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Tag: Governor Brian Kemp

  • Gov. Kemp delivers final State of the State address, touts Georgia’s progress

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    Day four of the Georgia Legislative calendar took place on Thursday, January 15.

    On the Senate floor, Governor Brian Kemp delivered his annual State of the State address at 11:00 a.m. Kemp gave business leaders and local leaders, including Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens and former Atlanta Mayor and Democratic Gubernatorial candidate Keisha Lance Bottoms, a preview of his speech at the 72nd Eggs & Issues event at Mercedes-Benz Stadium on Wednesday, January 14.

    “There’s no question the state of our state is stronger, more prosperous, and safer today than it was in January 2019. But I want to be clear. This success isn’t guaranteed,” Kemp (above, center) said during his speech. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    Kemp was joined behind the lectern by Lt. Gov. Burt Jones. Both men had family members in the gallery. Dickens was also in attendance and received applause from the General Assembly when House leader Jon Burns announced his presence.

    Burns said he had some misgivings because he had to introduce Kemp for the final time as governor. He said he couldn’t thank Kemp enough for his work over the past seven years.

    “You’ve done so much for this state,” Burns said.

    Kemp began his final State of the State by saying it has been an honor to serve the state of Georgia.

    “There’s no question the state of our state is stronger, more prosperous, and safer today than it was in January 2019. But I want to be clear. This success isn’t guaranteed,” said Kemp during his speech.

    Kemp added that communities and ports are safer and that unemployment is down. His speech included investments in infrastructure projects, K-12 education, and tax rebates.

    “That’s why my budget proposal will include a fourth, one-time, $1-billion-dollar tax rebate this year that will return or save the average filer $250 and a married couple up to $500,” Kemp said. “With this rebate, my administration and this General Assembly will have returned over $7.5 billion in surplus revenue to the taxpayers of our state over the last four years.”

    Kemp made sure to tout his administration’s responsible fiscal policies and conservative budgeting during his speech. “I learned a long time ago that it’s better to be a workhorse than a show horse,” Kemp said.

    The day’s order of business in the House began with Rep. Matt Hatchett, the chairman of the Influential House Appropriations Committee, announcing that fellow House members should pick up their budget books.

    The first and second readings of bills and resolutions began at 10:23 a.m. and 10:29 a.m., respectively. The Lovejoy High School 5A state championship cheerleading squad was invited to the gallery to be recognized as Clayton County’s first state championship cheerleading team.

    House Representatives and sisters of AKA took a moment to recognize the 118-year-old sorority on the House floor on Thursday, January 15, 2026. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    The 118th anniversary of Alpha Kappa Alpha’s Founder’s Day was also recognized on the House floor. The sorority was started at Howard University on January 15, 1908.

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    Donnell Suggs

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  • Georgia General Assembly kicks off session with budget and reform talks

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    Members of the Georgia House of Representatives, House Speaker Jon Burns, and the two vacant seats are all represented on the digital board on the House floor on Monday, January 12, 2026. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    For the next 40 legislative days, the Georgia Legislature will begin sponsoring bills, assigning them to committees, posting them to the calendar, passing them, voting on them, and ultimately creating laws for all Georgians. Whether the people of Georgia, with a population of 11 million and growing, like or understand the laws is why coverage of what takes place under the Gold Dome is important for readers. Georgia

    A woman displays one of her signs for the first day of the legislative session. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    On Monday, January 12, the Georgia General Assembly, which consists of the House of Representatives and the Senate, gathered under the Gold Dome to begin the 2026 session. Some of the priorities Speaker of the House Jon Burns listed in an email to the press were as follows: property tax reform, housing affordability, increased access to affordable healthcare, and strengthening literacy throughout the state. 

    Housing affordability has been a top concern for the State Representatives currently running for governor. Rep. Derrick Jackson (D-97) and Rep. Ruwa Romman (D-68) attended a Democratic gubernatorial forum in Savannah on Thursday, January 8, and said as much during their time on stage at Jonesville Baptist Church. 

    Three new members of the House Representatives, Akbar Ali (District 106), Eric Gisler (121), and Bill Fincher (District 23), were recognized at the start of the session.

    A 40-day calendar was not unanimously approved by the House, but was adopted by a majority vote. Romman was one of the representatives who was allowed to pose a question on making the calendar more accepting of religious holidays and observances. She did not vote in favor of the 40-day calendar. 
    A 40-day calendar was not unanimously approved by the House, but was adopted by a majority vote. Romman was one of the representatives who was allowed to pose a question on making the calendar more accepting of religious holidays and observances. She did not vote in favor of the 40-day calendar. 

    A 40-day calendar was not unanimously approved by the House, but was adopted by a majority vote. Romman was one of the representatives who was allowed to pose a question on making the calendar more accepting of religious holidays and observances. She did not vote in favor of the 40-day calendar. 

    Eliminating the state income tax and increasing the literacy rate among Georgia’s children are among the House’s priorities, according to Burns.

    Regarding the latter, for example, only 32% of Black fourth graders in this state are reading at proficiency or above, while 43% of white and 53% of Asian peers, according to data from the National Assessment of Educational Progress. 

    A portrait of Lerot R. Johnson, the first Black man elected to the State Senate, is inside the halls of the Capitol. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    Monday was a busy day in the people’s house. Along with the first day of the session, people from all walks of life took to the Capitol’s south steps to state their case for what they believe is important to their fellow Georgians.

    Black women took advantage of the large amount of press and legislative leadership in the building by holding a press conference on the south steps. Georgia Black Women’s Roundtable’s “Black Women U3: United, Unapologetic, Unstoppable took place at 11:30 a.m., after the session began. 

    A “Pack the Capitol” event was held in the lobby of the State Capitol. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) hosted it, and it was the first public demonstration to display the collective power of the people, according to a release by the organization. The rally began at 10:00 a.m.

