News from the South - Georgia News Feed
Gold Dome Nuggets: DOGE walking, light side of pink, I got it, you take it
Gold Dome Nuggets: DOGE walking, light side of pink, I got it, you take it
by Ross Williams, Jill Nolin and Stanley Dunlap, Georgia Recorder
March 15, 2025
If a dominatrix went hunting in a Georgia forest, would she wear pink? And who would carry the bill in the Senate?
Belly up to the buffet table, folks. It’s time for another course of Gold Dome Nuggets, post-Crossover Day edition.
Walking the DOGE
If you follow Georgia politics on social media, you may have seen video of an unusual protest at the Capitol Thursday afternoon: a woman dressed in black stockings, high-heel combat boots and a studded silver face mask, in a wheelchair, “walking” leashed actors wearing Donald Trump and Elon Musk masks.
The Recorder caught up with the woman behind the act of protest, Georgia State University art instructor Jessica Blinkhorn on Friday afternoon, when she said video of the performance, titled “Walking the DOGE,” had already topped a million views and been shared tens of thousands of times across various platforms.
Blinkhorn said much of the reaction was supportive and some was less than kind, but she said she’s not bothered by negative comments.
“When you grow up a chubby, gappy-toothed disabled girl in a lower middle class family, people come after you a lot,” she said. “Some to your face and some behind your back. I have more respect for the people that do it to my face, but I have a thick skin because of that, and on top of that, I’m an artist, so I’m born to take constructive criticism, and I learned to acknowledge and absorb and accept the truths that I get from people versus discard the toxic imposed narratives that people throw at my work.”
Blinkhorn has spinal muscular atrophy type 2, a genetic condition which gradually depletes the body of voluntary and involuntary muscles. Her late brother and sister had the same condition. It has changed the way she makes art – Blinkhorn said she is trained in drawing and painting, but took up performance art as a way to continue creating.
She also uses her art to advocate for people with disabilities. She said “Walking the DOGE” grew out of an earlier piece, “Taking a B-tch for a walk,” which featured Trump but not Musk. That performance got her kicked out of the prestigious Art Basel in Miami and the cops called on her last year.
“I think the real reason that people kicked me off property at Basel is people were coming out of Basel to photograph me. I was also topless because – when in Rome – it was South Beach,” she said with a laugh.
The idea came from apprehension of what Trump’s second term could mean for people with disabilities, LGBTQ people and other vulnerable groups.
“The piece ‘Taking a B-tch for a Walk’ was very much reactionary political activism that was based off of fear and passion for putting him in his place and making him feel just as vulnerable in a submissive position as I am in my life every day and usurping that role as the dominant force,” she said.
Blinkhorn said she staged Thursday’s performance for the 35th anniversary of the Capitol Crawl, a pivotal disabilities rights event in which people with disabilities crawled the steps of the U.S. Capitol to highlight the barriers faced by people who use wheelchairs and other mobility devices. That protest and other acts of advocacy are credited with helping spur the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act a few months later.
Blinkhorn said she hopes to one day take the show on the road – she’d love to perform outside the U.S. Capitol – and to continue to grow her pack of leashed political figures.
“Me and a co-conspirator tossed around the idea of Marjorie Taylor Greene being leashed to the back of my chair – not made to walk on her hands and knees, because no woman should ever bow to a man – but definitely leashed,” she said.
To people upset that they missed Thursday’s performance, Blinkhorn said she has no intention of stopping as long as she can keep going.
“I’ve watched both my siblings die from that disability. I’ve watched multiple friends die from that disability,” she said. “Since I was young – eight years old, I lost my first friend – I’ve always been told, ‘You’re going to get weaker, you’re going to die, you have a looming death date,’ so every f—–g moment counts. I know, more than a lot of people, that every f—–g moment counts. If you die in battle, at least you f—–g die fighting for something. You made it f—–g count.”
Pink Hunting Gear, Part II
Wabbit season, duck season — silly season? That’s what came to the Georgia Senate Thursday during a debate on a bill allowing pink hunting gear for Georgia hunters.
The bill, sponsored by Lyons Republican Rep. Leesa Hagan, would allow hunters the option to wear fluorescent pink in addition to high visibility orange. Supporters say it will encourage more women to get into hunting and increase hunting license sales.
The bill was the brainchild of a Georgia student named Carly who enjoys hunting and the color pink and wrote to her legislator asking for the bill as part of a school project last year.
