Governor Lee Calls Special Session Of General Assembly To Redistrict Tennessee Congressional Map

Governor Lee Calls Special Session Of General Assembly To Redistrict Tennessee Congressional Map

Governor Lee Calls Special Session Of General Assembly To Redistrict Tennessee Congressional Map

Image Credit: Gov. Bill Lee / Facebook

The Tennessee Conservative [By Olivia Lupia] –

On Friday, May 1, Governor Bill Lee officially called a special legislative session of the Tennessee General Assembly to review and potentially redraw Tennessee’s congressional map after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that districts can no longer be created using race-based metrics. 

Following a conversation with President Trump last Thursday, the Governor’s office announced the session will begin Tuesday, May 5, to “formally review the state’s congressional map following the renewed nationwide action around congressional representation.”

“We owe it to Tennesseans to ensure our congressional districts accurately reflect the will of Tennessee voters,”said Gov. Lee. “After consultation with the Lt. Governor, Speaker of the House, Attorney General, and Secretary of State, I believe the General Assembly has a responsibility to review the map and ensure it remains fair, legal, and defensible.”

The release also emphasizes that, “In order to comply with mandatory election qualifying timelines and ensure Tennesseans have reflective representation, any change to Tennessee’s congressional map must be enacted as soon as possible.”

Several Republican members of the legislature have expressed enthusiastic support for the special session reviewing the map, which may result in the only Democrat district in the state being dismantled as minority population densities are no longer a key factor in drawing the lines.

“The US Supreme Court has ruled Tennessee’s current map for congressional representation unconstitutional. The legislature must redraw the districts. It’s official. Next week, we will return to Nashville to fulfill that duty,” posted Republican Senator Adam Lowe.

Rep. Johnny Garrett, who is also running for the U.S. House, wrote, “I’m excited to get to work on Tuesday to support [President Trump] by sending more Tennessee to DC and getting rid of the radical democrat Rep. [Steve] Cohen.”

Senator Marsha Blackburn, who is a gubernatorial candidate, has been championing a special session since the SCOTUS ruling and continues to back the redistricting, writing, “Grateful to President Trump and Governor Bill Lee for their commitment to our state’s conservative values, and it was an honor to help lead the charge alongside them. Now, I’m hopeful the Republican supermajority in the legislature will act and make certain we add another Republican seat-I have your back 100%. I’m not slowing down. As governor, I’ll make sure Tennessee is America’s conservative leader.”

In contrast, Rep. Monty Fritts (R-Kinston-District 32), also a candidate for governor, does not seem overly enthused by the upcoming session, saying in a social media video, “Governor Lee doesn’t have a really good track record in calling special sessions. Our liberties have not prevailed when he writes a call, so that concerns me.”

“But if we’re going to do it, how about you Tennesseans get on the phone and your email and how about you write all of the leadership, and how about you demand that we remove the 4% grocery sales tax as part of this stupid special session we’re about to do. How about you demand that we reform property taxes in Tennessee so that we don’t tax against unrealized capital gains, because that’s unconstitutional. And how about we make it so in Tennessee you don’t feel like you’re renting your own doggone property…how about we fix those things. And one last, let’s put the cherry on top of this sundae, if these punked-out politicians are going to call us back into special session, how about we also demand a full constitutional carry… How about we stand up for the average Tennessean rather than another political power play executed by a bunch of people who have lost touch with the average Tennesseans. That’s my challenge to you, friends,” he entreated.

Pushback is definitely to be expected from Democrats, particularly those representing the Memphis area as they have decried the SCOTUS decision as “racist” and likened the Republican push to redistrict in several states to a “new Jim Crow South”. 

Multiple Southern states are working to quickly adjust or redraw their maps under the new parameters including Texas, which just had their maps upheld by SCOTUS, Florida which passed their new maps within hours of the SCOTUS decision, and Alabama which will also head into a special session next week.

The Department of Justice announced it will enforce the Supreme Court’s ruling in every state with racially gerrymandered districts. “The [Justice Department] under [Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche] continues to prioritize equal protection of the laws for ALL Americans, be it in employment, housing, education- and voting” stated U.S. Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Harmeet Dhillon last Thursday.

This will be the second consecutive year the Governor has convened a special session, with last year’s focused on implementing Lee’s school voucher program and increased disaster relief in the wake of 2024’s Hurricane Helene. Thus far, the addendum to the 2026 session is slated to only focus on the congressional map, though the agenda could be amended as lawmakers return to Nashville this week.

About the Author: Olivia Lupia is a political refugee from Colorado who now calls Tennessee home. A proud follower of Christ, she views all political happenings through a Biblical lens and aims to utilize her knowledge and experience to educate and equip others. Olivia is an outspoken conservative who has run for local office, managed campaigns, and been highly involved with state & local GOPs, state legislatures, and other grassroots organizations and movements. Olivia can be reached at olivia@tennesseeconservativenews.com.

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2 Responses

  1. The country has fallen into this stupid, exhausting trap where everything gets filtered through race, identity, and raw tribal power plays instead of basic competence and character. It’s exhausting and degrading. Race should play zero role in how we draw districts, pick leaders, hire people, or judge performance. We are all individuals. The only things that should matter for Congress, President, or any position of power are:Character
    Competence
    Intelligence
    Integrity
    Results

    Full stop. Skin color is irrelevant.

    We’re supposed to be a nation of individuals, not racial voting blocs to be carved up, packed, cracked, and manipulated for seats. Yet both parties (though they do it in different ways) treat people like skin-color chess pieces. Merit, integrity, and ability take a backseat while everyone screams about “representation” by race. It’s genuinely stupid. It divides people who should be on the same team, lowers standards, breeds resentment, and makes the whole system feel rigged and fake. A lot of normal people are sick of it they just want competent leaders who put the country first, regardless of what they look like. This racial obsession in politics is one of the dumbest directions America has gone in the last 30+ years. The fact that both parties obsess over race when drawing maps, gerrymandering districts, and counting voters is pure corruption for raw power. They treat Americans like racial blocks to be moved around on a chessboard instead of citizens who should be judged as individuals. It’s cynical, divisive, and deeply damaging to the country. This is exactly why so many people are fed up. The system has been poisoned by identity politics, and both sides keep playing the game because it helps them win seats in the short term even though it makes the country worse in the long term. The principle of color-blind merit is the right one. The fact that it’s now considered controversial by many shows how far things have drifted.

  2. Each Congressional Representative represents approximately 700,000 people in TN. The districts should be from the same area of the state. Race, religion, or party affiliation (or lack thereof) should not determine the make-up of the district. You can gerrymander a district across the northern border of TN that satisfies the number but the people living in that hypothetical district would not have the same issues in common. People living in the same area would have similar concerns. They may have different opinions on how those concerns should be handled which would make for better representation for their district.

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