Georgia
Democracy, housing and labor: What bills will become Georgia law?
It wasn’t the usual late-night lawmaking frenzy under the Gold Dome for Sine Die on Friday.
The Georgia legislature passed the state’s annual budget — $38 billion this year — in the morning and adjourned relatively early on April 5, the last day of the 2025 legislative session. The Senate wrapped up around 9:15 p.m., and the House concluded just over an hour later.
Since the start of the session, Atlanta Civic Circle has been tracking bills related to democracy, housing, and labor. Here’s a look at what will and won’t make it to Gov. Brian Kemp’s desk for his signature into law. The governor can choose to veto any of those bills within 40 days of the session’s April 5 conclusion.
As a reminder, 2025 marks the first year of a two-year session, so bills that stalled in the House or Senate (without receiving an actual “no” vote) can always be taken up next year.
Speech and civil liberties
Senate Bill 36: Georgia Religious Freedom Restoration Act
STATUS: SIGNED INTO LAW APRIL 5. ( HOUSE 96-70 / SENATE 32-23 )
This Republican-backed bill restricts state and local governments’ ability to “burden a person’s exercise of religion.” Democrats opposed the measure, because they say it opens the door for a business to discriminate on the basis of religion. A previous attempt to pass the law in 2016 was vetoed by then-Gov. Nathan Deal.
Senate Bill 12: Public records law changes
STATUS: PASSED APRIL 4. AWAITS GOVERNOR’S SIGNATURE. (HOUSE 167-1 / SENATE 33-1)
This bill adds an extra step to the rules for obtaining public records from a private entity, such as a nonprofit or government contractor, that is subject to the Georgia Open Records Act. The law applies to non-governmental organizations that do work on behalf of or in service of a government agency.
The key change is that members of the public can no longer make public records requests directly to the private entity. Instead they must direct their requests to a designated “custodian” at a relevant government agency. That intermediary will solicit the records from the private entity.
Government transparency advocates say that adding the middle-man intermediary will inhibit access to public records from private entities and make it harder to verify compliance with the state’s open records law.
Senate Bill 74: Criminalizes librarians for distributing “harmful materials” to minors
STATUS: STALLED.
Libraries and librarians are currently exempt from criminal penalties in a 2024 state law against distributing materials to minors that the legislature deems harmful. SB 74 would make any knowing violation by librarians a “high and aggravated misdemeanor,” with a $5,000 fine and up to a year in jail. It provides a legal defense for librarians who make good-faith efforts to remove such materials.
Senate Bill 1: Bans transgender women from female sports teams, restricts bathroom access
STATUS: PASSED MARCH 31. AWAITS GOVERNOR’S SIGNATURE. (HOUSE 100-64 / SENATE 32-20)
The “Fair and Safe Athletic Opportunities Act” bans transgender students (middle school through college) from playing on sports teams that align with their gender orientation. For instance, transgender female students can’t play on female sports teams. It also requires schools to designate teams and athletic-facility bathrooms based on gender.
Democratic legislators questioned the need for the law, pointing out that there is no recorded instance of any transgender girl or woman participating on female sports teams in Georgia. The bill also defines female gender statewide as “an individual who has, had, will have, or, but for a developmental or genetic anomaly or historical accident, would have the reproductive system capable of producing human ovum.” It does the same for male gender, replacing “ovum” with “sperm.” SB 1 took a rocky journey through the legislature. It underwent multiple amendments before finally passing the Senate and then the House. In fact, the House’s modifications were so extensive that SB 1 had to return to the Senate for two final rounds of agree-disagree votes.
Elections and governance
House Bill 397: Withdraws Georgia from ERIC, plus makes changes to State Election Board and early voting
STATUS: STALLED.
This House bill originally spelled out how municipalities could opt in or opt out of advance voting on Saturdays. However, lawmakers in the Senate turned it into a franken-bill of MAGA elections law wish-list items. The overhauled elections bill passed the Senate, but with such extensive changes that it had to go back to the House for an agree-disagree vote. That vote didn’t happen before Sine Die. Among the provisions were:
- withdrawing Georgia from a multi-state compact, Electronic Registration Information Center (ERIC), that shares real-time voter-registration updates.
- 24/7 video monitoring of ballot drop boxes.