    Meanwhile, Reproductive Freedom for All Georgia set up a table inside room 216. Meanwhile, Reproductive Freedom for All Georgia set up a table inside room 216. On the south steps, members of the Georgia Majority for Gun Safety wore bright orange shirts and held signs calling for common-sense gun control. 

    The first House session of the year also began at 10:00 a.m. and ended at 11:30 a.m. The Senate Ethics Committee will meet at 2:00 p.m.

    Grace Towns Hamilton, the first Black woman elected to the Georgia House of Representatives, also has her portrait inside the Capitol. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    On Tuesday, Governor Brian Kemp is scheduled to address the General Assembly about the state’s budget for fiscal years 2026 and 2027. The meeting will take place in room 341 and will be available for public viewing via the House broadcast YouTube page. 

    On Wednesday, Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, one of the many people running for the Governor’s office, and Georgia Insurance Commissioner John King will make their pitches to the budget committee at 1 and 1:30 p.m. And on Thursday, Attorney General Chris Carr, who is also running for governor, spoke to the budget committee on behalf of the state’s Department of Law. 

    Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

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    Donnell Suggs

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  • Kemp sending Georgia National Guard troops to join crackdown on D.C. crime

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    ATLANTA – Gov. Brian Kemp announced Friday that he is sending 316 members of the Georgia National Guard to Washington, D.C., to support President Donald Trump’s use of troops to crack down on crime in the nation’s capital.

    The Georgia Guard contingent heading to Washington will include 300 soldiers and 16 support staff.

    “Georgia is proud to stand with the Trump administration in its mission to ensure the security and beauty of our nation’s capital,” Kemp said. “We share a commitment to upholding public safety and are grateful to these brave Guardsmen and women, for the families that support them, and for their dedication to service above self.

    “As they have demonstrated again and again, our Georgia Guard is well equipped to fulfill both this mission and its obligations to the people of our state.”

    With Kemp’s announcement, Georgia becomes the eighth state to deploy more than 2,200 Guardsmen from around the nation to provide a visible presence in support of local law enforcement in Washington. All eight are led by Republican governors.

    Trump issued an executive order last month declaring a crime emergency in the District of Columbia, which has prompted criticism from Democrats who argue violent crime rates are higher in other cities that have not drawn the president’s attention and that using the military to police U.S. civilians is illegal.

    “The uniform should never be used to intimidate and divide but to protect and serve,” said state Sen. Kenya Wicks, D-Fayetteville, one of several military veterans in the General Assembly who spoke out against the deployment Friday at a news conference inside the state Capitol. “Not only is it unconstitutional. It is a violation of the oath Guard members are sworn to uphold.”

    “This is not about public safety,” added state Rep. Eric Bell, D-Jonesboro. “It’s an erosion of American freedom.”

    Kemp said Friday that sending Georgia National Guard troops to Washington is a separate mission from his decision late last month to deploy about 75 soldiers and airmen to help support U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operations across Georgia.

    The 300 Georgia Guard troops heading to Washington will relieve service members who have been stationed in the District of Columbia from the start of the mission. They are scheduled to mobilize by the middle of this month and will be on active duty in Washington shortly thereafter, barring any changes to the schedule that may arise.

    The 16 support staff personnel were sent earlier this week to Joint Base Anacostia-Boiling in Washington where they will work with other military personnel providing support for the broader mission. They are not expected to have any direct interaction with civilians.

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    Dave Williams and Capitol Beat News Service

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  • Debra Shigley: No right, and NOBODY, is safe

    Debra Shigley: No right, and NOBODY, is safe

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    Like many women in Georgia and across the country — I was shaken to my core the day that Roe v. Wade was overturned. I am a mother of five children. I know there is no safe pregnancy without access to abortion care. Without control over our bodies, we are not free. The warnings of what the Supreme Court intended to do didn’t lessen the shock – I felt a deep anger, sadness, and grief. I knew that the Georgia abortion ban was deadly. Now I feel that same anger, sadness, and grief as I see the worst case scenario come to pass. 

    Just this week, we learned of Amber Nicole Thurman, a 28 year-old mother, who died after becoming septic when doctors delayed performing a routine Dilation and Curettage (D&C) procedure. Thurman suffered in pain for more than 20 hours, her organs failing. When doctors finally operated, it was too late.

    In the weeks following the Dobbs decision, I could not forget the images of abortion bans immediately being signed into law across the country. I was disturbed when I noticed the pattern of who was in the room, singing these bills and banning our rights. Or moreover, who wasn’t in these rooms. Majority of these decision makers were men, men who not only were stripping me and every woman I love of our rights, but doing so with such little concern for the lives they so recklessly put at stake. I felt helpless. I was helpless. Plus, I immediately began to question where we go from here—and what role I would play in restoring abortion access to my friends, neighbors, and daughters. 

    The State of Georgia is culpable

    The same Georgia lawmakers – the same men – who were so eager to make abortion illegal, passed a law making a D&C procedure a felony with very few exceptions. This law directly led to Amber Nicole’s death. A D&C is a minor and routine procedure, but the law restricting it led to a little boy who now has to grow up without his mother. How can we expect that doctors will be able to provide the appropriate care when they are operating in a climate of fear of losing their careers? This fear is exactly what this law is designed to create – a chilling effect on medical care needed by women.

    Worst of all, Amber Nicole’s story isn’t unique. A woman named Candi Miller also died after being unable to seek care due to Georgia’s restrictive and controlling laws. How many more women’s stories are not being told in national news? How many more women are going to die because of a draconian law, put into place by Republican lawmakers who have no business acting as medical professionals? Additionally, how many women have already died? Amber and Candi’s deaths were preventable. Maternal health experts determined they were due to lack of access to safe abortion care, the same safe abortion care that was stolen from us. 

