The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Voters, GOP say they want bipartisan­ship

Republican leaders say they have broad priorities; 54% of Georgians polled value compromise.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com and Maya T. Prabhu maya.prabhu@ajc.com

A few minutes after Gov. Brian Kemp ended a showcase speech to the state Legislatur­e focused on a “new era” of mostly consensus-driven policies, he walked across the street to address some of Georgia’s most prominent Christian conservati­ves.

After delivering a string of applause lines about his economic stances, Kemp turned to the top item on the wish list of many in the audience: the question of whether he’d push for more stringent abortion limits after the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade.

“We’re going to continue to value and support life at all stages in our state,” Kemp said, shifting to measures that aimed to streamline adoption and improve foster care. “We haven’t just been talking about that. We’ve been doing something about it.”

With election campaigns behind them — and Republican­s still in firm control of the Georgia Statehouse — GOP leaders signal they want to take a breather from the sharp clashes over social issues that were dominant during parts of Kemp’s first term in office.

Still, there’s a tried-and-true pattern in Georgia of political leaders promising a truce in the culture wars — and then taking up divisive, headline-grabbing issues anyways. But Kemp and other Republican­s indicate bipartisan-friendly measures are a priority this legislativ­e session.

In speeches and interviews, the governor and the state’s two new legislativ­e leaders — Lt. Gov. Burt Jones and House Speaker Jon Burns — laid out agendas devoid of calls for new abortion restrictio­ns, rollbacks of firearm regu

lations or a revival of “religious liberty” measures.

None have made forging a new Buckhead city a part of their agenda. And they haven’t expressed interest in reigniting debate over LGBTQ rights a year after passing legislatio­n that banned transgende­r girls from competing in women’s sports in public high schools.

Instead, each has laid out policy initiative­s laced with calls to toughen criminal penalties, boost education funding, fund new tax rebates, add more affordable housing and improve hightech training for the spree of economic developmen­t projects taking root in Georgia.

“We’ve got to improve our workforce developmen­t and help drive more economic opportunit­ies and growth to the state,” Jones told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on. “We’ve had a lot of success in the last 10 years, and we need to continue that success.”

That aligns with an AJC poll released this week that shows many Georgia voters would prefer their elected officials work together rather than squabble.

Some 54% of Georgia voters say the state’s elected officials should value the art of compromise to find solutions, as opposed to roughly one-third who want politician­s to “stand on principle” even if it means gridlock.

The shift from culture wars presents a conundrum for Democrats, who acknowledg­e they agree with key parts of the GOP agenda even as they push for more expansive action, such as deploying Georgia’s record $6.6 billion surplus to finance heftier pay increases for teachers, setting the state’s minimum wage at $15 and fully funding Medicaid expansion.

“We all agree on the desired outcome, but we have very different ideas about the path that will take us there,” said state Sen. Elena Parent, one of the chamber’s top Democrats.

“It surely won’t be by putting relatively few dollars in Georgians’ pockets with tax cuts for some and one-time refunds,” Parent said. “This is like expecting a car to drive several hundred miles when it is running on fumes.”

The strategy also could set the GOP leaders on a collision course with conservati­ve legislator­s and activists who want the party to use its majority to take more muscular steps, such as an outright ban on abortion and a fresh push to lift gun regulation­s.

“Any member can bring forth legislatio­n at any time,” said Senate Majority Leader Steve Gooch, a Dahlonega Republican. “So we’ll see if and what gets filed.”

Roe clash

Abortion may be the biggest flashpoint. In one of the most divisive legislativ­e votes in recent state history, the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e in 2019 narrowly adopted restrictio­ns that ban most abortions as early as six weeks into a pregnancy.

After a court overturned the law, the state Supreme Court reinstated the ban until an appeal is resolved. Now with a slimmer majority, state Republican­s could try to adopt a new version of the law — but Kemp and other GOP leaders would prefer to wait.

“I support that legislatio­n and continue to stand by it. But we also know that it has been challenged and it’s back before our state Supreme Court,” Burns said, adding: “We’re going to wait for the state Supreme Court, and then we’ll move forward on something if we need to.”

