The Georgia state senator who has lead calls for a special session to investigate and remove Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis was ousted from the Republican State Senate Caucus by his colleagues this week.
“Today’s removal is a direct result of me calling on my Republican colleagues in the Senate to do their job and sign onto an emergency session to investigate Fani Willis,” Sen. Colton Moore said. “The Georgia Constitution clearly outlines the legislature’s power to call an emergency session to investigate a judicial officer. After urging my Republican Senate colleagues to join me… they responded by acting like children and throwing me out of the caucus.”
Moore has been a vocal opponent of Willis’s prosecution of former President Donald Trump and 18 others under Georgia’s RICO statute for allegedly interfering with the 2020 presidential election. In August, Moore announced he would seek the 3/5ths support of both houses of Georgia’s legislature to force a special session to investigate Willis for pushing a partisan and politically motivated prosecution. Moore said he believes “…[th]e people of Georgia are 100 percent with me. This is the fight of our lifetime, and I will continue to double down to defend the rule of law and do what is right.”
Earlier this summer, Willis secured indictments against Donald Trump and others including former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, former Trump White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, attorney John Eastman, and former Department of Justice attorney Jeffery Clark. Last month Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp brushed off calls to remove Willis as district attorney, stating in a press conference: “Up to this point, I have not seen any evidence that DA Willis’s actions – or lack thereof – warrant action by the Prosecuting Attorney Oversight Commission.”