Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

After their expulsion, 2 Tennessee legislator­s raise $2M

- JONATHAN MATTISE

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Tennessee state Reps. Justin Pearson and Justin Jones have raised more than $2 million combined through about 70,400 campaign donations after Republican lawmakers abruptly expelled the Democrats this spring for their gun control protest on the House floor.

The vast majority of those small donations came over just a few days when the two had been kicked out, but not yet reinstated. If Republican­s kept the two young Black House members in office, they would not have been allowed to fundraise as sitting lawmakers while a legislativ­e session was ongoing.

Instead, each of the two lawmakers saw a flood of campaign cash beyond the norm for even Republican legislativ­e leaders to raise, let alone two freshman Democrats who are in the super-minority.

Campaign finance reports that were due by the end of Monday show how much Democrats capitalize­d on the national attention. Jones and Pearson were expelled over a breach of decorum rules for their protest calling for the GOP to pass gun control measures after the March 27 deadly shooting at a Christian school in Nashville. Their white colleague who joined them in protest, Rep. Gloria Johnson, was spared by a single vote.

Jones, from Nashville, brought in almost $959,000 from April 6, the date of the expulsions, to his reinstatem­ent April 10 by local Nashville officials. In total, he raised nearly $1.1 million from early April through June.

Pearson, from Memphis, raised more than $857,000 from his expulsion until April 13, when he was sworn back into the House and returned to the floor the day after the Shelby County Commission voted to reinstate him. Pearson’s total fundraisin­g topped $971,000 from April through June. His campaign previously provided The Associated Press with preliminar­y fundraisin­g totals.

Johnson remained in office, so the Knoxville lawmaker was still banned from fundraisin­g while Jones and Pearson were receiving tens of thousands of donations. Johnson raised $27,000 from late April through June.

GOP leaders said the expulsion actions — used only a handful times since the

Civil War — were necessary to avoid setting a precedent that lawmakers’ disruption­s of House proceeding­s through protest would be tolerated. They have denied that race was considered in the moves.

Pearson, Jones and Johnson have hit the national TV news circuit, visited President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris at the White House and made appearance­s outside Tennessee.

Among the biggest high-profile supporters has been Democratic U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy of Connecticu­t. Murphy tweeted a link to a fundraisin­g page in April, and his team said he helped raise more than $605,000 to split between Pearson and Jones.

Tennessee Democrats have been relegated to the super-minority in both legislativ­e chambers for years, limiting their recourse mainly to complainin­g when Republican­s want to halt debates quickly, or waive other House rules. Pearson and other Democrats hope the fundraisin­g wave can help them cut into that margin. In recent years, there have been very few competitiv­e legislativ­e districts.

Pearson and Jones first face Aug. 3 special elections to keep their seats.

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