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Tag: Georgia Senate

  • ‘Our job is to be moral leaders’: Ruwa Romman wants to be Georgia’s Next Governor

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    Ruwa Romman (above) stopped by The Atlanta Voice to discuss her candidacy for Georgia Governor and what she hopes to accomplish while speaking with voters across the state. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    The first Muslim and Palestinian woman to ever be elected to Georgia’s House of Representatives, Ruwa Romman, believes she is the candidate voters will need to elect as the state’s next governor. In the midst of a career of civic engagement and representation, Romman, 32, is looking to take a step toward not only representing her people and the people of the state’s 97th District, but all Georgians as a gubernatorial candidate. 

    “I think our jobs right now are to be moral leaders, and what I mean by that is that we should not be leading based on what’s trending and what’s popular. We should be leading based on what’s right,” Romman said. 

    On Tuesday, Oct. 22, Romman, who moved with her family to the United States from Jordan when she was seven, visited The Atlanta Voice to discuss her campaign and what she wants most for Georgia. 

    “Even in a moment when people are at first mad at you, if you’re willing to lead with morality, they do come around,” Romman said.

    The Atlanta Voice: Rep. Romman, thank you for dropping by to chat. My first question of all of the candidates in this race is always the same: Why do you believe you are the best candidate for Georgia governor?

    Rep. Ruwa Romman: I want to be governor of Georgia so that we can raise the minimum wage, feed hungry kids, reopen hospitals, invest in small businesses, and take homes back from corporations. 

    AV: That’s going to take a lot of work.   

    RR: I know. I think anyone who is running for this position had better be ready to work. 

    AV: On your campaign website, it says in part, “After 20 years of Republican rule, Georgians are worse off. We can’t build the Georgia we deserve with Republicans in charge.” Could you elaborate? 

    RR: If you listen to what I call Republican propaganda, because that is what it’s become, you will hear them talk about we are the number one place to do business. My immediate question is, ‘For whom?” To be clear, it’s not even the best place for small businesses, because we are one of the worst states for small businesses. Twenty-five percent of small businesses fail within the first year in Georgia. This is a very difficult place for small businesses and entrepreneurs. 

    Romman also listed the state minimum wage of $5.15 per hour, two dollars under the federal minimum wage. “The fact that we haven’t even had a conversation about it since I was four years old is an absurdity to me,” said Romman. “That shows how completely upside down Republican priorities have been. We need to start owning that, saying that, and being very plain about it.”

    “Absolutely. If I didn’t think I was prepared for it, I wouldn’t be doing it. The reality of the situation is that, growing up in Georgia, I’ve had a lot of life experiences that have really prepared me,” Romman, a South Forsyth High School and Oglethorpe University graduate, said. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    AV: Do you believe you’re ready for what’s to come?

    RR: Absolutely. If I didn’t think I was prepared for it, I wouldn’t be doing it. The reality of the situation is that, growing up in Georgia, I’ve had a lot of life experiences that have really prepared me, whether it is growing up in Forsyth County before it became as diverse as it is today. Whether it is having to experience multiple unprecedented times for our generation. Way too many for any generation to experience. 

    There’s so much in my life that has brought me to this moment that has really called me to this moment.

    AV: What, if anything, concerns you about the last woman who ran for the office of governor, who was equally as educated, energetic, and good at organizing people, and how those particular campaigns ended?

    RR: It’s actually not a concern; it’s inspiration. I deeply believe that campaigns are building blocks and that even in the losses, if we nurture what we build, it can move us forward. I’m assuming you are referring to Stacey Abrams.

    AV: I am.

    RR: In 2018, she was the one who got the closest of any candidate that has ever run for governor. It’s deeply important to remember that. On her second turn, it was a year when the governor was an incumbent. If you look around the country, she lost by the smallest margin. Again, a loss is a loss, and I don’t only believe in moral victories, but the reality of the situation is that it’s a mixture of timing, context, and where people are.

    Romman credits Abrams’ two campaigns as inspirations to her political career, saying, “I ended up going to grad school [at Georgetown University’s McCourt School of Public Policy] because of that campaign and doing work on voting rights.” 

    AV: You co-founded Georgia Volunteer Hub in 2020, which helped train thousands of volunteers for the Georgia Senate runoff that year. Flash forward to this year, how has that kind of work prepared you for what’s next as a candidate for governor?

    RR: That work is going to influence my entire ethos. We are already going to start door-knocking on Saturday, Oct. 25. We will be launching in Norcross, and we will begin there and work our way out. Our goal is to recruit 5,000 volunteers by the end of the primary. 

    Romman told The Atlanta Voice that there have already been 300 volunteers signed up from dozens of counties. 

    AV: We are in the early stages of the gubernatorial race with the primaries still more than seven months away. Where have you held campaign rallies, and why did you choose those cities and counties?

    RR: We haven’t done a campaign rally because of logistics and cost, but we just were in Savannah for “No Kings” last night [Monday, Oct. 20], we were in Athens, and we expected 10-15 to show up. We had over 40 people show up. Our goal is to be everywhere as much as possible.

