Tag Archives: Georgia

Is Ga.’s Supreme Court really supreme?

By: Randy Evans

Last October, the Evans Report made this prediction:

In 2013, Georgians — especially Georgia businesses — will pay higher, indeed likely much higher, insurance premiums. It will not be the result of any action (or inaction) by Insurance Commissioner Ralph Hudgens, Gov. Nathan Deal or the Georgia General Assembly. Instead, it will be the product of a series of unprecedented decisions made by the Georgia Supreme Court.Read more...

On Becoming a Georgia Judge

By: J. Randolph Evans

Ever wonder how judges get to be judges in Georgia?

Well, in Georgia, there are two ways to get to be a judge. First, get elected. Second, get appointed.

Getting elected is pretty straightforward. Georgia elects its judges. Anyone who meets the legal requirements for being a judge can qualify with the Georgia Secretary of State during the qualifying period and appear on the ballot. It Read more...

The Undead – Acorn still walks – Just The Numbers, Mam

By Les Dunaway

So you thought Congress had driven a stake through Acorn’ s heart? They probably missed because it’s heart is way to the left of where you’d expect. This monster seems to be hard to kill.

The good news is that the monster hasn’t gotten any smarter.  Fox reporters walked in an interviewed the conspirators in their “New York Communities for Change” office about their funding … Read more...

Carley Changes Political Landscape

By J. Randolph Evans

Justice George Carley turned Georgia judicial elections upside down with a single decision this week. Here is what happened.

2012 was shaping up as a pivotal election for Georgia’s judiciary. On July 31, 2012 (Georgia’s Primary Election), Georgia voters would elect a majority of Georgia’s seven Supreme Court justices.

Placing four justices on the same ballot at the same time carried significant implications. It meant that Read more...

Georgia Political News Coverage

By J. Randolph Evans

As the 2012 elections approach, voters are starting to pay attention.
Everyone agrees that cable news and the internet (including Twitter and
Facebook) have changed the world – especially the way voters get their
information. Both cable news and the internet give them what they want
when they want it. Yet, local media coverage remains an influential
part of the voter decision-making process.

Every Georgia officeholder, … Read more...

Judicial Elections and Reapportionment

By J. Randolph Evans

What do Georgia judicial elections and reapportionment have in common?
Nothing, but maybe everything – especially in 2012.

In 2012, many statewide judges around Georgia, including a majority of
Justices on the Georgia Supreme Court, will be on the Primary Election
Ballot.  Georgia judicial elections are supposed to be nonpartisan
affairs (although political parties and governors have been known to get
into a judicial race here … Read more...

No Shirtless Tweets of Governor Deal

By J. Randolph Evans

On Thursday, June 16, 2011, Congressman Anthony Weiner announced his resignation from the United States House.  Headline writers, late night comedians and cable news anchors were greatly disappointed.  Their ticket to double-meaning words and phrases and tawdry humor has come to an end.  Oddly, he finally did something that both Democrats and Republicans agreed with.

Read more...

2012 Georgia Judicial Elections Big

By J. Randolph Evans

2010 was a watershed election in Georgia politics. Republicans swept
every state constitutional office and took firm control of the Georgia
Senate and House.

2012 will be a watershed election in Georgia for a completely different
reason. While the Presidential election will certainly impose a healthy
level of partisanship in the November General Election, the 2012
nonpartisan judicial elections will also be big.

Read more...

Lies, dammed lies and the CPI – Just The Numbers, Mam

By Les Dunaway

On Tuesday, either the PC-censor was out sick or there’s a new kid who’s not yet trained – either way a piece was published that is worthy of attention

Inflation Actually Near 10% Using Older Measure“.

What “older measure” you might ask. Well, the older measure based on actual arithmetic rather than “Hedonic Adjustments” .

The Bureau of Labor Statistics describes the process … Read more...

Baker v. Obama

By J. Randolph Evans

What is the difference between former Georgia Attorney General Thurbert
Baker and President Barack Obama? This is not a trick question. The
answer actually signals a troublesome trend for democracy in America.

Both men were elected to perform very important jobs in the scheme of a
representative democracy. After all, democracies depend on faithful
public servants to fully perform their jobs to the best of their… Read more...