The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Trenton senator banned for ‘vile’ comments

Republican sounded off in a bitter dispute with ex-Speaker Ralston.

- By Maya T. Prabhu maya.prabhu@ajc.com

On a day lawmakers celebrated the late House Speaker David Ralston, his successor banned a state senator from entering the chamber in the future for making what he called “vile” comments about the former speaker.

Members of Ralston’s family and community were in the Capitol on Thursday as the House unveiled a portrait that will be hung in the chamber, and the Senate considered a resolution urging the University of North Georgia to name a new academic facility being built on its Blue Ridge campus after the former speaker, who died in 2022.

But state Sen. Colton Moore, a Trenton Republican and former state House member, used the debate over Senate Resolution 687 to take shots at Ralston, who had previously targeted him for electoral defeat.

The move led to rebukes from the lieutenant governor, Senate president pro tem and other Republican colleagues and resulted in House Speaker Jon Burns saying Moore was no longer allowed in the House chamber.

“A member of the Senate, the senator from the 53rd District, took it upon himself to go to the well of the Senate and make some of the vilest comments you can make about a good man,” Burns said.

Senate Majority Leader Steve Gooch, a Dahlonega Republican who sponsored the resolution to honor Ralston, said he was surprised the debate became so controvers­ial. Ralston lived in Gooch’s district.

“Unfortunat­ely, some of the past run-ins between Sen. Moore and the late speaker — it’s still a sore subject for the senator and he took an opportunit­y to lash out at the speaker,” Gooch said. “And it was just not appropriat­e. It was very unprofessi­onal and probably the meanest thing I’ve seen anybody do in this chamber in the 14 years I’ve served.”

Moore used his floor speech to reference a 2019 investigat­ion by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on that found Ralston, who was a defense attorney, appeared to use a policy called “legislativ­e leave” to perpetuall­y keep cases off the docket, potentiall­y thwarting justice and putting the public at risk. Legislativ­e leave is a 120-year-old policy that requires judges and prosecutor­s to defer to the legislativ­e schedule of any practicing attorney who serves in the General Assembly.

“This body is about to immortaliz­e, in my opinion, one of the most corrupt Georgians we’ve seen in our lives,” Moore said.

Lt. Gov. Burt Jones stopped Moore from reading his prepared remarks, encouragin­g him to sit down, and both he and President Pro Tem John Kennedy condemned Moore for what they said was the poor timing of his remarks.

“There is a time and a place for everything,” Jones said. “I don’t like cutting members off for speaking their mind, (but) whatever personal grievances you might have, pick the (right) moment in time when you want to express those, because today was not one of them.”

While serving in the House, Moore was one of a handful of Republican colleagues who had called for Ralston to step down as speaker after the AJC investigat­ion. Because of that, Moore put himself in Ralston’s crosshairs, putting his reelection into question.

Moore resigned from the House and ran unsuccessf­ully for the Senate in 2020. Two years later, he won the seat.

It’s not the first time Moore has been publicly reprimande­d by members of his party. Last fall, the Senate Republican leadership suspended Moore from being part of the chamber’s caucus. Moore had called for a special session to defund the office of Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis in response to her indictment of former President Donald Trump, but it was his consistent public berating of his colleagues for not following suit that caused them to remove him from the caucus.

Moore said the debate on the resolution was a fair time for him to bring up the accusation­s against Ralston while he was a defense attorney.

“I wasn’t impugning the character of David Ralston, but I was certainly saying the facts and, from my perspectiv­e, how he used his position of authority in a very corrupt way,” Moore said in an interview.

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Colton Moore

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