    AV: I saw that you spoke at a “No Kings” rally in Savannah last Saturday. I covered the rally here in Atlanta. What are your thoughts on how Americans expressed themselves last weekend? Do rallies like that really help change things?

    RR: There is a starting point for everybody. I believe that. We never know what someone’s starting point is going to be. For example, I started out doing interfaith work and volunteering with those of other faiths, learning about the importance and the beauty of different people coming together towards a common and shared goal. We never know what an entryway for somebody is and where it can lead. To me, that’s what I see in these protests.

    It’s a reminder that there are way more of us than them.

    AV: What should potential voters know about you that they might not know if they don’t know you personally, have heard you speak, or don’t live in your district?

    RR: I hope they come to learn that I am somebody who will never back down from a fight. Somebody who will always have their back, and someone who, regardless of what negotiating room I’m in, will put them before any special interests or corporation. 

    That’s been a deep belief of mine for as long as I can remember, and one that I intend to take into that Governor’s Mansion. 

    Romman said that people who will be seeing her in person for the first time while campaigning might immediately see her Hijab before they see anything else. And that’s OK, as long as they understand its importance in her life.

    “At the end of the day, this to me is no different than wearing a cross or any other sign of faith,” Romman said. “I hope that they recognize it for what it is, which is a grounding thing in my life that has been very consistent in my life. This head scarf reminds me that there is something bigger than us. It is a reminder that we need to be our best selves in every place that we go. 

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    Donnell Suggs

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  • Fulton District Attorney Fani Willis said to agree to testify to Republican-led committee

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    ATLANTA — Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis will finally testify to a special committee of the Georgia Senate after rebuffing their demands for more than a year, the committee’s leader said Friday.

    After refusing to appear last year and fighting a committee subpoena in court, Willis will comply with a new subpoena to be issued by the Senate Special Committee on Investigations to appear on Nov. 13, said its chairman, Sen. Bill Cowsert, R-Athens.

    It will be an opportunity for Republican lawmakers to ask her about the election interference case she brought against President Donald Trump and his allies.

    Cowsert said she agreed to testify to a limited scope of questioning that he could not disclose.

    Willis’ office did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment.

    Republicans have been vilifying Willis ever since she pursued the case, but Cowsert said his committee members want neither to persecute nor humiliate her.

    They just want her advice on legislation to regulate prosecutorial misconduct, he said.

    Willis was dislodged from her Trump prosecution after the state Supreme Court declined in September to consider her appeal of a Georgia Court of Appeals order disqualifying her from prosecuting conspiracy charges against Trump and eight others.

    The appeals court had found an appearance of impropriety in her romantic relationship with Nathan Wade, a special prosecutor she had assigned to the case.

    Republicans have raised questions about her use of taxpayer dollars in hiring him.

    “She can’t continue to create this impression that the laws don’t apply to her — that she’s being an obstructionist,” Cowsert said.

    Sen. Harold Jones, II, D-Augusta, one of two Democrats on the eight-member committee, welcomed Willis’ testimony. It will be an opportunity to give her side of the story, said Jones, who is the Senate minority leader.

    Despite her agreement to testify, the state Supreme Court will still hear oral arguments Nov. 4 in the dispute over the original subpoena, Cowsert said.

    Cowsert’s committee also got an update from a new commission established by the General Assembly to investigate allegations of prosecutorial misconduct.

    Investigators with the Prosecuting Attorneys Qualifications Commission have considered 36 complaints filed in 2024 and 86 so far this year. None merited promotion to a hearing panel, said Ian Heap, the commission executive director.

    The details of cases are not public unless they merit formal charges, so Heap could not answer Cowsert’s question about whether the commission had considered allegations against Willis.

    Cowsert said after the hearing that he merely wanted to know if her Nov. 13 testimony to his committee might be constrained by concerns about self-incrimination connected with any commission investigation.

    Cowsert said Heap’s report on the escalation in the number of complaints — there were only seven in 2023 — was new information to him. He wondered whether it indicated many prosecutors were misbehaving and the public now has a vehicle to complain — or whether the complaints were merely frivolous.

    Jones focused on Heap’s disclosure that all the complaints so far were deemed meritless and on the relevance of the law that created the commission.

    “I think that kind of shows that the law was not needed,” he said.

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    Dave Williams and Capitol Beat News Service

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  • Time for Georgia To Repeal Hospital Certificate of Need Laws 

    Time for Georgia To Repeal Hospital Certificate of Need Laws 

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    Georgia—along with more than 30 other states—requires any entity that wishes to open a new medical facility or expand an existing one to demonstrate that there is a bona fide need for the services to be provided by the facility in its area. 

    If the government deems it as unnecessary it can deny it an operating license. These laws are called Certificate of Need (CON) laws. In effect, such laws give established medical providers the unique power to challenge investments by would-be competitors simply by alleging there’s no need for additional services. Both the Georgia State Assembly and Senate passed bills loosening restrictions in the state’s Certificate of Need Laws. 

