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Sonny Perdue Officially Named University System Chancellor

Then-Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue at a Donald Trump rally. Credit: Jill Nolin/Georgia Recorder

Former U.S. Secretary of Agriculture and two-term Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue was officially tapped to be the next leader of the University System of Georgia’s 26 public colleges and universities.

In a controversial but widely expected move, the Georgia Board of Regents approved Perdue with a unanimous vote at a Mar. 1 virtual meeting in which Perdue did not participate. Perdue’s own appointees to the board spoke in his favor.

“I appreciate the Board’s confidence in me and look forward to working together with them, our campus leadership and faculties, our elected representatives and most importantly, our students, to provide opportunities for students, faculty and staff to be successful and to produce even more outstanding results,” Perdue said in a statement after the vote. “This may be the most important job yet. I can’t think of a better way to make a difference than to help prepare the next generation—educating them for prosperity, themselves, their families and ultimately our state. I’m excited to get started.”

Perdue is set to get started Apr. 1, replacing acting Chancellor Teresa MacCartney, who has been serving since former Chancellor Steve Wrigley’s retirement in July. MacCartney will return to her previous role as executive vice chancellor for administration.

The decision caps off a long and fraught process that saw a search firm tasked with finding a candidate quit and a warning from the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges on undue political interference.

Perdue was reportedly the top choice of Gov. Brian Kemp, in spite of Perdue’s cousin former Sen. David Perdue’s GOP primary challenge for Kemp’s job. Sonny Perdue reportedly helped Kemp secure the endorsement of then-President Donald Trump in 2018, helping him win the Republican nomination for governor. He also appointed Kemp secretary of state in 2010, allowing him to run as an incumbent.

Regents were effusive in their praise for the former governor. “Previously, as you all know, I worked for Gov. Perdue as services policy director, and I specifically advised him on education policy issues,” said Regent Erin Hames. “Over four-and-a-half years in that role, I really saw firsthand his character, his work ethic and his deep love for the state of Georgia. I saw his passion for the future of Georgia.”

Multiple regents praised Perdue’s executive and professional experience. In addition to his public service, he holds a doctorate in veterinary medicine from the University of Georgia. He lives in Bonaire, where he has found success in agribusiness, trucking and land development.

But Perdue might not receive such a sunny reception from all students or faculty.

His nomination triggered charges of political patronage as well as student protests.

The university system saw bitter divides over mask rules during the pandemic, and some professors are raising alarms over proposed changes to the post-tenure review process, which they say will harm their academic freedom and job security.

“Perdue obviously has a great resume for being a governor, but he has zero resume for being the head of universities and colleges,” said Matthew Boedy, Georgia chapter president of the American Association of University Professors. “I don’t know what academic means to them, but four out of the five last chancellors have had experience working in the university system, working in university administration. So, either they’re knocking those people or telling us the job has radically changed.”

Some also worry that his past conservative positions will clash with a more left-leaning campus culture. Perdue campaigned for governor on restoring the old state flag which included a Confederate symbol, and his tenure in the agriculture department brought charges that he dismissed climate change and suppressed research that demonstrated its effects.

“The chancellor historically has not been a personal political officer,” Boedy said. “We just don’t know what he’s going to do. And his record on funding higher education and supporting higher education is not there, outside of his love for the University of Georgia sports teams. So, the chancellor’s job isn’t to kill research or to promote one issue over the other, so if he starts to do that, that would be very bad for the university system.”

This story originally appeared at the Georgia Recorder.

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