    Nobody is safe

    When Governor Kemp signed our state’s abortion ban into law, he said that ‘Georgia is a state that values life.’ And yet he has let many innocent women die because they needed medical care.  Georgia already has one of the worst maternal mortality rates in the country. Black women are three times more likely to die during pregnancy than their White counterparts. In the post-Roe world, Georgia’s maternal mortality rate is increasing, rising by 40% for women of color. 

    This is not about valuing life, this is about controlling women and denying us our privacy, dignity, and freedom. One of my strongest memories from law school is learning about the steady progression of individual rights secured in America. What alarms me is this rolling back of rights. We are witnessing the roll back of our nation’s agreement that we are all entitled to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. 

    In this climate, no rights, and no body is safe. Amber Nicole should be alive. Candi Miller should be alive. Pregnancy should never result in otherwise preventable death – women exercising bodily autonomy should not result in death.

    I decided to run for office because I needed to speak up.

    I cannot tell my daughter that her brother can make his own health care decisions, but she can’t. Also, I cannot allow my daughters to feel violated by their lack of bodily autonomy within this state. Lastly, I certainly cannot sit by and watch my daughters continue to be in the same kind of danger they are in now. I cannot, and I will not.

    Debra Shigley is a lawyer, former reporter and mother of five. Shigley is currently a candidate for Georgia House District 47. The opinions expressed are her own.

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    Opinion by Debra Shigley

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  • Georgia State Rep. Tanya Miller: Gov. Kemp Boasts of Failure While Our Children Bear its Burden

    Georgia State Rep. Tanya Miller: Gov. Kemp Boasts of Failure While Our Children Bear its Burden

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    Just weeks into the new school year, a tragedy unfolded at Apalachee High School. A troubled 14-year-old, armed with an AR-style rifle, shot and killed four people—two students and two teachers—leaving nine more critically injured. As our community reels, Governor Brian Kemp offers the same tired response: thoughts, prayers, and a call for “investigation” instead of action.

    But how many more investigations do we need? How many more children need to die before we stop hiding behind hollow platitudes and do something to prevent the next tragedy? It’s time for leadership, and it’s time for action. What Republicans are offering is too little, too late. 

    For years, Republican leaders in Georgia have prioritized guns over public safety. Governor Kemp’s first gubernatorial campaign in 2018 was built on promises to loosen gun restrictions. He even ran a TV ad where he pointed a rifle, point blank, at a teenage boy. Then, in 2022, he signed Senate Bill 319 into law, allowing both open and concealed carry without a permit, without fingerprinting, and without background checks or safety training.

    Governor Kemp says he wears his “F” grade from the Giffords Law Center as “a badge of honor.” But what does that say to the parents of the children killed at Apalachee High? It says that guns matter more than their children’s lives. It says that the gun lobby’s dollars are worth more than a child’s future. Kemp may find honor in his failure, but it is our children who pay its heavy price. 

    Governor Kemp’s suggestion that ‘now is not the time for politics‘ is a cop-out. Voters elect politicians to do a job. We are tasked with solving problems, not simply offering performative gestures. 

    Under Georgia law, it’s perfectly legal for a minor to possess an assault weapon like the one used at Apalachee High. There are no restrictions on a child receiving an AR-15 as a gift or purchasing one from an unlicensed seller. Why on Earth is it easier for a teenager in Georgia to get a weapon of war than it is for them to vote or to see a doctor when they’re sick? 

    This isn’t an abstract question—it’s the deadly reality we face. Georgia’s laws are written in a way that prioritizes gun rights over children’s lives, and now is the time to change that. Guns don’t belong in the hands of unsupervised minors, and certainly not AR-style rifles that can fire dozens of rounds per minute. It is an unconscionable failure of leadership that this loophole still exists.

    Now, rest assured, no one is coming to take your guns. I’m not interested in stripping law-abiding citizens of their Second Amendment rights. Keep your gun. Just keep it secure. Use it responsibly. But don’t let your rights infringe on someone else’s God-given right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

    This is about common sense. It is about mandatory safe storage laws, which require guns to be kept locked and out of reach of children and others who could misuse them. It’s about red flag laws, which allow authorities to temporarily remove firearms from individuals deemed a danger to themselves or others. Plus, it’s about closing background check loopholes that let dangerous people get their hands on guns.

    These aren’t radical ideas. In fact, most gun owners already support them. The truth is, most people want to be responsible, but we need laws that ensure everyone is held to the same standard of responsibility.

    While we grieve, Republican lawmakers offer half-hearted gestures that lack urgency. For example, Republicans claim to care about mental health, yet they refuse to do the one thing that would most effectively increase resources for mental health care—a full expansion of Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act. In fact, Georgia dropped approximately 300,000 children from Medicaid programs in 2023. 

    Georgia also has one of the worst rankings for school psychologist-to-student ratios in the country.

    Instead, Republicans talk about arming teachers. It is an idea so absurd that it’s opposed by teachers, law enforcement, and school safety experts alike. They suggest building fortresses out of our schools, with armed guards and high-tech security systems. However, they do not offer real funding or support to make that a reality.

    These are not solutions. These are distractions from the real issue: we have a gun violence crisis in this state, and we’re doing nothing about it.

    We don’t have to live like this. We don’t have to send our children to schools that feel more like war zones than places of learning. And, we can make our communities safer by passing common-sense gun reforms that the majority of Georgians, including responsible gun owners, support.

    First, we need mandatory safe storage laws. Every gun should be stored safely, especially in homes with children. Safe storage prevents accidents, suicides, and keeps firearms out of the hands of those who shouldn’t have access to them.

    Second, we need to enact red flag laws. These laws have been proven to save lives by temporarily removing guns from individuals in crisis. Why wait until someone harms themselves or others? Why not act when we see clear warning signs?