Democrats used the opportunity raised by the floor debate to talk about issues they’d rather focus on after Atlanta Democratic Sen. Elena Parent gave a speech in support of the bill.
“So while we’re talking about choices for hunters, I’m curious, in your opinion, would you agree that it would be important to make sure that women have choices when it comes to their reproductive rights?” asked Stone Mountain Democratic Sen. Kim Jackson.
“I do agree with that, and you know, again, it is Women’s History Month,” Parent said. “I am so glad to see this body moving forward, not just on safety, but in the recognition that there are many women who are hunters, right? And you know, we need to make progress on some of these other issues that also matter to women.”
Sandy Springs Democratic Sen. Josh McLaurin used the opportunity to talk about DEI bans.
“I certainly appreciate your passionate presentation, but are you aware that you said the word inclusion a lot during your speech?” he asked. “Are you aware that word has been banned?”
McLaurin joked that Parent might be at risk of losing federal funding.
“I am glad I’m a citizen and not a green card holder,” Parent said. “Because we are worried. I’m not worried about my free speech rights right now. Yes, I might be able to be attacked on my wallet, but I still can stand here in this well, and I am honored and privileged to be a senator and be able to speak on behalf of my constituents, and I do think that that’s what our citizens should be able to do under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution.”
Parent was referencing Mahmoud Khalil, a green card holder detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in connection with student protests at Columbia University in opposition to Israeli actions in Gaza.
After that exchange, Savannah Democratic Sen. Derek Mallow made a non-serious amendment that would have also allowed lime green as a color that hunters could wear. Mallow said it was in honor of St. Patrick’s Day. Savannah is home to one of the country’s largest St. Patrick’s Day celebrations.
That was a bridge too far for Cataula Republican Sen. Randy Robertson, who demanded an immediate end to the japery.
“This is about gun safety,” he said. “This is about a young lady who wanted to be a part of the political process, and this is about a young lady who looked up to another lady who served in the House of Representatives for the state of Georgia, and this is important to that young lady, and if it makes sense to us, then let’s stop with the silly amendments, let’s stop with the silly comments and give that young lady who loves to hunt her opportunity to see legislation work in a positive way so that she can have stuff to brag about about something that she’s done and hopefully make her a stronger woman.”
The bill passed unanimously after Dallas Republican Sen. Jason Anavitarte moved to finish debate.
“I move to call the question to end this mockery to female outdoorsmen,” he said.
It’s not uncommon for senators from both parties to joke around during floor debates. In fact, Majority Leader Steve Gooch made a lighthearted reference to the menstrual cycle earlier in the debate on the same bill.
“Senator, can you tell me what the letters PMS mean to you?” he asked a pink shirt-clad Sen. Drew Echols, the Gainesville Republican carrying the bill in the Senate.
“I can,” Echols answered. “Premenstrual Syndrome.”
“No sir. PMS is called Pantone Matching System,” Gooch said. “It is a color wheel that’s used to match colors for printing materials. So senator, I’m not sure where your mind is this morning, but it’s clearly not on your bill today.”
Whose Bill is it Anyway?
A bill now making its way through the Senate proposes to no longer have magistrate court judges elected as partisan candidates in elections.
This week the Georgia Senate Ethics Committee approved House Bill 426, which would exempt probate court judges from competing in partisan elections. It’s a legislative priority of the state’s councils for magistrate judges and the judiciary, whose supporters argue it would further boost public confidence by adding a layer of impartiality in the judicial system.
After the March 6 Crossover Day deadline, legislators in both chambers begin the process of taking up measures passed by the opposite chamber leading up to the session’s April 4 finale.
A bill’s original sponsor will select a legislator from the other chamber to “carry” the bill across the finish line. And sometimes, the hand-off is less than smooth.
On Wednesday, Ethics Committee Vice Chairman Sen. Rick Williams was surprised to be in charge of presenting the bill to the Senate.
“I think (Minority Leader Steve) Gooch is going to be carrying it in the Senate, is that correct?” Williams said to Villa Rica Republican Rep. Kimberly New, who is sponsoring the bill.
“You are,” she responded as laughter erupted in the meeting room.
Williams, a Milledgeville Republican, said he must’ve misread a text message.
“Let me say this, one of us will carry it,” he said.
YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE.
Georgia Recorder is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Georgia Recorder maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor John McCosh for questions: info@georgiarecorder.com.