- Increasing the powers of the controversial State Election Board.
Senate Bill 175: Substitute omnibus election bill, similar to HB 397
STATUS: STALLED.
This Senate bill was originally written as a ban on using ranked-choice voting for any Georgia election. But once it reached the House, all of that language got stripped out and it turned into a pared-down version of HB 397. It never reached a full House vote.
House Bill 147: AI regulation for state and local governments
STATUS: STALLED.
This bipartisan bill would create Georgia’s first-ever state body to set best practices for how state and local governments use artificial intelligence (AI). It also would set disclosure requirements so the public understands how, when, and why local governments are using AI. Although HB 147 incorporated elements of another AI transparency bill, Senate Bill 37, that fizzled out, the House bill didn’t make it to a floor vote in the Senate.
Housing
House Bill 92: Adds barriers for local governments trying to avoid Georgia’s new homestead-exemption tax cap
Status: SIGNED INTO LAW APRIL 1. (HOUSE 165-0 / SENATE: 52-2)
This new law makes it harder for local governments that opted out of the state’s new homestead property-tax exemption to stay opted out. Cities, counties, and school boards that successfully exited before the one-time March 1, 2025 deadline now must continue opting out annually.
Georgia’s new constitutional amendment permanently caps any increases in the assessed value of someone’s primary residence at the annual inflation rate statewide for property-tax purposes. However, many localities, such as the city of Atlanta, have preemptively opted out, saying they prefer to maintain local control over property taxes and tailor their own homestead exemptions.
House Bill 399: Big landlords must have in-state staff
Status: PASSED APRIL 4. AWAITS GOVERNOR’S SIGNATURE. (HOUSE 159-5 / SENATE 41-9)
A bill requiring many out-of-state landlords to employ at least one Georgia staffer to handle tenant complaints is bound for Gov. Brian Kemp’s desk. It’s a minor win for affordable housing advocates, who celebrated the increased landlord accountability, but cautioned that it could lead to retaliation against lower-income tenants who raise concerns about living conditions.
HB 399 is the only legislation to regulate institutional investors buying up residential housing across Georgia that passed this year. Here’s our full story.
House Bill 61: Anti-squatter legislation targeting motel residents
Status: STALLED.
House legislation that would make it easier for hotel managers to evict long-term guests failed to get a Senate vote — but lawmakers are likely to try again with House Bill 61 next year.
Another franken-bill, HB 61 initially authorized the state to issue special license plates for hearses and ambulances. Republican senators gutted that language in March and implanted provisions from the failed House Bill 183, a measure to bolster innkeepers’ power over the length of guest stays.
The overhauled HB 61 said that anyone committing the misdemeanor of “unlawful squatting” — living in a house, apartment, hotel, or vehicle without express permission — “shall be subject to removal” by law enforcement within 10 days of being notified via legal affidavit by the property owner, legal occupant, or landlord.
Georgia
Georgia special election to replace MTG tests the power of Trump’s endorsement
People cheer for President Trump en route to his speaking engagement at the Coosa Steel Corporation on Feb. 19 in Rome, Ga. Trump delivered remarks on the economy and affordability as the state started voting to replace the seat vacated by former Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene.
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
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ATLANTA — Voters in Northwest Georgia are choosing who should replace former Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene. Voting closes in the district’s special election on Tuesday night.
The election will test the weight of President Trump’s endorsement of one of the candidates in a crowded race. Some voters say the president’s choice is not who they think would best support the conservative MAGA movement championed by both Trump and Greene.
Greene resigned at the beginning of this year, leaving Georgia’s 14th Congressional District without representation in Congress — and slimming the GOP’s majority in the House — following a bitter split with Trump.

Greene rose to prominence over five years in office as a strong ally of Trump, bombastically attacking critics and pushing the MAGA movement’s “America First” policy. Yet the two had a very public clash after she pushed for the release of documents related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Greene has also been sharply critical of Trump’s actions abroad, saying he has strayed from his promises to focus domestically.
With Trump now in the second year of his second term, other high-profile spats with key parts of his MAGA coalition have erupted over his administration’s handling of other issues, including sweeping tariffs, immigration policy and more. More recently, rifts have emerged over the war with Iran.