    Finally, we must expand background checks to close the loopholes that allow dangerous individuals to obtain firearms without any oversight. It’s common sense that anyone buying a gun should pass a background check, no matter where or how they purchase it.

    And we must, without delay, ban minors from owning AR-style rifles. These are weapons of war, not tools for hunting or self-defense. A 14-year-old should not be able to access a weapon capable of such widespread carnage. This loophole is a direct threat to our children, and it must be closed.

    It is time for Republicans to lead or get out of the way. The question before us is simple: will we do something, or will we continue to do nothing? Will we protect our children, or will we continue to sacrifice their lives on the altar of political expediency?

    For years, Democrats in Georgia have been fighting for common-sense gun reforms, only to be blocked by Republicans who refuse to act. But the tide is turning. Voters are demanding action. Governor Kemp says this isn’t the time for politics, but that’s exactly what we need: the political will to stand up to the gun lobby and do what’s right for Georgia’s children.

    If our Republican colleagues can’t muster the courage to act, then they should step aside and let those of us who are willing to lead do the job we were elected to do.

    Let Kemp wear his badge of failure with pride. His failure mustn’t be ours. We can no longer afford to wait. Our children’s lives depend on it.

    Georgia State Representative Tanya F. Miller, Esq., is a Democrat representing the 62nd State House District which contains portions of Atlanta and East Point. Miller also serves as the lead counselor with the Georgia Federation of Public Service Employees. The views and opinions expressed are entirely her own.

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    Georgia State Representative Tanya F. Miller

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  • Georgia State Rep. Tanya Miller: Black History Should be Embraced

    Georgia State Rep. Tanya Miller: Black History Should be Embraced

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    Photo courtesy: Georgia House of Representatives

    Georgia is in the national spotlight as one of two must-win states that will determine who ascends to the presidency. You would expect that under such scrutiny, our public officials might want to present the state and its voters as educated, informed, involved citizens. 

    Why then, do Georgia’s leaders so often speak and act in ways that deliberately inflame and perpetuate our state’s long-held racial and political divisions? 

    Georgia’s growing population spans all ages, races, faiths, cultures, ethnicities, and educational and economic levels. Our statewide public school system is “majority minority,” meaning the majority of students in our school demographics are Black students, Asian students, Hispanic students, Native American students, and a delightful array of multiracial students. We also have students who live in rural, urban and suburban areas. All across Georgia, our inclusive public schools strive to offer each student an outstanding learning experience and access to the same opportunities. That’s how we build an educated, informed and involved citizenry.

    But, no. Instead of encouraging understanding and respect among students, Georgia’s leaders are strangely focused on what they insist are “divisive concepts.” Specifically, Georgia’s leaders are denying state funding for a course in Advanced Placement African American Studies.

    Let’s be clear. This is nothing less than an attempt to erase and devalue African American history and heritage. Denying funding for AP African American Studies – an obviously racist, politically-motivated decision – simply demonstrates to children of color that their story matters less, or not at all. That is wholly unacceptable.

    For reference, the Georgia Department of Education calls AP courses “college-level courses offered by trained high school teachers in the regular high school setting. Since 2008, over one-third of the seniors in Georgia public high schools were enrolled in AP courses. AP courses guarantee rigor in our classrooms.” It continues, “AP courses are challenging and require significant study time on a daily basis. Assessments in these classes require sophisticated critical thinking skills.” AP courses also allow high-scoring students the opportunity to earn college credit while in high school.

    Georgia currently provides state funding for AP courses in European History, Art History, World History, American Politics, and nearly three dozen other content areas. Yet, AP African American Studies alone is singled out as offensive, controversial, and even illegal for teaching so-called divisive concepts. 

    As of late July, Georgia School Superintendent Richard Woods planned on blocking the teaching of Advanced Placement African American Studies based on what he calls “areas of concern,” and he opines that, “If the Advanced Placement course had presented a comparative narrative with opposing views,” it would not violate Georgia law.

    There are no comparable “both sides” requirements for other AP courses.

    Georgia State Representative Tanya F. Miller, Esq. listens during Georgia Governor Brian Kemp’s annual State of the State Address inside the Georgia State Capitol on Thursday, January 11, 2024. (Photo: Itoro N. Umontuen/The Atlanta Voice)

    The fact is, understanding African American history is crucial for everyone. This country was built on the backs of Black Americans — literally— in many cases. AP African American Studies offers comprehensive, objective insights into American history, fostering a deeper understanding of our nation’s past and present. 

    All-encompassing knowledge equips students with critical thinking skills and a broader perspective, preparing them to be informed and engaged citizens who can better address the systemic issues that continue to divide our nation today. Instead, this course of study, which will enlighten and challenge all Georgia’s students, is effectively now banned.

    Much of the public outrage has been directed at Superintendent Woods, and while he certainly has earned the backlash he’s getting, it’s Georgia Governor Brian Kemp who intentionally created this manufactured controversy. Just two years ago, Mr. Kemp signed a law banning schools from teaching “divisive academic concepts about racism,” a law he championed by saying: “Here in Georgia, our classrooms will not be pawns to those who indoctrinate our kids with their partisan political agendas.” 

    Except, that is precisely what Governor Kemp and his fellow GOP state leaders are doing now. They act not to protect our children, but to boost their own political power. 

    So far, their proposed “solution” is to allow districts to choose to teach a non-AP African American studies class, which would not provide the full content or credit, the opportunity to earn college credit, or the academic recognition of the advanced placement course. Without state funding, only wealthier districts can afford to offer the AP course, thus deepening the educational inequalities and perpetuating urban and rural divisions in our state. 

    The hypocrisy is breathtaking.

    I am outraged by leaders who create divisive laws nobody asked for, then use them as cover for racism, all the while claiming to be neutral. One letter, asking for a few clarifications while taking no position on the issue, does not absolve Governor Kemp of responsibility. This is not a moment for equivocation. It is a time for leadership. 