     While the Governor should sign these changes into law as a step in the right direction, a full repeal of the CON laws would be the best possible outcome. In such a scenario, Georgia would join the twelve states that have already repealed their CON laws or allowed them to expire. Georgia’s existing CON laws epitomize an antiquated economic perspective that effectively suppresses competition and boosts prices by ceding power to the government to determine how the healthcare market should function. 

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    Hazel Trice Edney

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  • The Herschel Walker Scandals: A Guide To The Abortion And Domestic Violence Allegations That Have Roiled The Campaign

    The Herschel Walker Scandals: A Guide To The Abortion And Domestic Violence Allegations That Have Roiled The Campaign

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    Topline

    Georgia Republican Senate candidate Herschel Walker remains close in the polls with Sen. Raphael Warnock (D) despite regular eruptions of negative stories about Walker’s past that began almost immediately upon his entering the race in August 2021.

    Timeline

    September 2, 2021A friend of Walker’s ex-wife claims he threatened and stalked her in Texas in 2002, according to a police report seen by CNN, throwing a wrench in the Senate candidate’s narrative of being a “family man” (Walker’s campaign declined to comment on the report).

    February 11, 2022A redacted police report seen by the Associated Press reveals another incident in 2001 when police in Irving, Texas, confiscated Walker’s handgun after his therapist called 911, saying he was “volatile,” armed, frightening his ex-wife, Cindy Grossman, and toying with the idea of “having a shootout” with police (Walker denied he had ever been abusive toward Grossman in an interview with NBC News).

    August 27, 2022Another woman, Walker’s ex-girlfriend (whose name has not been made public), claims he threatened to kill her after she tried to break up with him in 2012, allegedly telling her that he would “blow her head off” and then kill himself, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported, citing police reports in Irving, Texas (Walker was never charged, and a campaign spokesperson told the outlet the claims are false).

    October 3, 2022In a bombshell Daily Beast report, Walker’s ex-girlfriend alleges the hardline anti-abortion candidate—who has expressed support for a nationwide abortion ban at 15 weeks with no exceptions for rape, incest or risk to the mother—paid her $700 for an abortion in 2009, allegedly telling her it wasn’t the “right time” for him to have a child (Walker fiercely denies the report in a Twitter post, arguing the claim was a “hatchet job from a Democrat activist,” and threatening to file a defamation suit against the Daily Beast for reporting it).

    October 4, 2022Later that day, one of Walker’s sons, popular conservative social media star Christian Walker, slams his dad in a video diatribe posted on Twitter, accusing him of committing “atrocities” against his mom, and arguing he was an absent father to each of his four children—Walker has previously criticized absentee fathers, particularly in African-American households (Walker tweeted in response, “I LOVE my son no matter what”).

    October 7, 2022Days after the Daily Beast report, Walker’s ex-girlfriend tells the New York Times he urged her to have a second abortion in 2011, two years after she claimed he paid for her to have the procedure, although she refused the second time around, giving birth to one of Walker’s four children (Walker’s campaign declined to comment on the allegations to Forbes).

    October 14, 2022Walker comes under fire again after briefly pulling out a “prop” police badge in a debate against incumbent Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock, saying he’s “never pretended to be a police officer” and claiming the badge is real—even though there is no record of him ever working with law enforcement (Walker had attended training at the FBI Academy in Quantico, Virginia, in 1989, although there is no evidence he worked with the agency, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported).

    Contra

    Walker, a former NFL running back and Heisman Award winner with the University of Georgia, has admitted to a history of domestic violence, telling Axios last December he is “accountable” for his actions, which he blamed on his mental health issues. He also told Axios he’s recovered from issues, saying he’s “better now than 99%” of Americans. He also addressed his history of mental health in a recent campaign ad, saying “by the grace of God, I’ve overcome it.”

    Surprising Fact

    Recent polling has been mixed. Walker, who was once neck-and-neck with Warnock, tumbled after the abortion scandal broke earlier this month, with a Survey USA poll released October 5 pegging him 12 points behind Warnock among likely Georgia voters (50% to 38%). Last week, however, an Emerson College poll found the two candidates within two percentage points of each other, with Warnock narrowly ahead 48% to 46%. An earlier Emerson survey released in August found Walker ahead 46% to 44%. Both parties have been keeping a close eye on the Senate race, one of a handful that could determine who controls the chamber, which is locked in a 50-50 tie, with Vice President Kamala Harris acting as the tie-breaking vote.

    Tangent

    Despite the recent scandals, major Republican officials have stood by the Trump-endorsed candidate. In a statement earlier this month, Republican Senate Committee Chair, Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.), said he supports Walker and “Georgians will stand with him, too.” GOP super PAC Senate Leadership Fund leader Steven Law said Walker would “make things better.”

    Further Reading

    Herschel Walker Acknowledges He Gave Ex $700 Check—But Has ‘No Idea’ What For (Forbes)

    Herschel Walker ‘Prop’ Badge: Candidate Has Long Record Of Claiming To Be A Cop (He’s Not) (Forbes)

    Herschel Walker Tumbles In Georgia Senate Poll As Scandals Mount (Forbes)

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    Brian Bushard, Forbes Staff

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