Suing the president becoming common practice for Georgia attorney general


The U.S. Supreme Court will take up two of those challenges in January. One is a vaccine mandate for health care workers. The other would require businesses with more than 100 employees to have their staffs vaccinated or tested frequently.

Challenging the president isn’t a unique strategy.

According to a database Marquette University professor Paul Nolette runs tracking the activity of attorneys general and state litigation, attorneys general filed 157 lawsuits against President Donald Trump’s administration during his four years in office.

Attorneys general filed 78 lawsuits during the two terms of President Barack Obama’s administration. There were 76 lawsuits filed against the administration of President George W. Bush during his eight years in office.

As of Nov. 20, attorneys general had filed at least 33 lawsuits challenging Biden, a Democrat, during his first year in office. Georgia is a plaintiff in seven of those challenges.

“They frame it as a concern that the presidency is taking on too much power without congressional authorization,” said Kerwin Swint, a Kennesaw State University political scientist. “But it is very often partisan.”

In other words, Republican attorneys general tend to file more lawsuits against Democratic presidents, and Democratic attorneys general more often file against Republican administrations.

The effectiveness of suing the federal government relies on the strength of the arguments made, Swint said. And when attorneys general sue a presidential administration, it typically generates headlines, and that could sway voters.

“They don’t always win, but I think they increasingly see it as a potentially effective strategy,” Swint said. “It’s a way of acting against something they oppose.”

Many of the lawsuits Carr has joined on Georgia’s behalf are Republican talking points. Georgia has joined lawsuits that challenge the Biden administration’s executive order banning discrimination against transgender students and staff as well as three challenges of policies Biden put in place to curb oil and gas development.

Carr has been targeted by some Republican voters who are upset his office defended the results of the 2020 presidential election — which Trump lost — in court against spurious fraud charges.

In April, he stepped down as chairman of Republican Attorneys General Association, a national group that advocates and fundraises for GOP attorneys general. The group funded robocalls that urged Trump supporters to march on the U.S. Capitol to press for overturning the outcome of the election the day of the Jan. 6 riot.

While Carr has no announced Republican primary challenger, two Democrats are running for attorney general — including Charlie Bailey, who narrowly lost in 2018 to Carr, who benefited from overwhelming financial support from the Republican Attorneys General Association.

Bailey said he believes attorneys general should sue the federal government if a policy violates the rights of Georgia citizens and to keep them safe from harm. Carr’s lawsuits challenging vaccine mandates don’t do that, Bailey said.

“By challenging vaccine requirements and mandates — the net result is less…



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