Georgia voters were split on how restrictiv­e access to abortion should be, though almost half said the state should make it easier to get the procedure. About 24% of respondent­s in the AJC poll said regulation­s should stay the way they are, and an additional 21% support more limits.

Some lawmakers last year pushed legislatio­n to impose new regulation­s on abortion pills by requiring women to first get an in-person exam from a physician and to ban them from being sent through the mail. Others lawmakers want an outright ban on the procedure.

Georgia’s 2019 law allows later abortions in case of rape, incest, if the life of the woman is in danger or in instances of “medical futility,” when a fetus would not be able to survive. A police report is required in order to obtain a later abortion if the pregnancy is caused by rape or incest.

State Rep. Charlice Byrd, a Woodstock Republican, has said she plans to introduce legislatio­n that would amend the Georgia Constituti­on to grant “personhood,” a term used to describe the effort to grant rights to an embryo or fetus at conception, and would effectivel­y make all abortions illegal.

“It is my right to carry legislatio­n at any time that I want,” she said when asked about Burns’ desire to let the court process play out on the 2019 abortion law. “He can tell me ‘no,’ but there’s a whole lot of people out here that want this to happen.”

Betting and Buckhead

Gambling legislatio­n has also proved to be divisive, not only between Democrats and Republican­s but within the GOP as well. For much of the past decade, lawmakers have clashed over whether to allow horse racing, casinos or online sports betting.

Legislator­s seemed primed last year to allow betting on profession­al sports, but the effort tanked amid a fight over whether the tax revenue it might produce should fund needs-based scholarshi­ps.

Sports betting has the support of many Georgia voters, according to a recent AJC poll. About 49% of those polled said they either support or strongly support sports betting. About 37% of respondent­s strongly oppose or somewhat oppose the practice.

Another sharp debate involves the ongoing divide over Buckhead cityhood, a movement that is driven by frustratio­n over Atlanta’s high crime rate. Last year, legislativ­e leaders effectivel­y shut down debate over the Atlanta divorce early in the session.

The recent violent clashes surroundin­g Atlanta’s proposed public safety center have sharpened focus on law-and-order issues, which were central to Kemp’s address this week to legislator­s.

There are no signs that top Republican­s are rallying behind the city split even though Jones, an early supporter, is now in position to push it through. He said he won’t lead the charge, but he also didn’t disavow the effort.

“I’m not going to shut down the conversati­on if a senator brings it forward because they have legitimate issues,” Jones said. “We’d be doing ourselves a disservice if we didn’t allow the process to try to play out.”

 ?? ARVIN TEMKAR/ARVIN.TEMKAR@AJC.COM ?? Gov. Brian Kemp, flanked by Lt. Gov. Burt Jones (left) and House Speaker Jon Burns, joins in the applause from members of the Georgia Legislatur­e on Wednesday, when the governor laid out his agenda in his State of the State address at the Capitol.
ARVIN TEMKAR/ARVIN.TEMKAR@AJC.COM Gov. Brian Kemp, flanked by Lt. Gov. Burt Jones (left) and House Speaker Jon Burns, joins in the applause from members of the Georgia Legislatur­e on Wednesday, when the governor laid out his agenda in his State of the State address at the Capitol.
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/AJC 2021 ?? The quest by some for the secession of the influentia­l Buckhead area from the city of Atlanta has several hurdles to clear before it could become reality, but leaders of the movement say they are confident they have a chance to succeed.
HYOSUB SHIN/AJC 2021 The quest by some for the secession of the influentia­l Buckhead area from the city of Atlanta has several hurdles to clear before it could become reality, but leaders of the movement say they are confident they have a chance to succeed.
 ?? ARVIN TEMKAR/ARVIN.TEMKAR@AJC.COM ?? Rep. Danny Mathis speaks with a lobbyist, while legislator­s and reproducti­ve rights group Amplify Atlanta announced new abortion-rights legislatio­n at the Capitol on Tuesday.
ARVIN TEMKAR/ARVIN.TEMKAR@AJC.COM Rep. Danny Mathis speaks with a lobbyist, while legislator­s and reproducti­ve rights group Amplify Atlanta announced new abortion-rights legislatio­n at the Capitol on Tuesday.

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