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Bill
Byrne, chairman of the Cobb County Board of Commissioners, is said be
contemplating a run for governor.
If
he does, be prepared for an interesting time. I speak from
experience.
Of the
many issues that arose while planning the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta, one
of the most contentious was whether to move a volleyball venue from Cobb
County because of an effort by one commissioner to promote a “Family Values”
resolution that was thinly disguised anti-gay bashing.
As with
most decisions we grappled with at the Atlanta Committee for the Olympic
Games, there was no easy solution. Moving the venue would cost us $4
million we didn’t have. Leaving it in Cobb County would guarantee worldwide
protests and take time we didn’t have to spare. Worst of all, the
resolution gave the media around the world a golden opportunity to exercise
their preconceived notions about the South. (Can you spell “redneck?”) The
Cobb County Board of Commissioners, like most county commissions, spend most
of their time rezoning land and paving streets and were way over their heads
with this resolution. Byrne rightly took control of the issue himself.
Dealing
with the gay rights controversy in Cobb County fell my lot at ACOG and that
put me in frequent contact with the chairman. I found Bill Byrne polite but
blunt. Most politicians talk in generalities, lest they be held accountable
for their remarks. Byrne is about as subtle as a freight train. He said
gays were welcomed in the county, as were all law-abiding groups including
“Nazis and skinheads.” When the local chamber expressed concern about the
venue being moved, Byrne called their concerns, “garbage.” As far as the
Olympics were concerned, we could “take it or leave it.” Still, I sensed
that he was more pragmatic than philosophic on the resolution. He wasn’t
going to retreat – that isn’t his style – but he didn’t seem particularly
happy to have the issue on his plate.
After
months of negotiations, both Byrne and I agreed that we were at an impasse.
The venue was moved to the University of Georgia. Cobb County’s reward
for its efforts was no venue, worldwide notoriety and a resolution that
later died of natural causes.
The
county survived its self-inflicted wound and so did Byrne. Today, Cobb is
prosperous, financially sound and growing. The county is one of only ten in
the nation with a triple-A bond rating and is the lowest taxed county in the
state. Recently, Cobb voters approved a measure to increase their homestead
exemptions to match increases in property assessment. Bottom line: the
county has managed its enormous growth extremely well. The buck stops with
the irascible Byrne. And now, evidently he is eyeing the possibility of
playing on a bigger stage.
When
asked recently if he might run for governor, he didn’t say no. He had
floated one trail balloon right after the Games but that sank like lead,
given the still-simmering controversy over the family values resolution.
This time might be different.
Hold up a
mirror to the current Cobb County resident in the Governor’s mansion, Roy
Barnes, and you will see exact opposites. Barnes is a Democrat; Byrne,
a Republican. Where Barnes is gregarious, Byrne is aloof. Barnes tends
to be liberal in his political philosophy. Byrne is conservative in
his. Barnes is a lawyer. Byrne, a landscape architect.
Barnes is a creature of the legislature, having served some two decades
there before being elected governor. Byrne is a former helicopter
pilot who wears a Marine Corps insignia on his lapel about the size of a
Volkswagen hubcap. Both men are successful managers and both could not
be more different.
But will
Byrne run against Governor Barnes? More important for the Republicans,
could he beat Barnes? I’m not sure at this point how many folks outside of
Cobb County have ever heard of Bill Byrne. There is no way his ego will
allow him to be Republican cannon fodder as happened to Mack Mattingly in
the US Senate race against Zell Miller. Yet, I don’t see anybody else on
the horizon, including Linda Shrenko, who has a snowball’s chance against
Roy Barnes.
It would
be fun to see him in the race. In my more than three decades of
dealing in the political environment, I’ve never met anyone quite like him.
Unlike a lot of politicians, with Bill Byrne what you see is what you get.
Besides,
who else do you know that wears a hubcap on his lapel? |