Chattanooga Times Free Press

Gov. Lee calls on Casada to resign

- BY ANDY SHER NASHVILLE BUREAU

NASHVILLE — Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee on Monday night called on embattled Republican House Speaker Glen Casada to resign, saying otherwise he would call lawmakers into special session to act after the House GOP Caucus’ stunning approval hours earlier of a no-confidence resolution.

Lee’s move came after the Republican Caucus members voted 45-24 for the nonbinding resolution.

Lee, also a Republican, said in a statement that House Republican­s had “sent a clear message, and I’m prepared to call a special session if the speaker doesn’t resign.”

His statement followed Casada saying he was “disappoint­ed” by the vote but showed little sign of giving up, vowing to “work the next few months to regain the confidence of my colleagues.”

The caucus action and Lee’s entry into the controvers­y capped a tumultuous three weeks for the 59-year-old Casada, who had worked for years to become House speaker, finally claiming the prize he so desired just 4 1/2 months ago in January.

Casada faced multiplyin­g controvers­ies that began with allegation­s his top aide had sought to frame a Nashville activist who’d been ordered to stay away from the speaker and revelation­s of leaked

misogynist­ic and racist text messages three years ago from the same aide, who quit earlier this month in the ensuing uproar.

Casada responded jokingly or approvingl­y to three sexually oriented texts from aide Cade Cothren, who had boasted among other things about having sex with a woman in a restaurant’s restroom.

Other controvers­ies began to multiply.

After the no-confidence vote in the GOP Caucus’ closed- door meeting in a Nashville hotel, a drumbeat quickly began from some top Republican­s, with Tennessee Republican Party Chairman Scott Golden calling on Casada to step down.

Golden said the vote of no confidence “sends a clear message” and “it is time for the speaker to heed the advice of the majority of his fellow legislator­s and step down from his position of leadership.”

House Majority Leader William Lamberth, R-Portland, also urged the speaker to resign and called on Lee to call lawmakers into special session to choose a new speaker before July.

Next came Lee and then came a joint statement from all top House Republican leaders, including GOP Caucus Chairman Cameron Sexton of Crossville, who had been a driving force behind fashioning a vote of no confidence and researchin­g House Caucus and Robert’s Rules of Order to determine whether it was feasible.

Other Casada controvers­ies included the speaker’s request of the House Ethics Committee to issue an ethics advisory opinion about his dealings with former aide Cothren, along with an unidentifi­ed man said to be a then-GOP political operative.

Outraged over a proposed draft ethics report he was presented, Rep. Mike Carter, R-Ooltewah, last week publicly called for Casada to resign, saying he saw it as an effort to “rig” the process and exonerate the speaker.

Carter went into the issue again during the 2 1/2- hour, closed- door GOP Caucus gathering, held in a large meeting room in the basement of a downtown Nashville boutique hotel, according to several attendees.

Later, Carter tweeted that “today the House Republican Caucus put the interests of Tennessee above politics and selfintere­st and I couldn’t be more proud.”

Some Republican­s see Carter, Sexton and several other representa­tives as potentiall­y interested in pursuing the speakershi­p if and when Casada goes.

Rep. Patsy Hazlewood, R- Signal Mountain, one of the first Republican­s to publicly call for the speaker to step down, said with her views “perfectly clear,” there was no need to speak Monday.

“It’s a sad day. It’s a sad day for our party, it’s a sad day for the House and it’s a sad day for Tennessee. But I think it’s just a step that has to be taken,” Hazlewood said by phone as she drove home from Nashville.

Hazlewood, who spoke before Lee waded in, said, “I don’t see anything good … for [Casada] by continuing to fight this. But that’s only a decision he can make.”

Earlier Monday, Lee told reporters that depending on House Republican­s’ actions, the possibilit­y of his calling a special session for lawmakers to consider further action was “something to consider.” But Lee also called it “premature.”

“We’ll have to wait and see what they do first,” the governor said, referring to the later caucus meeting.

Lee said, “I think the Legislatur­e will determine, they will signal whether or not they want a special session and we’ll consider that sort of thing,” he told reporters as he prepared to do volunteer work at a Nashville food bank.

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

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Glen Casada

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