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Tag: Ruwa Romman

  • First Democratic Gubernatorial forum of the year takes place in Savannah

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    Jason Esteves introduces himself to the crowd inside Jonesville Baptist Church on January 8, 2026. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    SAVANNAH, Ga. – The first Democratic gubernatorial forum of the year took place on Thursday at a Baptist church. The Democratic Party of Chatham County hosted the forum, and WJCL News anchor Greg Coy was the evening’s moderator. The nave inside Jonesville Baptist Church quickly filled as the locals looked to hear from the men and two women, former Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms and State Rep. Ruwa Romman, running for Georgia’s top seat. 

    Photoby Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    A large table sat on a stage behind a pew. The names of the people running for governor and participating in the forum were as follows: Bottoms, Olu Brown, Geoff Duncan, former State Representative Jason Esteves, State Representative Derrick Jackson, Romman, and Former DeKalb County CEO Mike Thurmond. 

    To say this will be a competitive race for the gubernatorial blue seat is a clear understatement. Along with polished and experienced politicians such as Duncan and Thurmond, there are popular and dynamic candidates like Esteves and Romman, as well as familiar names like Bottoms. There will also be some not-so-familiar names on the primary ballot, such as Brown, a former pastor of an Atlanta church.

    The church is tucked within a mostly Black neighborhood on Montgomery Street, so Brown might have been familiar with the evening’s setting. 

    Campaign signs outside of Jonesville Baptist Church on Thursday, Jan. 8, 2026. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    Democratic Party of Chatham County Communications Chair Orlando Scott said his party anticipates this election will be the most important in the state’s history. He took a moment to condemn the militaristic violence that took place in Minneapolis earlier this week.

    “That is why tonight’s conversation about leadership matters,” Scott said. “Real leadership protects civilians and human rights.” 

    “One of these seven will be our next governor, and I’m glad they found their way to Savannah,” Savannah Mayor Vav Johnson said. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    Jonesville Baptist Church Senior Pastor, Bishop James G. Rodges, gave the invocation prior to the start of the forum. He was followed by Savannah Mayor Van Johnson, who said he wanted to welcome everyone to “The greatest city on Earth.” Former Savannah Mayors Edna Jackson and Otis Johnson were also in attendance.

    “One of these seven will be our next governor, and I’m glad they found their way to Savannah,” Johnson said.

    It was the first political forum of the year and also the first for Savannah native Celeste Epps. The 66-year-old told The Atlanta Voice she wanted to be “more informed” and “involved” this time around.

    Epps sat next to Safronia Ingram, another native of Savannah and an interested party.

    The forum began with each candidate speaking about how they could be a governor who works with the White House on behalf of Georgians. They each took a shot at the current President during their minute-long statements.

    “I don’t have to dream about fighting against Donald Trump. I’ve already done it and won,” Bottoms said.

    The second topic of discussion was housing affordability and how the candidates would tackle that issue.

    Thurmond, a multi-time elected statewide official, said he would “change and fundamentally shift how people keep roofs over their heads” by giving local leaders, like Johnson in Savannah, more power over housing in their cities and counties.

    Esteves received a loud ovation when he said he would stop private equity firms from buying homes in Georgia. “At the end of the day, we need leadership, and that’s what we are lacking,” he said.

    Romman, who has campaigned on housing affordability, said she also wants to stop corporations from buying homes.

    Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    The third topic of the forum, providing jobs and continuing the economic development that has taken place during the past terms of Georgia Governor Brian Kemp, followed a break in the live broadcast, which was aired on WJCL 22, the local ABC affiliate.

    Duncan, the former Lieutenant Governor, stated that economic development needs to occur throughout the state, not just in Atlanta. Bottoms agreed.

    “Community, compassion, and economic development can go hand-in-hand,” Bottoms said.

    “I believe in resourcing entrepreneurs,” Brown said while briefly introducing a plan to make cannabis legal and taxed in the state of Georgia. “Your governor has to dream big,” he said.

    The need to further workforce development was next on the topic list. All seven candidates agreed that the state’s minimum wage needed to be raised. Romman pointed out that the minimum wage in Georgia hasn’t been raised since she was seven years old in 1997.

    Esteves, who used affordable child care programs as an example, said, “I think it’s incredibly important to make it affordable for people to go back to work. As governor, I’m going to make sure we fill all of those gaps.”

    Left to right: Michael Thurmond, Keisha Lance Bottoms, and Geoff Duncan also attended the forum in Savannah on Thursday. Photo by Donell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    On expanding healthcare in the state, Bottoms said she would expand Medicaid coverage.

    “Even before the Big Ugly Bill, we did not expand Medicaid.”