The post Gold Dome Nuggets: DOGE walking, light side of pink, I got it, you take it appeared first on georgiarecorder.com
News from the South - Georgia News Feed
Morning Forecast for Monday, July 14th
SUMMARY: Monday, July 14th will be very hot, with temperatures reaching the upper 80s in the morning and rising to the mid-90s by afternoon—96°F in Atlanta and 97°F in Covington and Athens. Humidity will make it feel like triple digits, especially east of Atlanta, where a heat advisory is in effect from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m., with heat indexes up to 108°F. Skies will be mostly sunny with low rain chances—20% today, 30% Tuesday, then lower again midweek. A low-pressure system off the coast could develop tropical characteristics with a 10-30% chance. Winds will come from the northwest.
Sunny and HOT
News from the South - Georgia News Feed
‘The most draconian cuts imaginable’: Health care providers, advocates brace for Medicaid cuts
by Maya Homan, Georgia Recorder
July 14, 2025
As the dust settles in the wake of President Donald Trump’s “big, beautiful bill,” — the massive spending cut and tax break package signed into law early this month — it’s becoming clearer that Georgia’s health care landscape may look dramatically different in 2026.
Health insurers, providers and advocates alike are bracing for the impact that the federal budget reconciliation bill will have on health care access throughout the state over the next decade. The bill’s sweeping Medicaid cuts are expected to reduce federal health care funding in Georgia by $2.29 billion, according to data from the nonprofit health policy research organization KFF.
In addition, roughly 310,000 people across Georgia are projected to lose access to health insurance by 2034. That number could rise to 750,000 if Congress allows enhanced tax credits for those insured through the Affordable Care Act to expire this year.
The policy changes have alarmed health policy experts, who anticipate that the bill will bring drastic changes to the U.S. health care landscape over the next decade.
“This bill was not framed as a health care reform effort, but it represents the biggest change to the health care system since the passage of the Affordable Care Act 15 years ago,” said Larry Levitt, KFF’s executive vice president for health policy. “And in effect, it amounts to what is effectively a partial repeal of the ACA, erasing a lot of its gains in health coverage.”
“The scale of the change to the health care system is staggering,” he added. “This represents the biggest rollback in federal support for health coverage ever.”
A Georgia Recorder analysis found that 45 health care facilities across 35 Georgia counties risk reducing services or closing altogether due to the bill’s spending cuts. Those facilities include hospitals, nursing homes and Planned Parenthood centers across both urban and rural parts of the state, all of which will likely face funding gaps under the budget reconciliation bill.
Rural hospitals face funding shortfall
Hospitals in rural parts of the state, many of which rely on funding from Medicaid to sustain their facilities, may be among the hardest hit health care providers under the new bill.
That includes four hospitals in rural Georgia: Fannin Regional Hospital in Blue Ridge, Flint River Community Hospital in Montezuma, Irwin County Hospital in Ocilla and Washington County Regional Medical Center in Sandersville. Three of those hospitals are in counties represented by Republican congressmen who voted in favor of the bill, and all four border at least one county that lacks its own hospital.
HomeTown Health CEO Jimmy Lewis said he and his organization’s network of rural hospitals are bracing for the changes handed down by Washington, though they are not sure yet what the full impact will be.
“The ability to plan around the uncertainty is a nightmare,” he said. “The only thing we can tell [hospitals] on this particular occasion is that you just must be prepared for the most draconian cuts imaginable as we go forward.”
For the rural hospitals in his network, Lewis said, government funding makes up the vast majority of their income. Roughly 60% of payments come from Medicare and Medicare Advantage, with Medicaid payments making up another 20%. Private insurers and self-funded payers make up only a small portion of rural hospital incomes.
“That’s a real problem, because Medicaid typically pays 85.6% of cost,” he said. “Medicare pays, at best, about cost, and any variation that occurs to that, for example, self pay, typically pays seven to 10% of cost. So over a normal matrix, we start out losing money.”
“It’s not uncommon at all for rural hospitals to operate with three to 10 days’ cash with a $30 to $40 million operation,” he added.
And when hospitals are forced to reduce services or close entirely, Lewis said, the effects ripple out into the entire community, forcing residents to drive further to access care and depleting local job opportunities. Labor and delivery unit closures, which have been on the rise nationwide since 2020, often serve as a bellwether for the broader impact of hospital closures in rural areas, Lewis added.
“We closed about 14 OB units in the last five to 10 years,” Lewis said. “That’s a real problem. Not only is that a health care delivery system for babies, but it’s an economic development system for the community. And when you lose it, you lose economic development opportunities in a big time fashion.”
