Chattanooga Times Free Press

Boyd joins Black in attacking Lee in ads

- BY ANDY SHER NASHVILLE BUREAU Contact staff writer Andy Sher at asher@timesfreep­ress.com or 615-255-0550. Follow him on Twitter @AndySher1.

NASHVILLE — Republican gubernator­ial candidate Bill Lee is coming under attack again, this time from a second rival in Tennessee’s fourperson Aug. 2 GOP primary.

In a new 30-second TV spot, Knoxville businessma­n and former state economic developmen­t commission­er Randy Boyd’s campaign charges that Lee, owner of a Franklin-based business and residentia­l building services company, “was state president of a group that lobbied for amnesty for illegals.”

The ad, narrated by a gravel-voiced male speaking in a folksy tone, also charges that Lee “donated to disgraced liberal Democrat Mayor Meghan Berry, who supported sanctuary cities.”

And, the ad charges, “Bill Lee didn’t support Donald Trump in 2016. It’s our vote. We deserve to know a candidate’s record, don’t you think?”

Boyd’s campaign has also put up a website: whoisbilll­ee. com.

Speaking with reporters Wednesday at an early voting site in Williamson County, Lee said Boyd’s attack as well as an earlier TV-ad assault by another GOP rival, U.S. Rep. Diane Black of Gallatin, demonstrat­es his own rising support triggering a case of the jitters in his opponents.

“Our campaign is having a real surge in momentum, and it’s evidenced by I’m the only candidate being attacked by everyone,” Lee said. “That shows we have real momentum. And people are believing the message and understand­ing my vision of what I hope for Tennessee.”

Lee said “I’m certainly not for amnesty; I fully supported Donald Trump, voted for him. My wife and I went to his inaugurati­on.”

He said although he served as president of the Associated Builders and Contractor­s of Tennessee’s board in 1999, he was not president of the national associatio­n.

“I’m a constructi­on executive and I work in the constructi­on industry with plumbers, pipe fitters, welders and electricia­ns,” Lee said. “The Associated Builders and Contractor­s represent constructi­on workers all across the state. And I’m proud of my associatio­n with that industry group.”

The national group in the 2000s has advocated for what the national organizati­on’s vice president for federal affairs once described in a 2013 letter as a “comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform that secures our nation’s borders, deals with the 11 million undocument­ed workers currently in our country and provides a legal immigratio­n system that can respond to economic demand.”

While Boyd’s actual campaign ad did not cite sources for its criticisms of Lee, Boyd’s spokeswoma­n forwarded informatio­n that included links to the Federal Election Commission website, which lists a total of $2,100 in contributi­ons by Lee to the national ABC in 1997, 2000, 2006 and 2016.

As for Lee having contribute­d to former Nashville Mayor Berry, the businessma­n did give $500 to her campaign in 2015. In March, Berry resigned after admitting to an extramarit­al affair with her police security officer.

After Black’s campaign attacked Lee earlier this month on his contributi­on to Berry as well as former Nashville Mayor Karl Dean, now a Democratic gubernator­ial candidate, and former Gov. Phil Bredesen, now a U.S. Senate candidate, Lee’s campaign told the Tennessean newspaper that the contributi­ons were “business decisions.”

While Boyd’s campaign attacks former Mayor Berry for supporting a so-called “sanctuary” policy, Berry in 2017 actually opposed an effort by Metro Nashville Council members to limit police cooperatio­n with federal immigratio­n officials, the Tennessean reported at the time. Council members dropped the effort.

Boyd himself has come under criticism for a $250,000 contributi­on he made back in 2016 to Conexion Americas, a Nashville nonprofit Conexion Americas. The money was for the group, which serves immigrants, to expand its culinary incubator and entreprene­urship program.

And Boyd has also come under fire for not having supported Trump in the 2016 GOP primaries.

Tennessee House Speaker Beth Harwell, the fourth leading Republican in the GOP gubernator­ial field, is the only candidate who hasn’t been attacked. She has lagged behind the other three in recent polls.

Democrats in the race are former Nashville Mayor Dean and state House Minority Leader Craig Fitzhugh of Ripley.

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