The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Kemp appoints supporter to ethics panel amid Abrams investigat­ion

Atlanta attorney has contribute­d funds to Democrats also.

- By James Salzer James.salzer@ajc.com

Burge said he didn’t apply for the job. ‘They called me and asked if I would be willing to serve,’ he said.

Gov. Brian Kemp has appointed a longtime campaign donor to Georgia’s ethics commission.

Such an announceme­nt in itself may not be surprising: Governors have always appointed donors to boards.

But the appointmen­t Kemp made late last week comes as the commission is continuing its investigat­ion into Democrat Stacey Abrams’ 2018 gubernato- rial campaign and groups it says may have illegally coor- dinated with the candidate’s bid for office. Abrams is the Democratic gubernator­ial nominee-in-waiting this year, and she will face Kemp or his top GOP challenger, ex-u.s. Sen. David Perdue, in the general election.

And Atlanta attorney David Burge replaces on the board Eric Barnum, the only mem- ber of the ethics panel to contribute to Abrams’ campaign. Barnum’s term was up, and he served his last meeting in March.

Under state law, the governor appoints three members — only two of whom can be from his party — and the Senate leaders and House speaker get the other two appointmen­ts. Kemp had replaced an outgoing Repub- lican member with a Demo- crat last year.

Burge is a partner with Smith Gambrell Russell, where he has worked in real estate law since 1998. He has served as a Repub- lican member of the Fulton County Board of Elections and was a delegate to the 2008 Republican National Convention.

Burge said he didn’t apply for the job. “They called me and asked if I would be will- ing to serve,” he said.

He also said he’s well aware that 2022 is an election year and all that entails. Election years are typically busy for the commission.

An Atlanta Journal-consti- tution review of campaign reports shows Burge has contribute­d to Kemp more than three dozen times since 2006, when the governor was then running for agricultur­e commission­er. Most of the contributi­ons were relatively small. Burge also contribute­d to the reelection campaign of Gov. Sonny Perdue that year. Perdue later appointed Kemp to the job of secretary of state.

Living in a Democratic city, Burge has also contribute­d to some Democrats, includ- ing state Sens. Elena Parent, D-atlanta; and Kim Jackson, D-stone Mountain; Jason Car- ter when he ran for governor in 2014; and then-atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed.

Since its inception in the early 1990s, politician­s have griped about complaints being filed with the ethics commission — which regu- lates campaign finance laws— for partisan purposes. Many of the purely partisan election-year complaints wind up being dismissed by the com- mission or result in minor penalties, but they often get headlines.

Members of the panel, and sometimes staff, are used to being criticized as partisans.

Democrats complained in 2019 when the pan el hired David Emadi, a Doug- las County prosecutor, to become the commission’s executive secretary because he’d been a Kemp donor.

The chairman of the commission at the time, Jake Evans, had long been a Republican Party activist. Evans left the commission and is running as a Repub- lican for a suburban Atlanta congressio­nal seat.

Barnum contribute­d $3,350 to Abrams’ 2018 campaign. Another commission member, Rick Thompson, is paid to file campaign reports and create political action committees and other fundraisin­g entities for candi- dates and groups.

Campaign reports show Burge has contribute­d about $8,500 to Kemp campaigns over the years.

Shortly after he took office, Emadi began issuing subpoe- nas seeking bank and other records from Abrams’ campaign and affiliated groups.

Abrams’ camp says it has provided thousands of doc- uments to the commission and that the panel was seeking records that either didn’t exist or should have no bear- ing on its case. Her top campaign aide, Lauren GrohWargo, called it a “fishing expedition.”

The commission is looking into whether Abrams’ campaign illegally coordinate­d its efforts with nonprofits supporting her bid for governor. Georgia law prohibits independen­t groups from coordinati­ng with candidates.

One of the groups, Gente4abra­ms (People for Abrams), was fined $50,000 by the state ethics commission in 2020 for failing to report what it spent to help her win the Democratic primary.

Gente4abra­ms (People for Abrams) spent $240,000 for canvassing, social media posts, and print and radio advertisin­g to help Abrams win the primary but didn’t report what it spent or where it got the money to pay for those efforts, the commission said.

The group later registered with the state and reported spending about $685,000 more to help the Democrat in her unsuccessf­ul general election campaign against Kemp.

 ?? COURTESY ?? Gov. Brian Kemp has appointed a frequent donor to his campaigns to serve on the state’s ethics commission as it prepares to investigat­e Democrat Stacey Abrams, whom Kemp could face in November’s general election.
COURTESY Gov. Brian Kemp has appointed a frequent donor to his campaigns to serve on the state’s ethics commission as it prepares to investigat­e Democrat Stacey Abrams, whom Kemp could face in November’s general election.

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