    I am determined to stand up against this bigotry and for every child who deserves to have our nation’s full culture and history valued, shared and treated as significant. 

    That is why in the coming legislative session, I and other Democratic legislators will sponsor legislation to remove any barriers, real or perceived, to full state funding of AP African American Studies. I urge my colleagues on both sides of the aisle to join us to ensure that all Georgia students have access to a comprehensive, inclusive education and to all the opportunities they deserve, regardless of where they live. Moreover, Governor Kemp’s “divisive concepts” law must be repealed.

    I also urge Governor Kemp, Superintendent Woods and the State Board of Education to fully fund AP African American Studies– just like any other AP course – so that students all across the state have access to a comprehensive, inclusive education. 

    Georgia State Representative Tanya Miller, Esq., D-Atlanta, makes comments during delibrations at a House Judiciary Non-Civil Committee meeting on Monday, January 22, 2024 inisde the Georgia State Capitol. (Photo: Itoro N. Umontuen/The Atlanta Voice)

    We owe our students nothing less.

    Regardless of the law’s intent, shouldn’t it have occurred to our leaders to clarify the issue before imposing a statewide ban that forced districts to rework class schedules for hundreds of students before school started? 

    Now, assuming the funding is restored, those same districts will have to hurriedly rework all those schedules once more in order for the AP course to be taught this school year. It seems all too “clear” that Georgia’s students and educators are not a top priority in the machinations of our elected and appointed GOP officials.

    Finally, after weeks of public outrage, national negative publicity, and pushback from Georgia citizens and prominent elected officials, School Superintendent Richard Woods reversed course, announcing on August 7 that he will “follow the law,” adding that “the AP African American Studies course will be added to the state-funded course catalog effective immediately.”

    Isn’t it embarrassing that Georgia’s Republican leaders have to be shamed and humiliated in order to do the right thing for their constituents? 

    They should be ashamed.

    Georgia State Representative Tanya F. Miller, ESQ., is a Democrat representing the 62nd State House District which contains portions of Atlanta and East Point. Miller also serves as the lead counselor with the Georgia Federation of Public Service Employees. The views and opinions expressed are entirely her own.

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    Georgia State Representative Tanya F. Miller

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  • AP African-American studies will return to Georgia’s Public Schools

    AP African-American studies will return to Georgia’s Public Schools

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    Wednesday, Georgia State Schools Superintendent Richard Woods permitted the state to pay districts to teach an Advanced Placement course in African-American studies. This decision was a shocking about-face that came in about 48 hours. 

    Monday afternoon, Gwinnett County Public Schools was told the State Board of Education (SBOE) would not agree to adopt the class. Tuesday morning, that news became public. Wednesday, Georgia State Representative, Dr. Jasmine Clark, a Democrat from Lilburn, spoke out against the decision. 

    “I want to be clear to Governor Brian Kemp, State School Superintendent Richard Woods, and the State Board of Education: Do right by our students,” exclaimed Clark. “Reinstate AP African American Studies. Do right by our teachers who have spent time preparing to teach this class.  Do right by the students of Georgia. Because, Black history is not just slave history. Black history is not just a history of us being strange fruit hanging on trees. Black history is not just about us being shoved out and passed aside. Our history is rich and diverse, and it starts way before the transatlantic slave trade.”

    The College Board, a nonprofit testing entity, offers Advanced Placement courses across the academic spectrum. This includes math, science, social studies, foreign languages and fine arts classes. Students can earn college credit if they can attain high scores on their final exams.

    “What Superintendent Woods is doing is intellectual terrorism,” explained Jamal Bryant, Pastor of New Birth Missionary Baptist Church. “Because it is in fact handicapping our students from being able to compete on a global stage. To extract African American history out of the minds and out of the palette of Georgia students will and in fact, rewrite history.”

    Pastor Jamal Harrison Bryant of New Birth Missionary Baptist Church speaks during a press conference at the Georgia State Capitol on Wednesday, July 24, 2024. (Photo: Itoro N. Umontuen/The Atlanta Voice)

    Republicans’ push ‘anti-woke’ policies

    Two years ago, “divisive concepts” legislation was pushed through the General Assembly by Republicans. At the time, Senate Bill 377 and House Bill 1084 were similar bills with language from an executive order by former President Donald J. Trump. Both bills forbade the teaching of lessons that are “inherently racist or oppressive, whether consciously or unconsciously”. Equally important, the bill says no one “should feel discomfort, guilt, anguish, or any other form of psychological distress because of his or her race.” ​​

    Moreover, it was part of a push by Republicans to ban Critical Race Theory in Georgia Public Schools. By definition, Critical Race Theory seeks to highlight how historical inequities and racism continue to shape public policy and social conditions today. The concept is only taught in law schools. Critical Race Theory has never been taught in any K-12 public school in the United States.  

    But, Republicans continually argue that it promotes a distorted view of American history while vilifying white Americans as inherently racist. 

    Woods countered, in a statement, that schools will retain the ability to teach some or all of the standards in the AP African American studies course if they choose to do so.

    “When I reviewed the AP course, I had concerns about the state endorsing the totality of the course,” Woods wrote. “It’s my position that districts should use the existing course code – which offers them the flexibility to develop their own curriculum based on local priorities – or to use standards from the AP course if they choose and in consultation with their communities.”

    Members of the Government weigh in

    Atlanta City Council President Doug Shipman expressed his disappointment in Superintendent Woods’s decision. He said, in part:

     “I am deeply disappointed by the Georgia State School Superintendent’s decision not to approve the Advanced Placement (AP) African American studies class in high schools. African American history is an integral part of American history, and this decision is particularly detrimental to Atlanta, given its profound social justice legacy and significant contributions to our nation’s civil rights progress.