    Duncan said the next governor would have to expand Medicaid, and that would mean working with the State Legislature.

    Esteves took a slight at Duncan by saying he had an opportunity to do something about expanding Medicaid when he was the Lieutenant Governor. It was the first time during the forum that a candidate addressed another candidate by name.

    Each candidate had a minute for a closing statement.

    “There are more of us than there are of them,” Romman said.

    “You can always count on me to put people ahead of politics,” Esteves said.

    Duncan said, “Doing the right thing will never be wrong. The right thing is for Geoff Duncan to run for governor as a Democrat.”

    Bottoms said, “I am here to earn your vote. This election is about the future.”

    Thurmond had the boldest closing statement. “I’m Mike Thurmond, and I will be your next governor. From the outhouse to the courthouse. With your vote, we’re going to the governor’s house.”

    Jackson, a father of seven and a U.S. Naval veteran, said, “This is personal. Every day when I wake up, I will come to your city. You won’t have to come to Atlanta.”

    After the forum, Ingram thought the forum was “interesting.”

    “The main thing I was looking for was facts and data,” she said. “I don’t think all of the candidates presented data.”

    Ingram added that she thought Duncan, Esteves, and Romman did the best job of providing complete answers to the moderator’s questions.

    Epps agreed that Esteves and Romman did the best. She had no previous knowledge of either candidate before Thursday night.

    “I felt they were answering the questions on point,” she said.

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    Donnell Suggs

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  • Rep. Ruwa Romman visits Manuel’s Tavern to kick off her “Georgia We Deserve” Tour

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    “Movement building is not polished. We can flip our state, one door at a time,” State Representative and gubernatorial candidate Ruwa Romman (above) said. “I can’t thank y’all enough for being here tonight.” Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    With less than two weeks before the Georgia Legislative Session begins, State Rep. Ruwa Romman got the 2026 portion of her pre-primary campaigning started. At Manuel’s Tavern on Saturday night, Romman was joined by her staff and a couple of dozen people in a back room of the bar to kick off her “Georgia We Deserve” campaign tour.

    Campaign literature rested on all of the tables. One card began with, “As Governor, Ruwa Will….”, while others listed her priorities and goals. Romman made her way from table to table, meeting and greeting supporters. It is now five months since the gubernatorial primary will take place on May 5. There’s no better time than the present to be campaigning. 

    On one of the TVs in the room, CNN’s broadcast of the invasion of Venezuela, and the kidnapping of the country’s president, Nicolas Maduro, his wife, and son, played on a loop. 

    American politics was back on a Saturday night in Atlanta. 

    “Movement building is not polished. We can flip our state, one door at a time,” Romman said. “I can’t thank y’all enough for being here tonight.”

    Romman is running against experienced politicians, but the people will decide who represents the Democratic Party, and the diversity of Atlanta’s voters was on display at Manuel’s on Saturday night.

    Following the interview, which was conducted by local journalist King Williams (left), Romman (right) took questions from supporters. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    Following the interview, Romman took questions from the audience about investments in public education, improving public transportation, how to volunteer for her campaign, strengthening union rights, ICE, raising minimum wage without accelerating inflation, and sustainable farming. 

    On ICE, Romman said, “I would start with working to repeal House Bill 1105,” Romman said. “Immigration is a federal issue, but there are state issues we can pursue.” 

    On access to better mental healthcare, Romman said, “What if instead of spending our money on private prisons, we spend it on mental healthcare?, she said. 

    “Keep the faith because this is going to be a long-term project,” Romman told the crowd at the end of the event. “I’m telling y’all, this is how you build it, like this. I promise you, Georgia is absolutely worth it.”

    Romman (left) took time to talk to supporters before and after the event on Saturday night. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    Romman told The Atlanta Voice that her campaign tour will continue to include small gatherings like the one that took place at Manuel’s. Small venues, such as coffee shops, and even walks along the Atlanta Beltline, will be future locations. 

    “I think right now, with people feeling more isolated because of the algorithm, there’s a clear need to be with people,” said Romman. She was one of many local politicians who greeted the two dozen Buddhist monks, led by Bhikkhu Pannakara, who had embarked on a 2,300-mile Walk for Peace, which included a passage through Georgia.

    The “Georgia We Deserve” tour continues. Immediately after the event, a line of supporters formed in front of Romman to take selfies with her and ask more questions. Romman said the door-knocking and hands-on approach will continue. Romman said the concept of speaking face-to-face with voters will be at the forefront of the campaign. 

    “By being here tonight, you all have proved our point,” Romman said. 

    A Ruwa Romman campaign sign on a chair in a hallway at Manuel’s Tavern on Saturday, January 3, 2026.
    Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

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    Donnell Suggs

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  • ‘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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