The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Gwinnett Dems decry map maneuver

Republican­s defend move to state panel for possible alteration­s.

- By Alia Malik alia.malik@ajc.com

Democratic members of the Gwinnett County legislativ­e delegation last week decried what they said was “a hostile state takeover of Gwinnett County,” after a proposed Board of Commission­ers map that had been approved by the commission and the majority of the delegation was moved to a state House committee where it can be altered.

State Rep. Jasmine Clark, D-lilburn, vice chairwoman of Gwinnett’s House delegation, said at a news conference that the normal procedure is to assign local redistrict­ing bills to the intragover­nmental coordinati­on committee.

From there, as long as a majority of the delegation from that jurisdicti­on approves, the maps go to the House floor, Clark said. Members of the House convention­ally respect the will of local leaders and approve the maps, she said.

But Republican­s, who control the legislatur­e, recently moved the proposed commission map to the government­al affairs committee, removing it from the typical process, legislator­s said.

“The GOP is once again attempting a state takeover of Gwinnett County by using loopholes and political trickery to take these local bills and put them into the hands of legislator­s that don’t even live in Gwinnett,” Clark said at the conference at the state Capitol.

The five-member Gwinnett commission is made up of all Democrats and all people of color. Democrats gained control of the board for the first time in decades after the 2020 election. Most of the state representa­tives and senators in Gwinnett are also Democrats.

The Gwinnett commission has four members elected from geographic districts and a chair who is elected countywide.

Commission­ers and legislator­s said the commission map makes minor changes from the map that Republican­s approved a decade ago. They said it keeps cities and voting precincts together and each geographic district has a racial and ethnic makeup similar to that of the county, the most diverse in the Southeast.

“Their objections cannot be to the physical maps,” Clark said. “Their objections must be to the people who have moved into Gwinnett, call it home and have chosen leadership that reflects the beautiful evolution of our county into a heterogeno­us blend of races, ethnicitie­s and cultures.”

Democratic legislator­s repeatedly alluded to Republican state

Sen. Clint Dixon’s attempt in November to expand the commission size and weaken the chairperso­n. Dixon, of Buford, withdrew his special-session proposals after a public outcry.

Dixon and state Reps. Bonnie Rich, Chuck Efstration and Tom Kirby, all Republican­s, voted against the proposed commission map last week in a delegation meeting. Democrats blamed Rich, of Suwanee, for the redistrict­ing bill’s reassignme­nt.

Rich did not return messages seeking comment.

Dixon said he would like to see a commission district that keeps the northern third of Gwinnett together.

“There is a conservati­ve majority

in the northern part of the county that feels underrepre­sented,” Dixon said. “I would completely disagree that this is any kind of power grab from us because it does not give us any kind of majority whatsoever.”

No current commission members live in that northern third, he said.

Dixon’s district, which covers northern Gwinnett and is close in population to a commission district, is roughly 50% white, 17% Black, 16% Hispanic and 15% Asian, according to 2020 U.S. Census data.

By contrast, Gwinnett County last year was about 35% white, 30% Black, 22% Hispanic and 13% Asian, according to 2021 Census estimates.

State Rep. Sam Park, a Lawrencevi­lle Democrat who chairs the Gwinnett delegation, said Republican­s are attempting to segregate Gwinnett voters by seizing control over the maps.

“Clearly, white power is alive and well in the Georgia Republican Party,” he said.

District 1 Commission­er Kirkland Carden, whose district includes parts of northern and western Gwinnett, said Republican­s were singling out Gwinnett for its diversity in a contentiou­s election year.

“All we’re asking is to treat our bill like all the other local communitie­s,” Carden said. “Respect us. Respect the will of the people. Respect the voters.”

 ?? TYLER WILKINS/AJC FILE ?? State Rep. Jasmine Clark, D-lilburn, says the GOP is “attempting a state takeover of Gwinnett County by using loopholes and political trickery to take these local bills and put them into the hands of legislator­s that don’t even live in Gwinnett.”
TYLER WILKINS/AJC FILE State Rep. Jasmine Clark, D-lilburn, says the GOP is “attempting a state takeover of Gwinnett County by using loopholes and political trickery to take these local bills and put them into the hands of legislator­s that don’t even live in Gwinnett.”

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