The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

GOP group promotes ‘stop the steal’ operative

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

A political operative whose organizati­on sent out robocalls urging Donald Trump supporters to march to the U.S. Capitol before the deadly Jan. 6 attack was chosen Thursday to lead a prominent GOP group.

The board of the Republican Attorneys General Associatio­n voted to confirm Peter Bisbee as its new executive director. He was head of RAGA’S policy arm, the Rule of Law Defense Fund, when it financed robocalls pressing its backers to “stop the steal” at the

Capitol before it was stormed by a pro-trump mob.

The vote sheds new light on why Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr, who was chairman of the overall organizati­on, abruptly stepped down as the group’s leader this month. His resignatio­n letter cited a “significan­t difference of opinion” in the organizati­on’s direction following the robocalls, referencin­g the departure of the group’s executive director, Adam Piper, who resigned shortly after reports of the robocalls surfaced.

“The fundamenta­l difference of opinion began with vastly opposite views of the significan­ce of the events of January 6 and the resistance by some to accepting the resignatio­n of the executive director,” Carr wrote in the April 16 letter obtained by The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on.

In a statement Thursday, Carr said he accepted Piper’s resignatio­n, ordered an audit and investigat­ion, “imposed new controls” and began a search for a new executive director after the robocalls.

“I felt we needed to go in a new direction,” he said. “Some in the organizati­on did not believe this was necessary. Based on what I know, I had no other choice but to step down as chairman and as a member of the executive committee.”

On Thursday, the Alabama Political Reporter also reported that the Republican AG group’s finance director resigned in protest of Bisbee’s hire.

Carr’s spokeswoma­n has repeatedly said he had no knowledge or involvemen­t in the robocalls, which were promoted by the Rule of Law Defense Fund. He’s also condemned the violence at the Capitol and joined other AGS who declared that “such actions will not be allowed to go unchecked.”

Carr’s decision to distance himself from RAGA comes as he weighs a challenge to U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock, a newly elected Democrat standing for a full sixyear term in 2022. The Republican also faces a tough campaign for a second term if he decides to run for reelection as attorney general.

Two Democrats have already announced challenges: Charlie Bailey, who narrowly lost to Carr in 2018, and state Sen. Jen Jordan, who represents a slice of suburban Atlanta. Both have framed Carr’s resignatio­n as an attempt to distract voters from RAGA’S role in the insurrecti­on.

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