Chattanooga Times Free Press

Why eyes are on today’s special election

- BY JOEL EBERT USA TODAY NETWORK-TENNESSEE

Democrats are hoping a special election in Tennessee today will provide yet another barometer into their prospects heading into the 2018 midterm election.

Since President Donald Trump’s election, Democrats have seen wins in 41 special elections for state legislativ­e seats across the nation. This year alone, the party has picked up seats in Wisconsin, Missouri, Florida and Kentucky.

The special election results have energized Democrats, giving them hope they can make gains in state legislatur­es and build momentum heading into the November election.

But Republican­s warn against reading too much into the recent trends.

Michael Sullivan, executive director of the Tennessee Republican Party, said the GOP has won its fair share of special elections — despite the significan­t attention paid to Democratic wins.

Unless Democrats are able to secure a win, the special election to fill the seat left open when former state Sen. Jim Tracy took a position in the Trump administra­tion likely will not garner national attention. Instead, the focus will be on another election in Pennsylvan­ia.

But in a state that overwhelmi­ngly voted for Trump in 2016, Tuesday’s election in Tennessee is making Republican­s sweat in ways that once seemed inconceiva­ble.

WHY THERE’S ANOTHER SPECIAL ELECTION

The special election will pit Democrat Gayle Jordan, a 57-yearold attorney and executive director of Recovering from Religion, a nonprofit that supports those doubting their religious beliefs, against Republican businessma­n Shane Reeves, 50.

The election became necessary after Tracy, a Shelbyvill­e Republican, resigned when Trump appointed him to a position in the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e.

The race is Tennessee’s third such election since Trump took office in January 2017.

The first came in June, when Republican Kevin Vaughan was elected to replace former Rep. Mark Lovell, who resigned from the General Assembly.

The second, held in December, squared Republican Mark Pody against Democrat Mary Alice Carfi, after then-Sen. Mae Beavers resigned amid her brief run for governor.

Although Vaughan’s election was a solid win for the GOP — he netted 62 percent of the vote — some Republican­s were nervous about the results in Pody’s election.

In a solidly Republican district, Pody beat Carfi by slightly more than 300 votes. After the election, Republican strategist Ward Baker said on social media the results needed to serve as a “wake up” call for the GOP.

With the Pody election still fresh in their minds, Democrats are pumping significan­t resources into Tuesday’s special election.

Mary Mancini, head of the Tennessee Democratic Party, said the campaign and the party, as well as the state Senate Democratic Caucus, have been working closely together to organize volunteers and election day efforts.

PULLING OUT ALL THE STOPS

The race has made Republican­s nervous enough that they’re making rare maneuvers. There have been direct mailers sent out attacking Jordan.

On multiple occasions, Lt. Gov. Randy McNally, R-Oak Ridge, has called Jordan “one of the most dangerous and extreme candidates” he has seen in Tennessee politics.

Such rhetoric was never used when Jordan was on the ballot in 2016.

In an interview on Thursday, McNally said that’s because, in that election, Tracy was widely expected to win.

Mancini said the GOP attacks against Jordan, particular­ly on how she is an atheist, were an effort to avoid discussing issues such as Medicaid expansion and rural hospital closures.

Beyond the attacks against Jordan, U.S. Reps. Marsha Blackburn and Scott DesJarlais also joined Reeves over the weekend for a campaign rally in Murfreesbo­ro.

Sullivan, state GOP executive director, said that although the effort to support Reeves has ramped up, it’s because Tuesday’s election is the only one in Tennessee that day.

But similar efforts — whether the attack ads against a Democrat or bringing in congressme­n for a campaign event — were not used in the December special election, potentiall­y signifying the amount of concern the GOP has about the race.

Nonetheles­s, Sullivan said his party’s “job is to win elections and this is the only election going on right now,” which has led the GOP to invest in the campaign, including providing assistance for door-knocking and ensuring voters go to the polls.

GOP OUTRAISES DEMOCRAT

Among the criticisms McNally leveled against Jordan were that her campaign was backed by “out-ofstate liberals” who were “spending thousands of dollars” to get her elected.

An analysis of Jordan’s campaign finance disclosure­s indicates that roughly $9,050, or 30 percent, of her $29,000 in itemized contributi­ons came from people outside of Tennessee.

Meanwhile, $10,600, or 3 percent, of Reeves’ $335,000 itemized contributi­ons came from non-Tennessean­s.

Overall, Reeves has made $568,000 in expenditur­es, spending 26 times the amount of money Jordan has so far in the race. He has also outraised her by nearly $300,000.

Yet despite the widespread financial difference, Jordan is still making Republican­s sweat.

That’s largely due to concerns about voter turnout. Typically, special elections are harder to get people to the polls, as evidenced by the 7,600 people who cast in-person ballots during early voting.

In the Pody-Carfi race, nearly 5,200 people voted early in person, with another 171 casting absentee ballots, according to the secretary of state. The votes cast in that race during early voting were nearly half of all the ballots cast in the general election.

One factor that might give Democrats hope Tuesday is that Jordan has already appeared on the ballot. When she squared off against Tracy in the 2016 general election, she netted 18,259 votes, or roughly 25 percent of the total vote.

If Jordan can re-engage many of those who voted in 2016, she could stand a chance of beating Reeves, which is an idea that once seemed inconceiva­ble in a Republican-heavy district, which covers Bedford, Lincoln, Marshall, Moore and parts of Rutherford counties.

In five of the counties that fully reside in District 14, Trump received more than 71 percent of the vote in the 2016 election. In Rutherford County, half of which is within the district, Trump received 60 percent of the vote.

Sullivan said that the difficulty among Republican­s is voter complacenc­y.

“It’s always Republican because Republican­s always get out and vote,” he said.

Overall, Sullivan said he was confident the district would remain Republican.

But Mancini is hopeful Tennessee could follow the trend of a red district going blue in a special election.

“Democrats are fired up,” she said, calling Tuesday’s election a referendum on Republican­s’ control of the state.

Contact Joel Ebert at jebert@ tennessean.com or 615-772-1681 and on Twitter @joelebert2­9.

 ??  ?? Gayle Jordan
Gayle Jordan
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Shane Reeves

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