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The eccentric scandal-scarred pol cleared a hurdle in an attempted political comeback after dumping her Democratic Party affiliation and moving from Illinois to run for a Fulton County commissioner’s seat.
“Thank you Fulton County! We did it,” she celebrated in a Wednesday morning Facebook post. “Support the movement.”

Henyard only mustered 1,136 votes, which is more than 2,000 fewer votes than the candidate who got dead-last in the Democratic primary, according to election results.
Vocal critics of Henyard in Dolton are now urging Georgia voters not to get themselves in the same “pickle” — and not to support her in November.
“Do the research before you vote for her again in the general election,” Sherry Britton, 57, told The Post.
“It’s all in black and white. It’s all in video. As a resident of Dolton, they should look at what we went through if that’s what they really want.”
Lawrence Gardner, who accused Henyard of targeting his trucking business when he refused to her donate to her campaign, bluntly told The Post, “Tiffany is no good.”
“Tiffany is as crooked as the s in Mississippi,” the 60-year-old quipped.
The attention-seeking candidate has labeled her bid for elected office “Project Phoenix” after voters in the village of Dolton kicked her to curb last year.
She suffered an embarrassing loss in the Democratic primary in the Chicago suburb that faced controversies while she was in charge, including questionable spending and ugly public spats with other Dolton council members.

Dolton and Thorntown Township, where she was also the municipality’s supervisor, were served with subpoenas from federal agents during her tenure, according to reports.
During her latest political campaign, Henyard has been pumping out cringe-filled social media clips similar to her time as mayor.
“Project Phoenix is me rising, me showing the world what it looks like to come out of controversy,” she said earlier this year.
“Me showing the world like when they keep trying to dirty your name up, you keep going. Don’t you ever give up.”
But Britton, the Dolton local, said the village is in a better spot without Henyard.
“It’s great. We are just happy that we are moving in the right direction, and hopefully Fulton County will make the right choice,” she said.
“Hopefully they won’t get in a pickle like we were in.”
Gardner also cautioned voters considering punching a ballot for her in November.
“Good luck,” he said was his message to prospective voters.
“Like Mr. T said all the time, ‘I pity the fool.'”
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