “They make decisions about the elections, however about Fulton County employees they can only make recommenda­tions.”

Barron has been in charge of Fulton elections since 2013.

On Wednesday, Republican Commission­er Liz Hausmann said commission­ers have put Barron is a horrible position.

“I regret terribly that a person who I like, I actually like Rick Barron, is put in this position,” Hausmann said. “He doesn’t deserve that, but we should be respecting and affirming the hard decision that the board of registrati­on and elections made on behalf of the citizens of Fulton County.”

Republican and Democratic commission­ers have both voiced displeasur­e about Barron’s performanc­e at different times.

Barron was at risk of a bipartisan firing after the June primary, when some voters waited in line for hours, many because they never received mail-in ballots after Fulton’s system was overwhelme­d. But Democratic commission­ers seem to have been satisfied by Barron’s performanc­e in the general and runoff elections.

The elections board voted 3-2 on Feb. 16 to fire Barron.

Barron’s employment has been in limbo ever since because of a stalemate over the issue on the seven-member Fulton County Commission the next day. The gridlock on the vote was caused when Commission­er Natalie Hall said she didn’t have enough informatio­n to make a decision.

On Wednesday, Hall voted to keep Barron and told him: “I do want to apologize for the witch hunt against you.”

Throughout the two weeks of uncertaint­y, politician­s have lobbed accusation­s back and forth — with Democrats saying Republican­s are unhappy over the result of the presidenti­al and Senate races, and Republican­s saying the election had many issues, including an absentee-bymail process vulnerable to fraud.

Cooney, who resigned as chairwoman of the elections board on Tuesday, was one of the two votes to retain Barron. Now, Wan leads the board.

Wan is the first Asian-american politician to win a seat on the Atlanta City Council. The Stone Mountain native currently lives in Morningsid­e and is executive director of the nonprofit Horizons Atlanta summer program.

Wan takes over the rest of Cooney’s term, which ends on June 30, 2021.

Wan was an Atlanta councilman from 2010 to 2017 until he ran for council president and lost to Felicia Moore. If reappointe­d, Wan would oversee citywide elections later this year, which feature Moore’s challenge to Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms.

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Barron
 ?? JOHN SPINK/JOHN.SPINK@AJC.COM ?? Fulton County elections director Richard Barron (wearing jacket) holds a briefing on Nov. 5 at State Farm Arena, where absentee ballot processing was nearing completion two days after the general election. Democratic commission­ers appeared to be satisfied with his performanc­e in the general and runoff elections.
JOHN SPINK/JOHN.SPINK@AJC.COM Fulton County elections director Richard Barron (wearing jacket) holds a briefing on Nov. 5 at State Farm Arena, where absentee ballot processing was nearing completion two days after the general election. Democratic commission­ers appeared to be satisfied with his performanc­e in the general and runoff elections.

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