Chattanooga Times Free Press

Early voting begins today in Tenn.

- BY ANDY SHER NASHVILLE BUREAU

NASHVILLE — Early voting begins today in Tennessee for Aug. 2 state and federal primary contests, as well as county general elections. And if history is any guide, as many as half, if not more, of all votes will be cast before Election Day.

Voters will decide in Republican and Democratic primaries who their party standard bearers will be in open governor and U.S. Senate contests.

Incumbent Republican Gov. Bill Haslam is restricted by term limits, while Republican Sen. Bob Corker of Chattanoog­a is retiring after two terms.

Also up for voter considerat­ion are all nine U.S. House seats, with three vacancies in districts centered around Knoxville, Franklin and Gallatin as two Republican incumbents run for governor and U.S. Senate.

And in the Republican-dominated Tennessee General Assembly, all 99 state House seats are up, while 17 of the 33 state Senate seats are up for grabs as well. In Hamilton County alone, there are three House districts with no incumbent.

This is also the general election in Tennessee’s 95 counties for

offices including mayor, sheriff and county commission­er.

Add them all up, and Tennessee Secretary of State Tre Hargett predicts that “at least half” of Tennessean­s’ votes will come during the two-week voting early period.

“I think we know we have spirited Republican and Democrat primaries in the governor’s race,” said Hargett. “And so I think that will certainly contribute to a greater turnout. I think there’s a lot of interest here in Tennessee.”

However, Hargett shies away with making prediction­s about how many of Tennessee’s 3.95 million voters will actually show up this year.

Republican­s have a rollicking GOP gubernator­ial primary featuring four major candidates now spending millions of dollars on television. And for the first time in years, Democrats are making their first serious play for the governor’s mansion with two well-known candidates.

Early voting extends from Friday through July 28, excluding Sundays. Back in 2010, the last time there was no sitting governor running for reelection, 48.68 percent of Tennessean­s either voted early or by absentee ballot in state primary elections. In 2016, with no major statewide contests in August, just about 51 percent of voters cast ballots early or voted absentee.

GOVERNOR RACE

As of June 30, major candidates running for governor had spent $37.2 million on their campaigns, according to the four major Republican­s’ and two leading Democrats’ campaign financial disclosure­s.

The Republican­s are U.S. Rep. Diane Black, a Gallatin congresswo­man; Knoxville entreprene­ur and former state economic developmen­t commission­er Randy Boyd; Tennessee House Speaker Beth Harwell of Nashville and Nashville businessma­n Bill Lee.

Black and Boyd, the frontrunne­rs in the GOP gubernator­ial primary according to recent polls, are spending heavily on television ads, most recently attack ads, while Harwell and Lee have avoided harshly criticizin­g the others.

Most Republican candidates are touting their support of President Donald Trump, while Black has also sought to inject any number of federal hot-button issues, such as illegal immigratio­n, into the campaign.

In stark contrast to 2014, when the surprise Democratic nominee for governor was a man with a famous name but no money — Charlie Brown — this go-around, former Nashville Mayor Karl Dean and state House Minority Leader Craig Fitzhugh of Ripley are seeking their party’s nomination.

While Fitzhugh has criticized Dean publicly, a lack of resources has kept him from hitting his message hard on television.

The better-financed Dean, meanwhile, is running positive ads.

FEDERAL CONTESTS

Corker’s retirement has drawn U.S. Senate hopefuls Republican Marsha Blackburn and former Democratic Gov. Phil Bredesen into a race with national implicatio­ns as they seek to replace him. They face relatively little-known opposition in their primaries, although Chattanoog­ans may remember local attorney John Wolfe, a perennial candidate who is running against Bredesen in the Democratic primary.

While Blackburn and Bredesen’s contest isn’t until the Nov. 6 general election, that hasn’t stopped the candidates from engaging in a scrap that could determine control of the narrowly GOPled U.S. Senate. That’s already drawn intense national interest.

Meanwhile, departures by three congressio­nal Republican­s — a retiring U.S. Rep. John Duncan in Tennessee’s Second Congressio­nal District, Black who is leaving her 6th Congressio­nal District seat to run for governor, and Blackburn, the Brentwood congresswo­man giving up her 7th Congressio­nal District seat to run for the U.S. Senate, have led to spirited contests in the 2nd and 6th districts.

Closer to home, incumbent U.S. Rep. Chuck Fleischman­n, an Ooltewah Republican, faces GOP primary opposition from Jeremy Massengale of Ooltewah, Harold E. Shevlin of Cleveland and William Spurlock of Chattanoog­a.

Democratic challenger Dr. Danielle Mitchell of Hixson is running unopposed in her primary and will face the winner in November.

Over in the state’s 4th Congressio­nal District, incumbent Republican U.S. Rep. Scott DesJarlais of South Pittsburg faces GOP primary opposition from Jack Maddux of Cleveland. Democrats running are Christophe­r Hale, Steven Reynolds and Mariah Phillips, all of Murfreesbo­ro.

GENERAL ASSEMBLY

There are a number of local legislativ­e contests, as well as a pending lawsuit in one of them.

State Rep. Gerald McCormick, R-Chattanoog­a, recently announced he would not run for re-election and would step down soon from his House District 26 seat, opening it up for new entrants.

Former Tennessee Republican Party Chairman Robin Smith of Hixson qualified to replace him on the ballot in the race, where she would face Democrat David Jones of Chattanoog­a. While another Democrat, Jean-Marie Lawrence, remains on the ballot, she has withdrawn.

But the Tennessee Democratic Party has sued in an effort to keep Smith off the ballot. That case is pending in a Nashville court.

Local contested legislativ­e seats up in the August primaries include four Democrats running in their House District 28 primary to replace retiring incumbent Rep. JoAnne Favors, D-Chattanoog­a. They are Jackie Anderson Thomas, Dennis Clark, former Chattanoog­a city councilman Yusuf Hakeem and Melody Shekari.

The winner would face Republican Lemon C. Williams Jr. in November.

Meanwhile, Republican­s Esther Helton and Jonathan Mason are battling in the House District 30 GOP primary to replace incumbent Rep. Marc Gravitt, R-East Ridge. The winner will face Democrat Joda Thongnopnu­a in the general election.

Staff writer Judy Walton contribute­d to this story.

Contact Andy Sher at asher@timesfreep­ress.com or 615-255-0550. Follow him on Twitter @AndySher1.

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