    Next, Governor Kemp wrote to State Superintendent Woods. He requested more information regarding his decision. The Governor’s Office does not have any decision-making powers in this regard. Nonetheless, Kemp asked Woods questions such as:

    • Did the state fund the pilot of the AP African American Studies course?
    • If so, how much did the pilot cost the state?
    • Over the past 10 years, how many pilot AP courses have been recommended by the state and how many have not been recommended?
    • How many students participated in the pilot of the AP African American Studies course?

    By the end of the day, Woods reversed his decision. However, his change of heart arrived after the Georgia Republican Party was excoriated locally, statewide, and around the nation.

    “Republicans do not want the best public schools that we can offer,” explained Georgia State Minority Leader Gloria Butler. They want our public schools starved of money. Our teachers are fired if they don’t toe the Republican line. How do I know? Because for 20 years, that’s what they’ve done.”

    Georgia Senate Minority Leader Gloria Butler speaks during a press conference at the Georgia State Capitol on Wednesday, July 24, 2024. (Photo: Itoro N. Umontuen/The Atlanta Voice)

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    Itoro N. Umontuen

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  • Governor Kemp signs controversial voting bills into law

    Governor Kemp signs controversial voting bills into law

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    Tuesday, Georgia Governor Brian P. Kemp signed three voting-related bills into law. These measures create new rules for voter challenges. Republicans claim the bills will secure future elections. Plus, the victory is sweet especially for some that believe the 2020 Presidential election was ‘stolen’.

    Kemp signed Senate Bill 189 into law Tuesday afternoon. The legislation creates new rules for challenging voter qualifications. It also bans the use of QR codes to count ballots after 2026. SB 189 also requires the counting of all advance and absentee ballots within an hour of the polls closing. Additionally, any political party or political body could qualify for the presidential ballot if it already has gained access to the ballot in at least 20 states or territories.

    Controversially, unhoused people without a permanent address must re-register to vote. They will not be able to vote at a homeless shelter. Persons that are “homeless and without a permanent address” — must visit the county’s registrar’s office. Previously, registered voters without permanent addresses have registered at shelters or government offices, including courthouses.

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    Itoro N. Umontuen

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  • Georgia Senate Republicans have hijacked State Rep. Omari Crawford’s high school sports mental health bill

    Georgia Senate Republicans have hijacked State Rep. Omari Crawford’s high school sports mental health bill

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    Tuesday, Georgia Senate Republicans successfully stole State Representative Omari Crawford’s bill which originally addressed mental health challenges currently facing high school athletes and pumped it full of culture war issues that serve as red meat for Conservatives. The current version of House Bill 1104 passed 31-21 along party lines. State Senator Clint Dixon, a Republican from Buford, says the Georgia Senate Education Committee and Youth added changes to the bill that protects children and empowers parents from a “dangerous” atmosphere.

    The Georgia Senate Education Committee and Youth added other bills that failed to pass previously. These bills include bathroom restrictions, transgender sports bans, and restrictions on when children can learn about sex education.  These proposals are similar to those by Republicans in other states.

    Georgia State Senator Clint Dixon, a Republican from Buford, speaks inside the Georgia Senate chamber on Tuesday, Match 26, 2024. (Photo: Itoro N. Umontuen/The Atlanta Voice)

    “This bill provides that public schools and private schools participating in sports leagues with public schools, the matter dealing with gender identity,” said Dixon. “And what it is no matter what the male would claim his gender identity is currently it would be based off of his birth certificate, and would not be allowed to play in those girls sports. It doesn’t have anything to do with CO Ed sports, it is just dealing with protecting women’s sports and girls sports in K through 12th grade.”

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    Itoro N. Umontuen

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  • ‘The state of our city is strong’: Dickens state of the city address preaches progress

    ‘The state of our city is strong’: Dickens state of the city address preaches progress

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    A video plays before Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens took the stage inside the Woodruff Arts Center on Monday, Mar. 25, 2024.
    Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    The auditorium inside the Woodruff Arts Center filled quickly after 8 a.m. Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens was going to give his annual State of the City Business Address. Coming out onto the stage to Usher’s “Yeah!”, Dickens immediately thanked the three former Atlanta mayors in attendance; Ambassador Andrew Young, Bill Campbell, and Shirley Franklin. 

    Dickens took a moment to thank the numerous government officials, City of Atlanta employees, his family and close friends. He also took time to thank the family of former Atlanta Mayor and legendary civil leader Maynard Jackson, the first Black mayor in the city’s history, who were also in attendance. This year marks the 50th anniversary of Jackson being elected.

    “I’m blessed to have a talented group of people on my team,” Dickens said. 

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    Donnell Suggs

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  • Kemp signs Georgia law reviving prosecutor sanctions panel. Democrats fear it’s aimed at Fani Willis

    Kemp signs Georgia law reviving prosecutor sanctions panel. Democrats fear it’s aimed at Fani Willis

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    ATLANTA (AP) — Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp signed a law Wednesday that lets a state commission begin operating with powers to discipline and remove prosecutors, potentially disrupting Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis’ prosecution of former President Donald Trump.

    “This legislation will help us ensure rogue and incompetent prosecutors are held accountable if they refuse to uphold the law,” Kemp said before signing the bill, flanked by Republican legislative leaders. “As we know all too well, crime has been on the rise across the country, and is especially prevalent in cities where prosecutors are giving criminals a free pass or failing to put them behind bars due to lack of professional conduct.”

    Though Kemp signed legislation last year creating the Prosecuting Attorneys Qualifications Commission, it was unable to begin operating after the state Supreme Court in November refused to approve rules governing its conduct. The justices said they had “grave doubts” about their ability to regulate the duties of district attorneys beyond the practice of law. Tuesday’s measure removes the requirement for Supreme Court approval.

