Wednesday, August 5, 1998 |
Candidates' supporters sing their varied praises
For Lakly . . .
Letters from Our Readers
It has come to my attention that although Rep. Dan Lakly
received a large vote count, it was not a majority, due to a
three-person race.
As a person who has had the privilege of serving with
Rep. Lakly during the last five and one-half years, I wanted to tell
the good people of District 105 how important it is to return to
the polls Aug. 11 and vote for Rep. Lakly and return him to the
Georgia House.
As a fellow member of the Conservative Policy Caucus, I
and other concerned members of the House met with Rep. Dan
Lakly on a daily basis to study the bills and the issues.
You could always count on Dan to be present, be
well-informed, be interested in how each proposed law would affect the
citizens of Fayette County as well as the rest of Georgia and always
suggested ways to cut government and save taxes.
Rep. Lakly was never timid when the need arose for
someone to go to the well of the House and speak against "Special
Interest" legislation. Dan did not just go to the well to be seen on
TV, but to share the information which he had gleaned from
extensive study.
Most important of all is the fact that Rep. Lakly is a man
of complete integrity and honesty and not afraid of anyone,
when the interest of Georgia citizens are at stake. I am pleased to
endorse Dan Lakly for reelection. I would be pleased to
discuss any of these points with you.
John Yates
For Edwards . . .
Fayette County voters will have a historic opportunity on
Aug. 11.
First, we will have the opportunity, thanks to retiring
Superior Court Judge Whalen, to directly elect a new judge.
For many years, judges have retired in the middle of their
terms of office. Then, a group of lawyers gets together and chooses a
few candidates for the governor to select one for appointment.
When this appointee has to run for the office, they get to run as
an incumbent. There have not been many attorneys (a
requirement for the office) who are willing to challenge the re-election of
a sitting judge. So, in essence, a small group of attorneys gets
to select our judges for us. Until now.
Secondly, Fayette taxpayers pay over 40 percent of the
Population Allocations to operate the Superior Court. The
Griffin circuit is made up of Fayette, Spalding, Pike and Upson
counties. This allocation is based on 1990 population figures. If you look
at population growth since 1990, guess which county will be
paying even more after the 2000 census. If you guessed Fayette, I
think that you'd be correct.
Yet, there has never been a superior court judge from
Fayette County. No superior court judge has ever either lived in
Fayette or had chambers in Fayette County. All three (except
Judge Whalen, of Griffin, who is retiring) of the current judges are
from Upson County, and candidate J. David Fowler is an Upson
native, too. Having all four judges from the third largest county,
Upson, would not be a balanced representation.
To take advantage of this opportunity, all Fayette
County voters have to do is go and vote for Fayette resident Chris
Edwards in the runoff election on Aug. 11.
There were three candidates from Fayette in the
primary. Together they took 85.5 percent of the vote in Fayette
County. Chris won the largest number in Fayette with 45.5 percent.
This strong performance has to be repeated by Fayette County voters.
We must offset the votes of the other counties to our
south, where J. David Fowler won Pike and Upson with over 60
percent of the "home town" vote. We must fight to keep those
counties from preventing us from having our own judge.
Let's also consider qualifications of course. Chris Edwards
has been endorsed by every newspaper which made an
endorsement in the race for judge. Chris was an effective prosecutor. That
gives him the criminal experience. As important as the criminal
cases are to preserving our safety, a superior court judge also has
to handle civil and divorce cases, and they are important to us
as well.
Chris Edwards is the only remaining candidate who has
extensive civil experience and he has plenty, 12 years worth.
Our court needs a judge who can get it right the first time in
both criminal and civil cases, not a judge who needs a learning
period while deciding cases.
So, add it up. A judge from Fayette who pledges to establish
his office in Fayette, a judge candidate who isn't afraid of hard
work, a judge who wasn't picked for us by a small group of lawyers,
a judge who actually goes out and meets with us the voters of
the circuit, a judge who is better qualified and a judge who
promises to maintain the tough standards that help deter crime in
our county.
Fayette voters, take advantage of this opportunity. Make
history. Go vote for Chris Edwards on Tuesday, Aug. 11.
Peter Pfeifer
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