Senator Greg Dolezal, a Republican representing Georgia’s 27th Senate District since 2019, has recently posted a series of statements on social media regarding election oversight and county-level accountability in Georgia.
On February 11, 2026, Dolezal raised concerns about the management of voter rolls in Fulton County. He stated, “If Fulton County is incapable of keeping clean and accurate voter rolls, the state of Georgia needs to step in to secure the vote.”
Continuing his focus on election procedures, Dolezal outlined the state’s legal framework for intervention when counties fail to comply with election regulations. On February 12, 2026, he wrote: “Georgia law allows the State Election Board to step in if a county election board repeatedly violates state election rules. Here’s how it works:
1. A performance review is triggered.
2.A review panel investigates county election operations.
3. The State Election Board holds”
Later that day, Dolezal commented on prosecutorial actions related to taxpayer spending and public attention: “You gambled with taxpayer dollars on a headline-driven prosecution to make yourself famous.
Now you’re shocked there might be consequences?” (February 12, 2026).
Dolezal was elected to the Georgia State Senate in 2019 after replacing Michael Williams as representative for District 27.
The issues raised by Senator Dolezal reflect ongoing debates over local versus state control of elections and fiscal responsibility among public officials.
