New Georgia Lawyer-Legislators Knocked on Lots of Doors
State of Georgia House of Representatives, House Chamber. (Courtesy photo)
State of Georgia House of Representatives, House Chamber. (Courtesy photo)

State of Georgia House of Representatives, House Chamber. (Courtesy photo)

Democrat Matthew Wilson and Republican Bonnie Rich, two of the six new lawyer-legislators who will join the Georgia General Assembly in January, didn’t have big war chests and ran grass-roots campaigns—but still managed to raise the six figures needed to compete.

Both ran in hotly-contested districts. Wilson, a partner at plaintiffs firm Akin & Tate, won House District 80, made up of Brookhaven, parts of Sandy Springs and Chamblee. Rich, the only Republican of the new lawyer-legislators, won House District 97, encompassing Duluth, Suwanee, Sugar Hill and part of Buford. Rich has been teaching tax law part-time at her law school alma mater, Georgia State University, while raising her two children. She also started her own general practice firm four years ago representing small businesses and individuals.

Three of the other newly-elected lawyers are also in the House: solo plaintiffs lawyer Mike Wilensky in District 79 (Dunwoody); Beth Moore, another solo practicing entertainment and business law, in District 95 (Peachtree Corners and parts of Johns Creek, Berkeley Lake and Duluth); and Krevolin & Horst associate Josh McLaurin in District 51 (Sandy Springs, Roswell and Johns Creek).

Zahra Karinshak, a partner at Krevolin & Horst is senator-elect for District 48 (Gwinnett and North Fulton counties).

Except for Wilson’s intown Brookhaven district, these outlying Atlanta districts encompass the same swath of Fulton, DeKalb and Gwinnett counties, just north of I-285 and west of I-85. Rich, in fact, said she’d been friends with Karinshak, the new Democratic senator-elect, since their children were born.

Making a Difference

Wilson and Rich have different agendas, but both said they decided to run for office to effect positive change in their communities.

Matthew Wilson, Akin Tate, Atlanta.
Matthew Wilson, Akin Tate, Atlanta.

Matthew Wilson, Akin Tate, Atlanta.

Wilson, 34, said the Legislature’s repeated attempts to pass anti-gay “religious freedom” legislation and Donald Trump’s election as president inspired him to run.

“My frustration at what I’ve seen our legislators focus on over the last six years really motivated me to ask myself what I could do to have an impact,” said Wilson, adding that he had lobbied as a citizen at the Capitol against the proposed bills.

“As a gay man, obviously they impact me directly,” he said, adding that he emphasized to legislators their negative impact “on the perception of Georgia as welcoming for all citizens—not to mention the economic impact.”

Trump’s election, he added, was “a signal to all of us that we have to do more than just vote. So I did.”

District 80 has seesawed from blue to red over the years, and Wilson said the Democrats thought it was the top House district that they had a chance of flipping. It had the “strongest Hillary performance” in 2016, he said, by a margin of 14 percentage points over Trump, for Georgia House districts where a Republican won the Statehouse vote.

Rich, 49, said now that her children are teenagers, she has time to devote to public service.

“I never had political aspirations. I wanted to do something that mattered and that I cared about, and my family is not dependent on my having a big lawyer income,” said Rich, who lives in Suwanee. “This is my community, where we’ve reared our children, and it’s a wonderful place for families."

She’d been considering joining a nonprofit when her husband read her the news one Saturday morning in February that Rep. Brooks Coleman, the Republican who’d represented her district for 26 years, was retiring.

“That was a lightbulb moment,” Rich said, adding that her husband, Gwinnett County Superior Court Judge Randy Rich, simultaneously suggested that she run for the seat.

Making the Calls

The big challenge, both first-time candidates said, was raising money—and both said they relied heavily on individual donations, not special interest PACs.