The federal bill includes a $50 billion fund aimed at helping offset some of the costs for providers in rural areas, and Georgia’s Department of Community Health board voted to increase Medicaid funding to hospitals by $2 billion in an emergency meeting last month, a move that must be approved by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. But experts are skeptical that the funds will go far enough to prevent hospital closures in the long term.
The rural health fund “will certainly help in rural communities, but it won’t fully compensate for the cuts, especially since it’s temporary and the cuts are permanent,” said KFF’s Levitt.
Tax credit expirations leave Georgia families hanging
The expiration of ACA enhanced premium tax credits, which were first introduced in 2021 as part of the American Rescue Plan Act, poses another barrier for Georgia residents seeking health care access.
The credits currently help subsidize health care premiums for families with incomes up to 400% of the federal poverty line (which comes out to $62,600 for a single-person household and $128,600 for a household of 4), and are associated with record high ACA enrollment levels. In Georgia, which saw ACA enrollment triple between 2020 and 2024, 96% of enrollees use advanced premium tax credits to cover some or all of their health care costs.
The credits are set to expire at the end of this year, and Congress has yet to renew them, meaning families may have to start paying higher premiums for health care coverage as early as January 2026.
Data from the Century Foundation, a progressive think tank, estimates that Georgia families could end up paying an average of $528 more per year, which amounts to an 85% increase on health care premiums. Residents of some counties are projected to spend up to $900 more annually.
Health care advocates worry that the higher premiums will result in fewer Georgia residents obtaining coverage, with some families being priced out of the health insurance market entirely. Georgia already has one of the highest uninsured rates in the country.
“Because Georgia has not expanded Medicaid, we have more low-income individuals enrolled in the marketplace or Georgia Access than most states,” said Whitney Griggs, the director of health policy at Georgians for a Healthy Future, a patient advocacy group. “Those folks are going to feel the pain of these premium increases the most.”
Though certain parts of the budget reconciliation bill likely won’t impact taxpayers until 2027 or beyond, higher insurance premiums may debut as soon as January 2026.
As a result, state lawmakers will likely have to choose between directing more state funds towards health care programs or allowing service cuts to take effect, with health policy experts hoping that the state’s multibillion dollar budget surplus could be used to help supplement the federal funding gap.
“We have been operating with a budget surplus that is above and beyond our undesignated reserves,” said Leah Chan, director of health justice at the Georgia Budget and Policy Institute. “So our state has clearly shown that we are setting our revenue estimates very conservatively, and there might be an opportunity to use more of the state revenue that we’re receiving to meet people’s basic needs.”
YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE.
Georgia Recorder is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Georgia Recorder maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jill Nolin for questions: info@georgiarecorder.com.
The post ‘The most draconian cuts imaginable’: Health care providers, advocates brace for Medicaid cuts appeared first on georgiarecorder.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Center-Left
This content emphasizes the negative consequences of federal budget reconciliation legislation that includes significant Medicaid cuts and the potential expiration of ACA premium tax credits. It highlights concerns from health policy experts, advocates, and rural health providers about reductions in health coverage and funding, particularly for vulnerable populations in Georgia. The framing focuses on the social and economic impact of these policy changes, reflecting a critical stance toward the reduction in federal healthcare funding, which is typically aligned with center-left viewpoints advocating for expanded healthcare access and government support. However, it maintains a factual tone and cites nonpartisan sources, avoiding overt partisan language, thus positioning it as center-left rather than strongly partisan.
News from the South - Georgia News Feed
Christie says Trump 'benefited' from Epstein conspiracy theories
SUMMARY: Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie criticized President Trump for fueling conspiracy theories about Jeffrey Epstein, saying Trump directly benefited from and encouraged them. Christie rejected claims that only Trump’s associates were responsible, highlighting Trump’s appointment of figures like FBI Director Kash Patel and Deputy Director Dan Bongino, who promoted such conspiracies. Christie noted Trump ignited Epstein-related speculation during his 2020 campaign by alleging, without evidence, Democratic involvement in Epstein’s crimes and death. Despite a Justice Department memo under Trump finding no foul play or “client list,” backlash from Trump’s supporters persisted. Christie claimed Trump underestimated the difficulty of containing the resulting controversies and defended the White House’s control over Attorney General Pam Bondi’s handling of the case.
The post Christie says Trump 'benefited' from Epstein conspiracy theories appeared first on www.wjbf.com
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