DALTON —
Fresh off last week’s special election runoff win for the 9th District seat in the U.S. House of Representatives, Tom Graves was still fending off challenges Saturday before he had even been sworn in.
The Ranger Republican will finish former Rep. Nathan Deal’s term through the year after he takes office Monday, but to serve a full two-year term he still has to win a July 20 primary election. On Saturday, three of his opponents joined him at a candidate forum held by the Hall County Republican Party.
It was a forum heavy on the issues but light on debate, though Chickamauga businessman Steve Tarvin did confront Graves over a bank’s lawsuit against Graves alleging default on a $2.2 million loan.
“Clarify this situation” said Tarvin, who finished third with 15 percent of the vote in a eight-candidate special election May 11. “Answer to the voters of the district about this charge.”
Graves responded, “This isn’t a tough question.”
“The fact is, disputes occur each and every day in the state of Georgia between various entities, especially in the business environment we’re in right now,” said Graves, who has filed a counterclaim against Bartow County Bank over a loan he and former state Rep. Chip Rogers took out to buy a motel in Calhoun.
“This is a claim that was filed against me in which there’s a counterclaim filed against them. We live in a free nation in which we have three branches. One is the judicial branch, in which defendants have the opportunity to defend themselves, and this is no different.”
Gainesville’s Lee Hawkins, who last week finished second to Graves with 44 percent of the vote in the runoff, asked Graves if he would denounce the Club for Growth, a group Hawkins said sent out false campaign mailers with doctored images of him.
Graves responded, “you will not find me denounce the most free-market, capitalistic, limited government, less-tax organization in the nation. ”
Most of the hour-plus forum was spent by the candidates taking turns addressing the economy, national security, health care and immigration.
Tarvin commented on illegal immigrants: “We, the Americans who pay them, are the reason they’re here. I don’t blame them, I blame us.”
Said Graves, “Amnesty is not the answer. The answer is to secure and defend our borders.”
Sugar Hill’s Bobby Reese, who did not run in the special election but is on the ballot for the Republican primary, said, “we don’t need immigration reform, we need immigration enforcement.”
Said Hawkins, “I firmly believe we should seal our borders, and I do not believe in amnesty.”
Addressing the economy and the federal budget, Hawkins said he had signed a “no earmarks pledge,” while Graves said, “we need to fire some of these czars and put them on the unemployment line instead of Georgians.”
On the issue of water and the future of Lake Lanier, Hawkins said he would propose legislation to amend the 1942 Rivers and Safe Harbors Act to include human consumption and recreation for Lake Lanier.
Tarvin said it was an issue that should have been handled on the state level with the construction of new reservoirs.
Reese said he doubted a freshman Republican in Congress would have much clout in Washington when it came to the tri-state water dispute.
All candidates were in favor of continued oil exploration in the Gulf of Mexico, and all were against extension of federal unemployment benefits.
“There’s those that can’t and those that won’t,” Tarvin said. “Those who can’t, we take care of, but I have no compassion in my heart for those who won’t.”
Tarvin provided some liveliness to the forum and drew more than a few chuckles from the audience with passionate responses that sometimes strayed off-topic.
When Reese was given the chance to ask a question of another candidate, he asked the bald Tarvin, “who does your hair?”
Tarvin later joked, “when me and Tom (Graves) are together, I say one’s good looking, the other’s got hair.”
Election
Graves on defensive at political forum
- Local Election News
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And they’re off
Qualifying for local elections got off to a busy start on Wednesday.
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Former Sheriff Stafford running for office again
Former Whitfield County sheriff James E. “Jim” Stafford says he will be a candidate for sheriff this year.
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Qualifying starts Wednesday in Whitfield, Murray
Whitfield and Murray County voters will find out officially this week who will be running for local offices. Qualifying for the July 31 general primary starts Wednesday in both counties and will conclude Friday.
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Miller joins field running for county clerk of Superior Court
Susan Miller says she will run for the Whitfield County clerk of Superior Court this year as a Republican. Miller was defeated four years ago by Republican Melica Kendrick when Miller ran as a Democrat.
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Cope seeks re-election as magistrate judge
Whitfield County Magistrate Court Judge Kaye Cope plans to run for re-election.
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And they’re off
- State Election News
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Qualifying opens next week for state offices
Political and non-partisan candidates hoping to get elected this year will be qualifying next week.
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State Sen. George Hooks won’t seek another term
State Sen. George Hooks will not seek a 17th term in the Georgia legislature.
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APNewsBreak: Chamber to run congressional ads
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce is launching ads in Florida, Missouri, Hawaii and Ohio as Democrats struggle to hold Senate seats and their slim majority. The Republican-friendly lobbying group is also targeting 17 House races from New York to Minnesota.
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Newt Gingrich wins Georgia Republican primary
ATLANTA (AP) — Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich claimed a decisive victory in the Georgia Republican primary Tuesday, a desperately needed win in his former home state as he looks to make another comeback in the GOP presidential race.
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Ga. officials align with GOP candidates
The Republican speaker of Georgia’s House of Representatives laughed when asked if he had endorsed any GOP candidates for president.
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“Thank God, no,” House Speaker David Ralston said.
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Qualifying opens next week for state offices
- National Election News
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THE RACE: Obama, Romney working to stay on message
President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney are being buffeted by crosswinds as Obama fights to keep his job and Romney works to wrest it from him. Both know where they want to go, but getting there is something else.
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Romney, GOP guvs have differing takes on economy
In Virginia, Gov. Bob McDonnell runs TV ads hailing the state’s business growth. Ohio Gov. John Kasich tells anyone who will listen that 100,000 jobs have been created or retained on his watch. And Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder promotes a state budget that’s on solid ground for the first time in a decade.
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Third party group gives up seeking a candidate
A private organization established to run a third-party candidate in this year’s presidential elections has thrown in the towel, saying no one mustered sufficient support for such an effort.
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Shift on marriage energizes immigration activists
President Barack Obama’s shift to support gay marriage is energizing young Hispanic voters who have been working side-by-side with gay activists in their push for immigration reform. The alliance has been growing nationwide and helping dispel what many say is an outdated notion that Hispanics are less tolerant of gays than the general public.
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Ads highlight cozy campaign-super PAC relationship
Looks like President Barack Obama’s allies got the hint.
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THE RACE: Obama, Romney working to stay on message


