Chattanooga Times Free Press

New conservati­ve group takes on government mandates

- BY ANITA WADHWANI

In the six months since Tennessee Stands launched as a fresh conservati­ve voice railing against pandemic policies — galvanizin­g resistance to COVID-19 emergency orders by state and local officials — the newly establishe­d nonprofit has worked to coalesce resistance to government mandates during the pandemic.

Tennessee Stands and its founder, Gary Humble, have filed lawsuits against Gov. Bill Lee and county officials, organized protests over mask mandates and business restrictio­ns in town squares across Tennessee, establishe­d a loosely organized string of offshoot organizati­ons on Facebook — Knoxville Stands and Memphis Stands among them — and lobbied for law changes, although there is no record Humble or others associated with the organizati­on have formally registered as lobbyists.

The group is the main impetus behind a bill filed by state Sen. Mark Pody, R-Lebanon, to give parents the right to a

religious exemption for any future COVID-19 vaccinatio­n mandated by schools. Current law says religious exemptions may be overridden during a pandemic. Pody said he has been working “very hard” with Humble, Tennessee Stands and others on the measure.

Humble, the group’s founder, is a Williamson County resident and father of young children who is also the impetus behind a Facebook group called Recall Williamson that is critical of school board members in his county who have supported mask mandates. Recall Williamson filed suit against the public school district over mask mandates. The suit was blocked by a court order.

Humble said in a December interview that he is a full-time employee of Tennessee Stands, which has not yet had to file tax returns revealing its funding sources.

Humble is a former pastor whose most recent job was serving as CEO for the Family Action Council, a conservati­ve organizati­on led by former lawmaker David Fowler that for years has weighed in on opposition to abortion. Humble spoke to the Tennessee Lookout in December but has declined to comment or answer questions since then.

“We want accountabi­lity and we want respect for the state constituti­on,” Humble said in December. His group opposes what it characteri­zes as “government overreach” in “lawless executive orders” by Lee. It has enlisted paying members who want to “reclaim our liberty.” Humble said Lee is violating the state constituti­on in issuing executive orders that don’t have the full vetting of the Tennessee Legislatur­e.

Humble’s group has proved successful in harnessing the unease and anger of Tennessean­s opposed to what they see as government overreach in enacting pandemic policies including mask mandates and closures of businesses and schools. The group’s Facebook page posted supportive messages in advance of the siege of the U.S. Capitol last week and has since condemned shutdowns of social media sites including Parler, where the group regularly posted updates. Tennessee Stands has told its followers to join new social media sites including Telegram.

In a Nashville court late last week, Humble argued that he has been harassed and had to pull his children from school due to mask mandates. Humble said masks impact his asthma and impede Tennessean­s’ freedoms.

Attorneys for the state are seeking to dismiss Humble’s lawsuit. No ruling has yet been issued.

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Bill Lee

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