Supermarket wine foes pour cash into lawmaker accounts
NASHVILLE — Contributions totaling more than $364,000 have poured into lawmakers’ campaign accounts over the past two years from liquor wholesalers, package stores and the beer industry — three groups that have traditionally opposed changing state law to allow wine to be sold in supermarkets.
An Associated Press analysis of campaign finance data shows that six of the 11 members of the Senate Finance Committee, which is scheduled to take up a bill Tuesday to hold local referendums on whether to expand wine sales, received a combined $38,000 from the three political action committees.
Republican Senate Majority Leader Mark Norris of Collierville alone received $13,000, while the remaining five members of the Senate panel received no contributions from the three groups.
Norris, who voted against the measure when it eked out of the Senate State and Local Government Committee by a one-vote margin last week, did not return a message seeking comment.
Members of the subcommittee scheduled to take first House action on the measure on Wednesday received $15,000 from the three PACs, while members of the full committee received $10,000 more.
The Wine and Spirits Wholesalers of Tennessee PAC contributed $168,200, the Tennessee Wine and Spirits Retailers PAC gave $114,291 and $81,569 came from the beer wholesalers. Lobbyists for the three groups either didn’t return calls or declined to comment.
A Middle Tennessee State University poll released last week showed 65 percent support supermarket wine sales, while 24 percent oppose it. The telephone poll of 650 Tennesseans has a margin of error of plus or minus four 4 percentage points.
But opponents say the change would hurt sales at the 600 or so existing liquor stores around the state.