The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

It will be 40 long days for the Georgia General Assembly

- Patricia Murphy Political Insider

There’s something downright biblical about the length of Georgia’s annual Legislativ­e session — 40 days and 40 nights. Breaks are shoehorned in for lawmakers to go home on weekends to check in on kids, farms and family businesses. But for the most part, the members in the chambers of the House and Senate Monday morning knew they were in it for the long haul.

“It seems like just yesterday that we were here!” GOP House Speaker Jon Burns joked as he gaveled the House into session. It practicall­y was yesterday, since members had seen each other about a month ago for the special court-ordered restrictin­g session that ended up costing a pair of Democrats their jobs.

Burns has so far proven to be a collegial, lowdrama leader during his year-plus on the job. And he welcomed a former Democratic member to the House floor to be the chamber’s pastor of the day.

ut as leaders laid out their plans for the session ahead, it was clear that the election year politics outside of the Capitol would have a major impact on what happens inside.

House Majority Leader Chuck Efstration told a gaggle of reporters that Republican­s have three primary priorities — public safety and policing, literacy and education, and accelerati­ng Gov. Brian Kemp’s tax cuts. And he

said the House will push the state Senate to pass a bipartisan revision to the state hate crimes bill to add anti semitic acts as hate crimes.

“The House led on the issue of antisemiti­sm last year,” he said.

Democrats, meanwhile, laid out a totally different set of objectives that they want to focus on — maternal mortality, Medicaid expansion, gun safety, abortion and raising questions about the Republican state budget.

“The subtext of what we deal with is that our communitie­s benefit when Democrats are in charge,” said House Democratic Leader James Beverly.

But since Democrats are not in charge, they’ve got to find places to compromise with Republican­s, or at least include GOP thinking, since Republican­s control both chambers, every committee and every constituti­onal office. Georgia may be a “battlegrou­nd state,” but it doesn’t feel that way at the Capitol to most Democrats.

Could one area of common ground finally be Medicaid expansion? A mid-year hearing on health policy included a suggestion from Republican­s that Georgia could think about an expansion of the federal health insurance program like the one former Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson approved in Arkansas. It could be part of a grand bargain to greenlight rural hospital reforms pushed by Lt. Gov. Burt Jones, the thinking went.

But Medicaid reform wasn’t on Efstration’s radar at all on Day One.

“Health care contin

ues to be a priority and interest in the House. But that’s not an issue that I’ve been working on, or that I’ve heard rumors about,” he said. The Majority Leader said he hasn’t been approached about the issue at all, which is unusual for a big, expensive issue if it’s going to have any momentum.

Could there be a meeting of the minds on gun safety? A sliver of bipartisan agreement on a gun lock tax credit emerged before the session began, but Efstration said changing gun laws is not a part of the GOP’S public safety platform.

The one surprising area of semi-common cause Monday was the idea of moving the state’s voting system from Dominion machines back to handmarked paper ballots.

With far-right activists chanting in the hallways for lawmakers to adopt paper ballots, Beverly, the Democratic leader, said his caucus would be open to the idea.

“We pushed paper ballots years ago. I’ve been here 12 years now and, I hate to say this, but 12 years a slave is enough. The reality is that we’ve been pushing this stuff for forever. So I’m glad they’re coming back around now.”

For as carefully as Republican and Democratic leaders have laid the groundwork for their own agendas, outside events during the session always seem to deliver unexpected issues to deal with or problems to solve.

The 2020 session was cut short and then dominated by COVID-19. The next agenda was mostly swallowed up by the ongoing presidenti­al recount, which also sparked GOP lawmakers to quickly overhaul Georgia’s voting laws. The heat of the 2022 election year brought an unforeseen focus on transgende­r sports.

Last year, a last-minute motion on school vouchers landed in the House on Day 40, only to be defeated by rural Republican­s who said it would endanger funding for their own communitie­s’ schools.

The first surprise for lawmakers this year came the evening of the first day, when the Atlanta Journal-constituti­on broke a bombshell story that a defendant in the Trump election interferen­ce case is seeking to disqualify DA Fani Willis for allegedly having an improper relationsh­ip with one of the top — and highest paid — prosecutor­s in the case.

Nathan Wade, the sharpdress­ed lawyer who successful­ly argued Willis’s case to an indictment from Fulton County special grand jurors, has been paid more than $600,000 for his work. He’s also been taking Willis on Norwegian cruises and getaways to Napa Valley, according to the court filing.

No evidence was provided to back up those details and Willis’ team said she would respond in due time through court proceeding­s, as is typical. But Republican­s in the Capitol, who are currently writing the rules for a new Gop-appointed DA oversight commission, skipped the technicali­ties.

True or not, the allegation­s about Willis prove the need for state oversight of local DA’S, they said. Count on that to be among the first items of business for lawmakers in the 40 days ahead.

 ?? ARVIN TEMKAR/ARVIN.TEMKAR@AJC.COM ?? GOP House Speaker Jon Burns has so far proven to be a collegial, low-drama leader during his year-plus on the job. And he welcomed a former Democratic member to the floor to be the chamber’s pastor of the day.
ARVIN TEMKAR/ARVIN.TEMKAR@AJC.COM GOP House Speaker Jon Burns has so far proven to be a collegial, low-drama leader during his year-plus on the job. And he welcomed a former Democratic member to the floor to be the chamber’s pastor of the day.
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