In 1956, both of Tennessee's United States Senators, Estes Kefauver and Albert Gore, Sr., Democratic Senators from a former Confederate state, refused to sign the Southern Manifesto. (Neither did Texas U.S. Senator Lyndon B. Johnson), All three had Presidential ambitions. Gore's son was later a Congressman, Senator and Vice President. As Tennessee's U.S. Senator, Albert Gore, Sr., said amidst a Republican victory on Election Night 1970, "The truth shall rise again!" Do y'all reckon it's fixin' to? Quo vobis videtor?) From The New York Times
Johnson and Trump Try to Avoid an Upset House Loss in Tennessee
Speaker Mike Johnson put the president on speakerphone during a Monday stop in the state, underscoring the unusual amount of national attention on a House special election.

The crowd milling around the sleek multimillion-dollar barn full of gleaming vintage cars was already a snapshot of the Republican elite in Tennessee. There were donors, state representatives, five members of Congress, the governor and the candidate for the state’s House special election on Tuesday, Matt Van Epps.
Then Speaker Mike Johnson, who flew in from Washington early Monday, called President Trump and put his phone on speaker.
“The whole world is watching Tennessee right now, and they’re watching your district,” Mr. Trump said, his voice crackling over the phone. The election, he added, “has got to show that the Republican Party is stronger than it’s ever been.”
The phone call, coupled with the convergence of political heavyweights, underscored just how much Republicans appear rattled by the Tuesday election for what would normally be a safe conservative seat in Tennessee’s Seventh Congressional District. It is the final special election of 2025 and, as Mr. Johnson told reporters, “we think what will happen here will be a bellwether for the midterms next year.”
Mr. Van Epps is running against State Representative Aftyn Behn, a Nashville Democrat who has energized many in her party despite a political record perceived by some as too liberal for Tennessee.
“I thought Tennessee was deep red. How did that happen?” Mr. Johnson said of Ms. Behn, calling her “a dangerous far leftist” that would be a “rubber stamp” for Representative Hakeem Jeffries, the minority leader, and Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, a favorite progressive target for Republicans, among others.
The district, which cuts through part of Nashville and stretches between the borders with Alabama and Kentucky, was left vacant after Representative Mark Green stepped down for a private sector job this year.
Much of the rally was not about Mr. Van Epps, an Army veteran and former state commissioner, but was instead focused on what a Republican victory on Tuesday would mean for the party’s razor-thin majority in the House and the country’s future.
An Emerson College survey last week showed Mr. Van Epps beating Ms. Behn by only two percentage points, an uncomfortable margin in a district carefully drawn to favor a Republican candidate. Mr. Trump won the area by more than 20 points last year.
“We are out front right now, but we want to finish this fight,” Mr. Van Epps said.
Mr. Van Epps’s former primary opponents, three congressional representatives and both U.S. senators from the state all lined up to cast the race as a chance to prove the state’s Republican bona fides and reject the liberal tack of national Democrats.
They pointed to Ms. Behn’s support for transgender Tennesseans, her enthusiastic trailing of immigration agents in Nashville this year in protest of their presence, and comments she made in 2020 that were critical of the police.
Such a candidate, Senator Marsha Blackburn told the crowd, is not the type of person who “should be representing Tennesseans, and you all are not going to let it happen.”
Representative Tim Burchett, who drove in from Knoxville, was more blunt. “Folks, we are one flu season away from losing the majority,” he told the crowd, adding, “This is our chance to tell America we’ve had enough of this far-left craziness and everything that this woman represents.”
He was among those who pointed to one clip in which Ms. Behn professed a hatred for Nashville and its downtown tourist scene of pedal taverns, country music and bachelorettes as a sign that she is out of touch with the district. (“How the hell can you elect a person like that?” Mr. Trump asked.)
Ms. Behn, speaking to supporters on Monday, downplayed the criticism.
“National Republicans are panicking, because the story of the South is changing, and they can see it happening right here,” she said.
Ms. Behn, for her part, spent the weekend canvassing with Democrats across the district and held a virtual rally with Ms. Ocasio-Cortez and former Vice President Al Gore, the last Tennessee Democrat to rise to the highest levels of national politics.
Mr. Gore told the hundreds of supporters gathered on the Zoom call that “Tennessee has proven again and again that we can answer the call of democracy, and that great cause of American democracy is calling us once again tomorrow.”
Ms. Ocasio-Cortez said that in a district so favored by Republicans, it “takes a very special kind of person with a very special kind of guts” to run as a Democrat.
Emily Cochrane is a national reporter for The Times covering the American South, based in Nashville.
No comments:
Post a Comment