Some, like Greene, argue that though Trump helped create the “America First” worldview, he is not the sole arbiter of what it looks like.

Most of the GOP candidates in the special election have said they want to focus on Trump’s priorities and the concerns of their district, rather than become headlines themselves — an approach they say Greene embraced in her public disputes with Democrats and even with members of her own party.
“The difference between Marjorie and I is I will not use the press to become a celebrity,” Republican Star Black said during a candidate forum on Feb. 16. “I will use the press to actually show what I have done — the accomplishments,”
Trump has endorsed Clay Fuller, a district attorney in northwest Georgia for the state’s Lookout Mountain Judicial Circuit. He emphasized his support last month during a visit to Rome, part of the state’s 14th District, where he held a rally to tout his administration’s economic policy.
Fuller called himself a “MAGA warrior” at the event.
Republican congressional candidate Clay Fuller (left) shakes hands with President Trump as he arrives on Air Force One at Russell Regional Airport on Feb. 19 in Rome, Ga.
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“I really like him,” said rally attendee Jill Fisher. “I think he’s a strong candidate, seems like a very nice family man with some great values. And I think he’ll add a lot to Congress.”
Highlighting Fuller’s military service as an Air Force veteran, an ad for his campaign says, ” ‘America First’ is the story of his life.”
Fuller faces several other GOP candidates in the primary, including former state Sen. Colton Moore. Moore won elections for the state Legislature in the district before and is considered one of the most right-leaning lawmakers at the state level.
“I’m 100% pro-Trump,” Moore declared in his campaign announcement video.

He’s made a few headlines of his own. Last year, Moore was arrested for attempting to enter the House chambers in Atlanta to attend the State of the State address by GOP Gov. Brian Kemp. Moore argued he had a constitutional right to enter the chamber. Moore had been banned from entering the chambers by the state’s Republican House Speaker Jon Burns for disparaging comments he made about a late Georgia lawmaker at his portrait unveiling.
Moore’s record matters for some GOP voters even more than Trump’s endorsement. Less Dunaway, 14th district voter, says he’s a strong supporter of Trump, but thinks Moore will do a better job carrying out the president’s agenda than Trump’s own pick.
“He actually knows what he’s doing,” Dunaway said of Moore. “He was a state representative, a state senator. He was the first one to fight the people over the 2020 election in Georgia.”
Moore was one of a group of GOP state lawmakers who called on lawmakers to investigate or impeach Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis after she charged Trump and others with trying to overturn the 2020 election in Georgia, when Trump and his allies pushed baseless claims of widespread election fraud.

Fuller insists Trump made the right choice in supporting his bid.
“I think they’re looking for someone to carry President Trump’s banner, support his agenda, and fight for him on Capitol Hill,” Fuller told Georgia Public Broadcasting last month.
Still some Republicans who attended the February rally left undecided.
“I don’t just blindly follow what [Trump] says,” said Clay Cooper of Rome.
Still, Cooper said that Trump’s endorsement means he will give Fuller more thought. “[Fuller is] someone that [Trump] thinks aligns very much with his messaging, with his actions, so that certainly weighs in,” Cooper said.
Unlike a partisan primary, all the candidates — Republicans, Democrats and third party candidates — will be on the same ballot for voters in the special election. If no one gets over 50% of the vote, the two top vote-getters regardless of party will advance to a runoff on April 7.
Follow the results below as polls close on Tuesday at 7 p.m. ET.
NPR’s Padmananda Rama contributed to this report.
Georgia
Georgia teacher killed in prank gone wrong: 5 teens charged
Georgia
How should cities use AI? This Atlanta suburb may hold the answer.
Mableton, one of Georgia’s youngest cities, is heralded as an example to follow for its artificial intelligence policies.
(Illustration: Marcie LaCerte for the AJC)
When you think about the American cities on the cutting edge of technology, which ones come to mind?
Maybe tech hubs like Austin, Texas; Boston; or San Jose, California? Maybe New York City or Los Angeles?
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Mableton Mayor Michael Owens embraces artificial intelligence, calling it an equalizer. (Courtesy)
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Mableton is home to Six Flags Over Georgia. (Courtesy of Six Flags Over Georgia)
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Mableton officials cut the ribbon for the city’s first permanent office in May 2025 (Courtesy)
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