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    Jeff Amy and Associated Press

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  • Georgia congresswoman Lucy McBath remains focused on the tasks at hand

    Georgia congresswoman Lucy McBath remains focused on the tasks at hand

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    Despite being drawn out of her district for the second time, U.S. Congresswoman Lucy McBath, D-Georgia, once again flashed a smile as she filed papers to run for Congress. This time in the newly-drawn 6th Congressional District. 

    In December, Georgia Republicans claimed they spent a lot of time and effort putting forth a redrawn map that complies with Judge Steve C. Jones’s order. 

    McBath, who has been representing the 7th Congressional District the last two years, immediately responded to Jones’ ruling by declaring her intention to run in the 6th Congressional District this year. The redrawn 6th is much friendlier turf for a Democrat. It includes portions of Cobb, Douglas, Fulton, and Henry Counties, plus a few Atlanta neighborhoods.

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    Itoro N. Umontuen

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  • How Democrats Avoided a Red Wave

    How Democrats Avoided a Red Wave

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    The coalition of voters who turned out to oppose Donald Trump in 2018 and 2020 largely reassembled yesterday, frustrating Republican expectations of a sweeping red wave.

    Under the pressure of high inflation and widespread disenchantment with President Joe Biden’s job performance, that coalition of young voters, people of color, college-educated white voters, and women eroded at its edges. And because Democrats began the night with so little margin for error in Congress, that erosion—combined with high Republican turnout—seemed likely to allow the GOP to seize control of the House, and possibly the Senate as well.

    But even if the GOP does squeeze out majorities in one or both chambers when the final votes are counted, its margins will be exceedingly narrow, with control of the Senate, once again, possibly turning on another Georgia runoff. Up and down the ballot, Democrats dominated among voters who believe that abortion should remain legal—despite predictions from Republicans and many media analysts that the issue had faded in importance. Democrats held House seats in states including Rhode Island, Virginia, Michigan, and Ohio that Republicans had confidently expected to capture. And with the exception of Georgia, which reelected Governor Brian Kemp, Democrats could win gubernatorial races in each of the five swing states that flipped from Trump to Biden in 2020—a development that would greatly ease Democratic fears of Trump allies trying to rig the vote (and potentially the presidency) in 2024.

    The results largely followed the outline of what I’ve called a “double negative” election. On balance, voter dissatisfaction with Biden’s performance meant that Democrats faced more losses, but the continuing unease about the Republican Party lowered the ceiling on GOP gains well below what the party might have expected.

    These relatively positive results for Democrats were so striking because the findings of the national exit poll conducted by Edison Research for a consortium of media organizations, like virtually all preelection polling, showed deeply pessimistic attitudes that typically spell doom for the sitting president’s party. More than three-fourths of voters, Edison found, described the economy as only “fair” or “poor.” Four-fifths of voters said inflation had caused them either severe or moderate hardship. Fifty-five percent of respondents said they disapproved of Biden’s job performance as president. His approval stood even lower in many of the key Senate battleground states: 43 percent in Nevada and Arizona, 42 percent in New Hampshire, just 41 percent in Georgia.

    Exit polls suggested that unhappiness over the economy could doom the most embattled Democratic Senate incumbent, Catherine Cortez Masto in Nevada, though that race remains on a knife’s edge awaiting the counting of the last mail ballots. Across a wide array of other battleground states, Republicans carried significant majorities of voters who expressed negative views on the economy.

    But Republicans did not win those economically pessimistic voters by quite as big a margin as midterm precedents had suggested. Usually, the party out of power has dominated voters with those views: Democrats, for instance, in 2018 won about 85 percent of those who described the economy as either not so good or poor. This year, Republicans slightly exceeded that result among those who called the economy “poor,” the most negative designation. But among those who gave the equivocal verdict of “not so good,” Republicans won only 62 percent, way down from the Democrats’ total four years ago.

    The relationship between presidential-approval ratings and the midterm vote was similar. Biden’s national job-approval rating in the exit poll (44 percent positive, 55 percent negative) resembled Trump’s in 2018 (45–54). But, compared with Republicans in 2018, Democrats this year carried slightly more of the voters who disapproved of Biden, as well as slightly more of those who approved of him. Particularly noteworthy: Democrats won almost exactly half of voters who said they “somewhat disapproved” of Biden, whereas about two-thirds of voters who “somewhat disapproved” of both Trump in 2018 and Barack Obama in 2010 voted against their party in House races.

    These effects were even more pronounced in several of the battleground states. In 2018, no Republican Senate candidate in a competitive race carried more than 8 percent of the voters who disapproved of Trump, the exit polls found. But Cortez Masto and Raphael Warnock in Georgia carried about 10 percent of them, while Senator Mark Kelly in Arizona and Lieutenant Governor John Fetterman in Pennsylvania reached about 15 percent of support with Biden disapprovers, the exit polls found. In New Hampshire, the exit poll found Senator Maggie Hassan winning a striking one-fifth of voters who disapproved of Biden. Similarly, Warnock won about one-third of voters who described the economy as only fair or poor, while Kelly and Fetterman approached 40 percent with them in the exit polls. All of this may sound like a small difference—but it proved to be the margin between defeat and victory for Democrats in Pennsylvania and New Hampshire, and potentially in Arizona and Georgia.

    How did Democrats overperform recent historical trends with voters dissatisfied with the economy or the president? Attitudes about the former president, and the party he has reshaped in his image, may largely explain the difference. In the exit poll, nearly three-fifths of voters said they had an unfavorable view of Trump, and more than three-fourths of them voted Democratic this year. Many of the Republican Senate and gubernatorial candidates he helped propel to their nominations also faced negative assessments from voters. And despite predictions from both Republicans and media analysts that abortion had faded as a galvanizing issue, a clear three-fifths majority of all voters in the national exit poll said they believed that the procedure should remain legal in all or most circumstances—and about three-fourths of them voted Democratic. Democrats also won about three-fourths of the voters who said abortion should remain mostly legal in the key Senate states of Arizona, Georgia, and Pennsylvania, and two-thirds of them in New Hampshire. In Michigan, Governor Gretchen Whitmer won a stunning four-fifths of the voters who said abortion should remain legal.

