The Commercial Appeal

Mcnally appears to be trying to kill Bible bill

- Natalie Allison

The fate of this year’s Bible bill has taken an unexpected turn — one that likely signals its death.

Tennessee Lt. Gov. Randy Mcnally, long an opponent of perennial attempts by House Rep. Jerry Sexton to make the Bible the state book, has signed on as the Senate sponsor of the effort.

As of Friday, Mcnally, R-oak Ridge, was listed as a sponsor for House Joint Resolution 150, which would “designate the Holy Bible as the official State book” and require that distinctio­n be listed in the Tennessee Blue Book with other state trivia.

Sexton, R-bean Station, has filed similar legislatio­n for seven years, but this time opted to introduce it as a resolution rather than a bill. The resolution narrowly passed the House 55-28 on Monday, with seven members voting “present.”

It was awaiting a Senate sponsor to push it through the upper chamber’s committee system.

Given his vocal opposition to the resolution, Mcnally’s decision to sign on as a sponsor signals his likely intent to kill the effort by never allowing it to be taken up in a Senate committee.

In a statement, Mcnally’s office did not directly answer why he became a sponsor of the resolution, but noted the lieutenant governor has taken no action to move it through the Senate.

“The first senator to sign on to a House Joint Resolution received by the Senate becomes the prime sponsor,” Mcnally spokespers­on Adam Kleinheide­r said. “Lt. Governor Mcnally was the first senator to sign on.”

Kleinheide­r noted that while the resolution has been referred to the Senate state and local committee, Mcnally “has not yet requested it be placed on a calendar.” Mcnally, who is Catholic, previously said it makes light of the Bible by comparing it to other official state objects, such as the salamander as the state amphibian.

Repeated attempts by Sexton, a Baptist minister, to push the Bible bill have elicited groans and eye rolls from his fellow Republican­s, as well as impassione­d arguments by Democrats against designatin­g any official religious book for the state.

After the Bible bill passed in 2016, former Gov. Bill Haslam, a Republican, vetoed the legislatio­n. A veto override vote the legislatur­e was unsuccessf­ul.

In addition to his own personal religious conviction­s, Sexton has also argued in favor of the Bible being the state book due to Nashville’s lucrative Bibleprint­ing industry.

He did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment Friday.

Reach Natalie Allison at nallison@ tennessean.com. Follow her on Twitter at @natalie_allison.

 ?? GEORGE WALKER IV/THE TENNESSEAN ?? Lt. Governor Randy Mcnally bangs the gavel at the start of a special session of the Senate at the State Capitol on Jan. 21.
GEORGE WALKER IV/THE TENNESSEAN Lt. Governor Randy Mcnally bangs the gavel at the start of a special session of the Senate at the State Capitol on Jan. 21.

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