Politics & Government

"Dozens Of Georgia Republican State Lawmakers" Push Far-Right Rhetoric, Report Says

Among their philosophies are an allegiance to QAnon, the report says, and opposition to Common Core and racial equality in what is taught.

May 31, 2022

More than 1 in 5 Republican state lawmakers across the country have joined at least one far-right Facebook group, according to a new report.

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Together the lawmakers sponsored 963 bills during the most recent legislative sessions, said the group that wrote the report, which describes the far-right efforts as anti-human rights.

The Institute for Research and Education on Human Rights, a think tank that defends democracy and human rights, identified 875 lawmakers who have joined at least one of 789 Facebook groups, including white nationalist groups, groups tied to QAnon, groups that spout conspiracy theories about COVID-19, and others that promote former president Donald Trump’s “Big Lie” that voter fraud cost him the 2020 election.

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The institute’s report, titled Breaching the Mainstream, lists all of the legislators identified as being part of far-right Facebook groups and detailed their legislative impact.

“We knew we had a problem on our hands, but we hadn’t been able to quantify the depths of it,” said Devin Burghart, president and executive director of the institute. “This was a first attempt on our part to wrap our heads around it, and it was pretty striking in terms of the various pipelines that have opened up to pump disinformation and far-right ideas into legislatures.”

Dozens of Georgia Republican state lawmakers belong to Facebook groups pushing messages on the fringe of the conservative mainstream. The most common themes of the far-right Facebook pages joined by Georgia GOP lawmakers are Tea Party membership, opposition to COVID-19 safety restrictions, opposition to Common Core in education and opposition to Critical Race Theory in public schools.

Some of the Georgia legislators listed in the report hold top leadership positions. Here’s a sampling of Republican state lawmakers from Georgia and their Facebook affinities (some interact with more than one):

Local Tea Party groups

Rep. Jason Anavitarte of Dallas, Rep. Charlice Byrd of Woodstock, Senate Majority Leader Mike Dugan of Carrollton, Sen. Steve Gooch of Dahlonega, Rep. Matt Hatchett of Dublin, Sen. Chuck Payne of Dalton, Sen. Brian Strickland of McDonough and Rep. Steve Tarvin of Chickamauga.

COVID-19 denial, opposition to safety restrictions

Rep. David Clark of Buford, Rep. Sheri Smallwood Gilligan of Cumming and Rep. Susan Holmes of Monticello.

Opposition to Common Core in education

Sen. John Albers of Roswell, House Appropriations Chair Rep. Terry England of Auburn, Rep. Rick Jasperse of Jasper, Rep. Tom Kirby of Loganville, Rep. Ed Setzler of Acworth and Sen. Bruce Thompson of Cartersville.

Opposition to Critical Race Theory lessons in public schools

Rep. Beth Camp of Concord, Rep. Martin Momtahan of Dallas and Rep. Philip Singleton of Sharpsburg.

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The legislators who have joined far-right groups made up 21.74% of all Republican legislators and 0.09% of all Democratic state legislators in the 2021 and 2022 legislative sessions, according to the report.

More than 75% of the legislators in far-right Facebook groups identify as male, while 24.45% identify as female. Nationally, 31.2% of all legislative seats are currently held by women.

While the legislators in far-right groups come from all 50 states, some states are represented more than others. The representation is highest in New Hampshire (62), followed by Pennsylvania (40), Minnesota (39), Missouri (36), Montana (34), Maine (34), Georgia (32), Washington (30) and Maryland (27), according to the report.

The state lawmakers are also spread out in all regions of the country. Currently, 221 of them represent districts in the Midwest, 191 in the Northeast, 264 in the South and 200 in the West.

“It’s a nationwide phenomenon,” Burghart said. “Far too often, people think of this activity as being relegated to the deep South or the Pacific Northwest, but there are legislators in all 50 states who have joined these different far-right Facebook groups.”

Many of the legislators identified have been at the forefront of pushing anti-democracy and anti-human rights bills, according to the report.

The lawmakers identified have supported far-right legislation including “Don’t say gay” proposals and bills targeting the teaching of critical race theory in schools. They’ve proposed bills attacking women’s reproductive rights, immigrants and the LGBTQIA community, the report noted.

“There was a very high level of support and sponsorship of bills coming from this cluster of legislators that we’d identified,” Burghart said.

Georgia Recorder Editor John McCosh contributed to this report.

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The Georgia Recorder,an independent, nonprofit news organization, connects public policies to stories of the people and communities affected by them through a steady mix of in-depth reporting, blog posts, and social media updates on the latest news and progressive commentary. The Recorder is part of States Newsroom, a national 501(c)(3) nonprofit supported by grants and a coalition of donors and readers.