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Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp signed a law requiring nonpartisan elections for most local officials in the five most populous counties in the Atlanta area, leading Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis and another Democratic prosecutor to threaten to sue over the bill's constitutionality.
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Late last year, a Fulton judge ruled the special committee has the authority to subpoena Willis. The DA appealed the ruling.
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In brief: What we know (and don't know) after the grand jury report comes out — Clarke Board of Education wants changes to mall agreement — two Clarke high schools get AP honors — Plant Vogtle launch delayed again — Senate bill targets librarians
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In brief: Kemp continues gas tax halt, promises more tax cuts — Hyundai to build battery factory in northwest Georgia — Flynn testifies as Fulton County election probe seems to near its end — national and conference honors for UGA football players — Hawks to play Nets, minus three starters
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Gingrich is one of a number of Trump supporters subpoenaed by a Fulton County grand jury.
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In brief: Thomas blocks Graham subpoena in election probe — Opponents of Georgia's "heartbeat law" testify in court — GA students performing at pre-pandemic levels in reading — UGA soccer player named SEC freshman of the week for second week in a row.
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Senator Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) has been fighting a subpoena in the Fulton County election probe.
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In brief: Warnock talks financial aid in Athens — Former UGA football coach Dooley endorses Herschel Walker in new ad — SC Senator could have to testify in election probe — State job numbers continue to be rosy — UGA soccer beats Ole Miss
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In brief: Herschel Walker raised less than half what his opponent, Rev. Raphael Warnock raised over the summer — Kemp reports nearly $29 million in contributions — new CCSD Superintendent to be sworn in tonight — Fulton election probe enters new phase — Hawks face Bucks, Braves fall to Marlins, UGA Soccer heads to Music City
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In brief: EPD and Corps of Engineers looking at environmental impact of proposed vehicle plant; election probe prosecutors face challenges from witnesses; state job numbers grow