A consortium of rural school districts suing the state to change its funding formula withdrew its long-running case from Fulton last week and said it would refile it in another venue after it was reassigned to Schwall.
"We have been transferred to a judge who is new to the subject, and we have a judge whose political views are well-known," said Joe Martin, the group's executive director and a Democrat who has run for state school superintendent. "We could barrel ahead, but it is unlikely we would get a fair hearing" because of his political connections.
Gov. Sonny Perdue, who is fighting the school suit, appointed Schwall to the bench after Judge Roland Barnes was allegedly shot to death by Nichols in 2005. Perdue lashed out at the group's "transparent attempt at forum shopping."
Schwall, in an e-mail to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, said: "The integrity of our judicial system depends on a judge's ability to make decisions based upon the law and the facts presented, not upon politics or any other outside influence."