Posted on 11/09/2002 5:11:03 AM PST by FreedomPoster
|
||||||
State Sen. Rooney Bowen of Cordele said in an interview he would leave the Democratic Party and join the Republicans because it would be the best thing for his South Georgia constituents.
Also Friday, Democratic Sens. Don Cheeks of Augusta and Dan Lee of LaGrange formally announced their decision to switch to the Republican Party.
Adding those three senators will give the Republicans a 29-27 majority, their first in the Georgia Senate since Reconstruction, to go along with their first governor since that era.
"We want a functioning, governing coalition of Georgians who want to work together," Perdue told a crowd in LaGrange, where Lee announced his switch at a stop on Perdue's airport "victory tour."
Democratic Lt. Gov. Mark Taylor accused Perdue of "buying off" senators with choice leadership positions and local projects.
When Lee announced the switch, Perdue introduced him as one of his floor leaders. Cheeks acknowledged he was promised funding for a cancer research center in Augusta -- for which Perdue announced his support during his stop in the city.
"I would not have made the switch if I had not had the commitment the cancer center was coming," Cheeks said after announcing he would become a Republican.
Claiming a majority in the Senate would allow Republicans to wrest much of the power from the Senate's presiding officer, the Democratic lieutenant governor, when the Legislature convenes in January.
Senate rules give the lieutenant governor the authority to make committee appointments, but those rules can be changed by the majority party. Committee heads set the agenda on which bills are considered and which are not.
"The central power of the lieutenant governor is the power to appoint committees and to appoint chairs, especially the appropriations committee chair," explained former Lt. Gov. Pierre Howard, Taylor's predecessor.
Senate Republican Leader Eric Johnson of Savannah wouldn't say whether he expects his party to use its new strength to turn Taylor's job into a largely ceremonial one.
Senate Minority Whip Tom Price (R-Roswell) suggested not all committee chairmanships would necessarily go to Republicans.
An angry Lt. Gov. Taylor, in an interview Friday, said the party switchers should resign and run for office again as Republicans.
"This struggle is not over," said Taylor, who is striving to keep waffling Democrats in the fold. "I reached out to [Perdue] on election night, promised his agenda would be treated fairly in the Senate. At the same time, he's cutting all these backroom deals. This is a continuing process and I can assure you this process will continue right up until the Senate organizes."
Democrats hold 106 of the 180 state House seats, but the GOP is targeting about 10 rural Democrats in the House to switch, Republican officials said.
"This is about building a coalition, not partisanship," the governor-elect said.
Perdue said some Democrats who aren't switching parties will still support his agenda.
Sen. Regina Thomas (D-Savannah), who attended Perdue's appearance in Savannah on Friday, said she wasn't switching parties, but that she would likely vote with the new governor at times.
"We are going to have to work together to make things better," Thomas said. "It's going to be different, but it's not going to be a bad different."
Perdue, a longtime Democrat who switched to the Republican Party in 1998, tapped Sen. Bill Stephens (R-Canton) as his floor leader Friday. Floor leaders carry the governor's legislation in the Senate and line up votes for his initiatives.
Lee and Cheeks were strong candidates for switching from the start. Both have been at odds with the state's Democratic leadership over the last few years, notably over redistricting. Cheeks was upset that his Augusta district was loaded with minority voters under the latest redrawing of political boundaries, and Lee complained bitterly about his West Georgia district being divided up in an effort to strengthen Democratic candidates elsewhere.
Also, Cheeks said Senate Majority Leader Charles Walker (D-Augusta) tried to knock him out of the Legislature by running a candidate against him this year. The candidate withdrew from the race because she didn't live in the district. Walker was defeated Tuesday.
Lowell Greenbaum, chairman of the Richmond County Democratic Party in Augusta, said Cheeks has often voted with Republicans, so his defection was no surprise.
"This is not so much a betrayal of the Richmond County party as it is a betrayal of Taylor and the good work he does," Greenbaum said. "We will put up a qualified candidate to run against [Cheeks] in 2004."
Since Perdue rode a strong rural vote to victory over Gov. Roy Barnes on Tuesday, he and Republican leaders have been working aggressively to court rural and small-town Democrats. While on the plane Friday between Albany and Savannah, Perdue was talking by phone with Bowen.
Bowen said he decided to switch to ensure that he could "bring more back to the community." He said he hoped to remain chairman of the Senate Public Safety Committee.
Bowen won re-election Tuesday over Carden H. Summers, a Cordele Republican. Cheeks and Lee were re-elected as Democrats without opposition.
Speculation on who might switch next turned to state Sen. Jack Hill (D-Reidsville). Hill attended the Perdue stop in nearby Savannah, but did not acknowledge that he would go over to the Republican side. He said he showed up to support Perdue.
Some lawmakers are resisting Perdue. Sen. Peg Blitch (D-Homerville) said Friday she was sticking with the Democrats, despite pressure from Republicans.
"They haven't let up," said Blitch. "But I ran as a Democrat. Mark Taylor has done more for rural Georgia than any other individual I know. There aren't as many voters down here so they [Democrats] aren't doing it for political reasons. They are doing it because it's the right thing to do."
-- Staff writers Jim Tharpe and John McCosh contributed to this article.
He's far more valuable where he is. Here's a well-respected democrat, pretty much immune in any re-election bid (and from any serious hounding by the press especially with democrats in a minority), who publically calls democrats idiots to their faces. This only works for us if he is a democrat.
States that don't have principled democrats (i.e. nearly all of them other than Georgia), have got to look at their choice of candidates and turn away from the left. Zell is the Jiminy Cricket of the dems, constantly telling them how stupid they are being while their noses grow and grow and grow with each new lie. Where did pinocchio end up? A jackass, of course. =)
Zell is an example for everyone who is registered democrat but votes republican. For all these people, we need at least one Zell Miller!
I don't remember Taylor complaining about "backroom deals" when it was Roy Barnes cutting them...and Roy was King of the backroom deal.
Guess it just depends on whose ox is being gored, huh Marky?
The Pelosi appointment could have that effect. I wonder how many members of the U.S. House will now switch. Speaking of GA, what are Jim Marshall's politics?
Anybody got any idea what the final lineup in the state House is going to be? If the Republicans end up with at least working majorities in the two houses, can they redistrict?
The GOP should start dangling low-level appointments and promises of future help. Dems HATE to be out of power, their money machines (trial lawyers and unions) are going to dry up (now that the economy is down AND the Dems can't deliver on anything) and we can expand our lead everywhere. Our goal now is 60% of every House and Senate. Let that major party collapse (we haven't seen that happen in over a century!), and let them finally remove their masks and truly become the Socialist party or the Green Party (or both), in name as well as in substance.
The democrats are getting a crash course in unintended consequences -- not that they'll learn anything from it.
You must mean Oakland Cemetary located in my neighborhood. It is the final resting place of five Confederate generals and approx. 2500 Confederate soldiers. Anyone visiting Atlanta should see it.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.