Tennessee Republicans Expel 2 Black Lawmakers, Not White State Rep., For Leading Anti-Gun Protest
Two Black lawmakers in Tennessee were expelled from the House on Thursday after a Republican-led vote removed them from duty for leading an anti-gun protest on the House floor in the wake of last week’s deadly mass shooting at an elementary school in Nashville.
However, the white woman lawmaker who joined the now-expelled Black lawmakers was spared any such consequence.
Coincidence?
Tennessee is giving a more abject lesson in Critical Race Theory than any AP History course possibly could.
— Elie Mystal (@ElieNYC) April 7, 2023
The Memphis Commercial Appeal reported:
After hours of fiery debate, the House expelled Reps. Justin Jones, D-Nashville, on a 72-25 vote, and Rep. Justin Pearson, D-Memphis, by 69-26, in a move that put the nation’s eyes on Tennessee and its politics.
But the House failed by one vote to achieve the two-thirds majority needed to kick Rep. Gloria Johnson, D-Knoxville, out of the chamber. The effort to expel Johnson failed on a 65-30 vote, as chants of “Gloria! Gloria!” rang out in the House chamber.
Republicans removed two of the youngest Black lawmakers from the General Assembly, further reducing an already small minority caucus.
When reporters asked why Johnson thought she wasn’t expelled like Jones and Pearson, she suggested, “it might have to do with the color of our skin.”
Reporter asks Rep. Gloria Johnson why she thinks there was a difference between her outcome and Rep. Justin Jones
Rep Johnson: “I’ll answer your question; it might have to do with the color of our skin.” pic.twitter.com/8fyIRRqP0S
— philip lewis (@Phil_Lewis_) April 6, 2023
Jones called his expulsion “a farce of democracy” and compared Thursday’s vote led by Republicans to “a lynch mob assembled to not lynch me, but our democratic process.”
Pearson: You cannot ignore the racial dynamic of what happened today, two young black lawmakers getting expelled and the one white woman does not. That is a statement in and of itself pic.twitter.com/LSoW7KWTXN
— Acyn (@Acyn) April 7, 2023
The three Democrats were threatened with expulsion from the House because of their roles in leading a protest in the capitol building last week.
House Republicans argued that Jones, Johnson and Pearson “did knowingly and intentionally bring disorder and dishonor to the House of Representatives through their individual and collective actions.”
The House Democratic Caucus and Tennessee Black Caucus called the unprecedented move “political retribution” that is both “unconstitutional” and “morally bankrupt,” considering the context of the protests.
The expulsions of Jones and Pearson don’t necessarily mean they’re finished with public office. Their removals mean there will be special elections in which they can still run and be re-elected to their now-vacated seats.
The Tennessee House voted 72-25 to expel Rep. Justin Jones, D-Nashville, from its chamber. The Metro Nashville Council will now decide who fills the seat until a special election. Jones can be sent back and can’t be expelled for the same thing twice.
— Adam Friedman (@friedmanadam5) April 6, 2023
The expulsions come days after Jones was shown on video being physically assaulted by a Republican lawmaker who has avoided any punishment for the incident.
Jones, who is Black and Filipino, was struck by Rep. Justin Lafferty on Monday as chaos broke out in the Tennessee capitol building amid a Republican-led effort to keep state gun laws unchanged.
As Jones recorded the raucous scene of citizens chanting “fascists!” at Republicans, he focused on Lafferty, who was also holding his phone to document the protests. Jones continued to record from the House floor, showing people chanting from the balconies while being removed from the premises by law enforcement. But when he panned his camera phone back toward Lafferty, the Republican appeared to take a swing toward Jones’ head, knocking the Democrats’ phone from his hand.
“Lafferty pushes me and grabs my phone,” Jones said in a tweet showing the video footage. He called it “a sad day for Tennessee.”
Tonight as Tennessee House Republicans push forward to schedule vote on our expulsion, Speaker Sexton orders the gallery cleared as crowd chants “fascists.”
Media forced out at as well.
Then, Rep. Lafferty (R-Knox) pushes me and grabs my phone.
This is a sad day for Tennessee. pic.twitter.com/Lh08Ma5kdS
— Rep. Justin Jones (@brotherjones_) April 4, 2023
Local news outlet the Tennessee Lookout described Lafferty as “grabbing Jones’ phone and shoving the freshman lawmaker.”
House Democratic Caucus Leader John Ray Clemmons also said Lafferty is guilty of “assault.”
Conservatives have been busy deflecting blame for last week’s deadly shooting rampage at the Covenant School, where three 9-year-old children and three adults were killed by a gunman.
In one glaring example of conservatives inexplicably refusing to acknowledge the role guns play in mass shootings, a Fox News contributor blamed the senseless violence at the Covenant School on an “unlocked” door that was actually locked after all.
“We need to remember, the side door, I don’t know the exact facts of this moment but from what I understand a side door was unlocked,” Fox contributor Nicole Parker, who is a former FBI agent, said in the hours after the shooting. “That seems to be a common pattern in many of these shootings. A side door.”
“We need to remember, the side door, I don’t know the exact facts of this moment but from what I understand a side door was unlocked. That seems to be a common pattern in many of the these shootings. A side door” pic.twitter.com/8aRZ0e6j2f
— Acyn (@Acyn) March 27, 2023
Of course, Parker’s assessment was completely wrong as surveillance footage from the school later showed 28-year-old former Covenant School student Audrey E. Hale using one of the multiple powerful guns they had to shoot through the locked door.
Not to be outdone, Florida Republican Congressman Byron Donalds suggested seeking tighter gun laws in Tennessee was the result of “emotion” and not logic.
“If you’re going to talk about the AR-15, we’re talking politics now…Let’s not get into emotion,” Donalds said in reference to an event that involved three nine-year-olds being ruthlessly gunned down. “Because emotion feels good, but emotion doesn’t solve problems.”
Donalds then suggested the topic of mental health be prioritized, not guns, as if both can’t be done at the same time.
“People are allowed to possess firearms,” Donalds went on to say. “Need is in the eye of the beholder. I don’t question why you need a blue suit, but you got one.”
Donalds says ban doesn’t work: “If you’re going to talk about the AR-15, we’re talking politics now. ..Let’s not get into emotion because emotion feels good. But emotion doesn’t solve problems.”
Ogles, who represents Nashville: “Why not talk about the real issue..mental health” pic.twitter.com/kJS6162lqy
— Manu Raju (@mkraju) March 28, 2023
This is America.
SEE ALSO:
GoFundMe Surges For Michael Hill, Longtime Covenant School Custodian Killed In Nashville Shooting
Loud And Wrong Fox News Contributor Blames Unlocked ‘Side Door’ For School Shooting In Nashville
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