    These concerns about Trump and abortion rights didn’t completely erase voter discontent over the economy and inflation. Inflation still ranked highest when the exit polls asked voters what issues most concerned them (with abortion a very close second). And Republicans still won most of the voters who expressed the purest “double negative” views—those with unfavorable opinions of both Biden and Trump. But it’s hardly a surprise that the party out of the White House might win most voters who express an unfavorable view of the sitting president, no matter what other attitudes they hold. The notable part was that the exit poll found Democrats holding 40 percent of those double-negative voters—a number that helped them apparently avoid a titanic red wave.

    In the past, when midterms have turned decisively against the sitting president’s party, one reason is a backlash among independent voters, who are the most likely to shift allegiance based on current conditions in the country. Each time the president’s party suffered especially large losses in a midterm since the mid-1980s (a list of electoral calamities that includes 1986, 2006, and 2018 for Republicans and 1994, 2010, and 2014 for Democrats), independents have voted by a double-digit margin for House candidates from the other party, according to exit polls. But yesterday’s exit polls showed the two parties splitting independent voters about evenly on a national basis and Democrats winning among them in the Arizona, Georgia, New Hampshire, and Pennsylvania Senate races.

    The other ingredient in decisive midterm losses has been what political strategists call “differential turnout.” Almost always in American history, the party out of the White House has shown more urgency about voting in midterms than the side in power, but when midterms get really bad, that disparity becomes especially pronounced.

    A complete picture of this midterm won’t be available for months. But the early indications are that this year’s electorate leaned more toward the GOP than the past few campaigns. In 2020 and 2018, the exit polls found that self-identified Democrats made up slightly more of the voters than Republicans. But the exit polls yesterday showed Republicans with a slight edge.

    Young people gave Democrats preponderant margins in most races, but likely made up slightly less of the electorate than they did in 2018. Among voters of color, the story was similar—some erosion in support for Democrats, but not a catastrophic decline. The exit polls showed Democrats winning about 60 percent of Latino voters and 85 percent of Black voters. That was down just slightly from their level in 2020, though it represented a bigger fall from the party’s support with those voters in 2018. Republicans in the coming days will likely trumpet the continuing gains—though Democrats can fairly rebut that they have a clear opportunity to rebound if and when the economy recovers.

    Before Election Day, conservative pundits speculated rampantly about a sweeping shift toward the GOP among nonwhite voters without a college degree—what Axios breathlessly declared “a political realignment in real time.” But Democrats nationally carried about two-thirds of those non-college-educated voters of color, almost exactly their share among minorities with degrees; the picture was similar in the heavily diverse states across the Sun Belt, the exit polls found. Among white voters, the familiar educational divides held: The national exit poll showed Democrats slightly underperforming expectations among college-educated whites (winning only about half of them) but still showing much better with them than among non-college-educated whites, who once again broke about two-to-one for the GOP. (College-educated white voters did provide more resounding margins for Kelly, Hassan, and Fetterman, the polls found.)

    The full results won’t be known for days, and control of the Senate may not be settled until another runoff election in Georgia. But the 2024 presidential contest will likely kick into motion almost immediately. Trump has repeatedly hinted that he may announce a 2024 candidacy as soon as next week—and the GOP’s gains, even if less than the party anticipated, will only encourage him.

    Throughout American history, midterm results have had little relationship to the results in the next presidential contest. Presidents Jimmy Carter and George H. W. Bush had relatively good first-term midterm results in 1978 and 1990, and then lost for reelection two years later. Harry Truman, Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton, and Barack Obama were all shellacked in their first midterm and then won reelection.

    Could Biden follow those precedents and recover in time for 2024? Much will depend on the economy. Doug Sosnik, a senior White House adviser to President Clinton during his recovery after the 1994 midterm, pointed out that the period from fall of the third year to spring of the fourth year is when voters really lock in their judgment about a first-term president. That doesn’t leave Biden much runway to dispel the economic pessimism that weighed so heavily on Democrats yesterday. Many economists believe that the Federal Reserve Board’s actions will trigger at least a mild recession before squeezing out inflation, potentially by late next year.

    Given the doubts many voters have expressed about Biden’s age, it’s not clear that a rising economic tide would lift his prospects as much as it did for Reagan, Clinton, and Obama. Many Republicans (and even some Democrats) believe that the loss of the House, and possibly still the Senate, when all of this year’s votes are counted will increase pressure on Biden to step aside in 2024. In the exit polls, two-thirds of voters said they did not want to see Biden run again.

    Yet the GOP may be saddled with a 2024 nominee carrying even more baggage. Trump will inevitably interpret any GOP gains as a demand for his return. But even in a Republican-leaning electorate, the exit polls still registered enormous resistance to him.

    One of the night’s clearest winners was Trump’s most serious competitor for the next GOP nomination, Governor Ron DeSantis of Florida, who won a convincing victory that included breakthrough results in heavily Latino Miami-Dade County. His success will likely embolden the Republicans urging the party to turn the page from Trump—though Trump has already signaled his willingness to bludgeon DeSantis to secure the nomination, the way he did Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz in 2016.

    For Biden, the situation will likely be more equivocal: The results for Democrats probably won’t prove good enough to completely quiet the chatter about replacing him, but nor will they likely prove so bad as to significantly amplify it. After this double-negative election produced something of a standoff between the parties in 2022, it remains entirely possible that the nation may find itself plunged into the same grueling trench warfare between Trump and Biden again two years from now.

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    Ronald Brownstein

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