The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Labor commission­er won’t run again

Butler’s decision leaves office open on statewide ballot.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

Georgia Labor Commission­er Mark Butler isn’t running for a fourth term, a decision that will leave another open office on the statewide ballot in November.

The Republican told his office’s staffers in a memo Monday that his wife’s ongoing battle with cancer led him to reassess his political future.

“While I still enjoy developing good public policy, I no longer desire to be an elected official,” Butler wrote in the memo. “The extra stress that being an elected official puts on one’s family is not something that has a place in our current situation.”

Though he easily won his past three elections, Butler faced a much more challengin­g political climate had he competed for a fourth term.

Delays in receiving unemployme­nt benefits during much of the coronaviru­s pandemic frustrated hundreds of thousands of outof-work Georgians and many state legislator­s. Overtaxed department staffers struggled to shift to virtual services with offices closed to the public through most of the past two years.

State lawmakers narrowly approved legislatio­n that would have weakened the labor commission­er by creating a new office to speed benefits to jobless Georgians, but Gov. Brian Kemp vetoed the bill on grounds that it creates “serious infringeme­nts” with the separation of powers.

The backlash led state Sen. Bruce Thompson, a Republican from White, to announce a primary challenge last year. Three Democrats are also in the contest: state Rep. William Boddie, state Sen. Lester Jackson and Nicole Horn, an Atlanta entreprene­ur.

Butler has tried to tamp down the frustratio­n by acknowledg­ing his office was unprepared for the glut of claims while noting the department’s staff was half the size it was a decade earlier. Millions of new claims have been processed since March 2020.

A Carrollton native, Butler served four terms in the state Legislatur­e before his 2010 election made him the first Republican labor commission­er in state history.

Butler’s decision comes a week before the start of qualifying, when candidates for legislativ­e and state offices must formally sign up to run.

Even down-ticket contests such as the race for labor commission­er will likely be hypercompe­titive.

 ?? ?? Mark Butler will not seek a fourth term as labor commission­er.
Mark Butler will not seek a fourth term as labor commission­er.

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