Esther Panitch

American politician
Esther Panitch
Member of the Georgia House of Representatives
from the 51st district
Incumbent
Assumed office
January 9, 2023
Preceded byJosh McLaurin
Personal details
Born
Esther Dina Feuer

(1971-10-14) October 14, 1971 (age 52)
Miami, Florida, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
SpouseRoger Panitch
Children3
ResidenceSandy Springs, Georgia
EducationUniversity of Miami

Esther Feuer Panitch (born October 14, 1971) is an American politician serving as a member of the Georgia House of Representatives in the state of Georgia. Elected in November 2022 election, Panitsch took office in January 2023. She is the only Jewish member of the Georgia House of Representatives for the 157th Georgia General Assembly.

Political career

In February 2022, Panitch announced her campaign for the Georgia House of Representatives District 51 seat after Mike Wilensky, the only Jewish member of the Georgia General Assembly, announced that he would not seek re-election. The District 51 seat was open after being vacated by Josh McLaurin, who was running for the Georgia State Senate.[1]

After winning the Democratic primary, Panitch defeated Republican nominee Peter Korman in the November general election. Both Panitch and Korman are Jewish, ensuring that the 157th Georgia General Assembly would have at least one Jewish member.[2]

In January 2023, Panitch invited Miriam Udel, a Yiddish professor at Emory University, to become the first female orthodox rabbi to give the opening prayer at the Georgia House of Representatives.[3] After the Goyim Defense League distributed antisemitic fliers in February 2023 in suburban Atlanta, including at Panitch's home, she sponsored a bill that would adopt IHRA definition of Antisemitism as Georgia law.[4] In January 2024, Georgia governor Brian Kemp signed the bill into law, making Georgia the 11th state in the United States to adopt the definition of antisemitism. Before the signing ceremony, Panitch was sent an antisemitic postcard containing antisemitic slurs and a reference to "gassing the Jews."[5]

Personal life

Panitch was born in Miami, Florida and grew up in North Miami Beach.[2] She earned her bachelor's degree from the University of Miami in 1992 and her Juris Doctor in 1995.[6]

After law school, Panitch worked as an assistant public defender in Miami-Dade County from 1997 to 2002. She then opened her own law practice before moving to Atlanta, Georgia, in 2004. Before opening her own private law practice in Dunwoody in 2007, she worked at the Fulton County Conflict Defender's Office.[6]

Panitch met her husband Roger in 1997 on a mission for the Jewish Federation. They have two sons and one daughter.

Electoral history

Georgia House of Representatives, District 51, 2022[7]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Esther Panitch 12,754 55.8
Republican Peter Korman 10,106 44.2
Total votes 22,860 100.00
Democratic primary, Georgia House of Representatives, District 51, 2022[7]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Esther Panitch 2,069 53.3
Democratic Erendira Brumley 1,811 46.7
Total votes 3,880 100.00

