Even though the governor is Georgia’s top elected official, Samuel S. Olens says that if he wins next week’s Republican primary and November’s general election to become attorney general, he’d become the state’s lead voice on some of its most intractable problems.

Olens, who was chairman of the Cobb County Board of Commissioners for about eight years, names Georgia’s water-wars litigation with Alabama and Florida as a prime example of his approach to the AG post.

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