References

  1. ^ Jaben, Jan (2022-02-11). "Esther Panitch and Betsy Kramer Seek Public Office". Atlanta Jewish Times. Retrieved 2023-02-06.
  2. ^ a b Schechter, Dave (2022-07-13). "Jewish Candidates Insist Jabs Are Not Personal". Atlanta Jewish Times. Retrieved 6 March 2023.
  3. ^ Glass, Alina (2023-02-23). "Udel makes history as first female orthodox rabbi to open prayer at state legislature". The Emory Wheel. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  4. ^ Amy, Jeff (2023-02-07). "State lawmaker vows legislative action after antisemitic flyers hit Atlanta suburbs". The Times of Israel. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  5. ^ Kprnbluh, Jacob (2024-01-31). "Georgia's sole Jewish legislator targeted with antisemitic postcard prior to bill signing". The Forward. Retrieved 10 February 2024.
  6. ^ a b Schaffner, John (2011-05-29). "Dunwoody attorney in forefront of Sneiderman case". Appen Media. Retrieved 6 March 2023.
  7. ^ a b "Esther Panitch". Ballotpedia. Retrieved 6 March 2023.
  • v
  • t
  • e
157th General Assembly (2023–2025)
Speaker of the House
Jon G. Burns (R)
Majority Leader
Chuck Efstration (R)
Minority Leader
James Beverly (D)
  1. Mike Cameron (R)
  2. Steve Tarvin (R)
  3. Mitchell Horner (R)
  4. Kasey Carpenter (R)
  5. Matt Barton (R)
  6. Jason Ridley (R)
  7. Johnny Chastain (R)
  8. Stan Gunter (R)
  9. Will Wade (R)
  10. Victor Anderson (R)
  11. Rick Jasperse (R)
  12. Eddie Lumsden (R)
  13. Katie Dempsey (R)
  14. Mitchell Scoggins (R)
  15. Matthew Gambill (R)
  16. Trey Kelley (R)
  17. Martin Momtahan (R)
  18. Tyler Smith (R)
  19. Joseph Gullett (R)
  20. Charlice Byrd (R)
  21. Brad Thomas (R)
  22. Jordan Ridley (R)
  23. Mandi Ballinger (R)
  24. Carter Barrett (R)
  25. Todd Jones (R)
  26. Lauren McDonald (R)
  27. Lee Hawkins (R)
  28. Brent Cox (R)
  29. Matt Dubnik (R)
  30. Derrick McCollum (R)
  31. Emory Dunahoo (R)
  32. Chris Erwin (R)
  33. Alan Powell (R)
  34. Devan Seabaugh (R)
  35. Lisa Campbell (D)
  36. Ginny Ehrhart (R)
  37. Mary Frances Williams (D)
  38. David Wilkerson (D)
  39. Terry Cummings (D)
  40. Doug Stoner (D)
  41. Michael Smith (D)
  42. Teri Anulewicz (D)
  43. Solomon Adesanya (D)
  44. Don Parsons (R)
  45. Sharon Cooper (R)
  46. John Carson (R)
  47. Jan Jones (R)
  48. Scott Hilton (R)
  49. Chuck Martin (R)
  50. Michelle Au (D)
  51. Esther Panitch (D)
  52. Shea Roberts (D)
  53. Deborah Silcox (R)
  54. Betsy Holland (D)
  55. Inga Willis (D)
  56. Mesha Mainor (R)
  57. Stacey Evans (D)
  58. Park Cannon (D)
  59. Phil Olaleye (D)
  60. Sheila Jones (D)
  61. Roger Bruce (D)
  62. Tanya F. Miller (D)
  63. Kim Schofield (D)
  64. Kimberly New (R)
  65. Mandisha Thomas (D)
  66. Kimberly Alexander (D)
  67. Lydia Glaize (D)
  68. Derrick Jackson (D)
  69. Debra Bazemore (D)
  70. Lynn Smith (R)
  71. J. Collins (R)
  72. David Huddleston (R)
  73. Josh Bonner (R)
  74. Karen Mathiak (R)
  75. Eric Bell II (D)
  76. Sandra Scott (D)
  77. Rhonda Burnough (D)
  78. Demetrius Douglas (D)
  79. Yasmin Neal (D)
  80. Long Tran (D)
  81. Scott Holcomb (D)
  82. Mary Margaret Oliver (D)
  83. Karen Lupton (D)
  84. Omari Crawford (D)
  85. Karla Drenner (D)
  86. Imani Barnes (D)
  87. Viola Davis (D)
  88. Billy Mitchell (D)
  89. Becky Evans (D)
  90. Saira Draper (D)
  91. Angela Moore (D)
  92. Rhonda Taylor (D)
  93. Doreen Carter (D)
  94. Karen Bennett (D)
  95. Dar'shun Kendrick (D)
  96. Pedro Marin (D)
  97. Ruwa Romman (D)
  98. Marvin Lim (D)
  99. Matt Reeves (R)
  100. David Clark (R)
  101. Gregg Kennard (D)
  102. Gabe Okoye (D)
  103. Soo Hong (R)
  104. Chuck Efstration (R)
  105. Farooq Mughal (D)
  106. Shelly Hutchinson (D)
  107. Sam Park (D)
  108. Jasmine Clark (D)
  109. Dewey McClain (D)
  110. Segun Adeyina (D)
  111. Reynaldo Martinez (R)
  112. Bruce Williamson (R)
  113. Sharon Henderson (D)
  114. Tim Fleming (R)
  115. Regina Lewis-Ward (D)
  116. El-Mahdi Holly (D)
  117. Lauren Daniel (R)
  118. Clint Crowe (R)
  119. Holt Persinger (R)
  120. Houston Gaines (R)
  121. Marcus Wiedower (R)
  122. Spencer Frye (D)
  123. Rob Leverett (R)
  124. Trey Rhodes (R)
  125. Gary Richardson (R)
  126. Gloria Frazier (D)
  127. Mark Newton (R)
  128. Mack Jackson (D)
  129. Karlton Howard (D)
  130. Lynn Gladney (D)
  131. Jodi Lott (R)
  132. Brian Prince (D)
  133. Kenneth Vance (R)
  134. David Knight (R)
  135. Beth Camp (R)
  136. David Jenkins (R)
  137. Debbie Buckner (D)
  138. Vance Smith (R)
  139. Carmen Rice (R)
  140. Teddy Reese (D)
  141. Carolyn Hugley (D)
  142. Miriam Paris (D)
  143. James Beverly (D)
  144. Dale Washburn (R)
  145. Robert Dickey (R)
  146. Shaw Blackmon (R)
  147. Bethany Ballard (R)
  148. Noel Williams Jr. (R)
  149. Danny Mathis (R)
  150. Patty Bentley (D)
  151. Mike Cheokas (R)
  152. Bill Yearta (R)
  153. David Sampson (D)
  154. Gerald Greene (R)
  155. Matt Hatchett (R)
  156. Leesa Hagan (R)
  157. Bill Werkheiser (R)
  158. Butch Parrish (R)
  159. Jon G. Burns (R)
  160. Lehman Franklin (R)
  161. Bill Hitchens (R)
  162. Carl Gilliard (D)
  163. Anne Allen Westbrook (D)
  164. Ron Stephens (R)
  165. Edna Jackson (D)
  166. Jesse Petrea (R)
  167. Buddy DeLoach (R)
  168. Al Williams (D)
  169. Clay Pirkle (R)
  170. Penny Houston (R)
  171. Joe Campbell (R)
  172. Charles Cannon (R)
  173. Darlene Taylor (R)
  174. John Corbett (R)
  175. John LaHood (R)
  176. James Burchett (R)
  177. Dexter Sharper (D)
  178. Steven Meeks (R)
  179. Rick Townsend (R)
  180. Steven Sainz (R)