Image Credit: Martin B. Cherry / Nashville Banner
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by Sarah Grace Taylor and Stephen Elliott, [The Nashville Banner, Creative Commons] –
An array of Democrats are picking up petitions to run for Congress across the state after Tennessee’s districts were redrawn last week, sending the minority party into a scramble.
Largely, Democrats are hoping to thwart the new map, or at least delay it until after November’s midterm election, through a series of lawsuits filed by the NAACP, ACLU and Tennessee Democratic Party in recent days.
As the new map waits in legal limbo, candidates now have until noon Friday to qualify for the newly-drawn districts, which split Memphis into three districts to take away the Democrats’ only seat of nine that represent Tennessee in the U.S. House.
State Rep. Justin J. Pearson (D-Memphis), who has been in a heated primary challenge against current Congressman Steve Cohen since before the redistricting, criticized members of his party during a rally reaffirming his candidacy on Tuesday, days after Cohen said he would not run in the newly drawn district if the court challenge fails.
“What they want is us to keep fighting each other in this moment of unity,” Pearson said. “They want Democrats to start jumping in the race against each other, so you start wasting your resources on each other instead of paying attention to who’s really doing this stuff.”
Still, Pearson has amassed new challenges in his district, including state Sen. London Lamar (D-Memphis). Meanwhile, several Nashville candidates, including Rep. Vincent Dixie (D-Nashville), former Nashville Mayor Megan Barry, Metro Councilmember Jacob Kupin and businessman Darden Copeland, are testing the waters in Middle Tennessee districts, where they believe the new gerrymandered districts may give them an opening.

New Nashville-area candidates
Among the first new candidates was state Rep. Vincent Dixie (D-Nashville), who ran in the District 7 special election last year but lost in the primary. Dixie picked up a petition to run again this spring, but ultimately decided not to file before the original deadline.
At the time, Dixie told the Banner that he and his wife wanted a break from campaigning. After a week of tense and racially centered debates at the General Assembly last week, Dixie says his wife was the first one to encourage him to re-enter the race.
“The climate changed. This is an attack on Black voters and democracy itself,” Dixie told the Banner Tuesday, noting that he had not officially announced his campaign but was “all in” to run again in the 7th District, which would change under the new map but still would include parts of Davidson and Montgomery counties, which make it a target for Democrats.
Dixie lost to state Rep. Aftyn Behn (D-Nashville) in the 2025 Democratic primary. Behn, who has not picked up a petition to run and was not available for comment Tuesday, lost to now-Congressman Matt Van Epps, a Republican who is seeking reelection in the district.
Unlike last time, Dixie said there is a political tide shifting in the state, which Democrats need to take advantage of in order to get out from under the Republican supermajority that thrust the new districts upon candidates and voters at the last minute.
Particularly, Dixie says, it’s up to Black leaders to run with the support of white Democrats.
“We can do this. Black leaders, such as myself, were built for a time like this,” Dixie said. “Now, I just need our allies to get behind us and join the fight with us.”
Another candidate who ran in the special election but lost to Behn in the primary was Copeland, a corporate lobbyist and business owner in Nashville, who says that he’s the most likely to win outside of Davidson and Montgomery, and therefore the best Democrat to run in the 7th.
“I still have the same belief I had nine months ago, and that is that I can win in every corner of this district,” Copeland told the Banner late Tuesday, noting that he is also committed to running regardless of the redistricting lawsuits.
Copeland, who was a first-time candidate last year but gained name recognition during the short special election campaign, said he would fare better than his opponents because he can work with anyone and would campaign on the idea of un-gerrymandered redistricting in 2030, to create a more representative state.
“I think I won’t make the mistake this time of not spending as much time in Davidson County, you know?” Copeland asked, noting that he outfundraised the other Democrats and performed well in the district’s less urban counties. “I think I’ll be formidable.”
Kupin, who represents downtown and Germantown on Nashville’s Metro Council, is another of several potential candidates navigating the slapdash qualifying period. He pulled a petition to qualify to run as a Democrat in the 7th Congressional District on Tuesday.
“Things have been changing by the hour with who’s in and who’s out and who was in and is now out, and who was out and is now in,” Kupin told the Banner. “I’ve shared with a number of members in the Democratic Party that I’m here to help and here to support, whether that’s being a candidate or supporting a candidate. Normally, there’d be some more time to talk and think and have conversations, but with a seven-day window, [there’s] not much time to maneuver. So I pulled my petition, and [I’ll] think about it these next couple days, talk to folks that are getting in the race, and I’ll make a decision before noon on Friday.”
Copeland never used Kupin’s name, but rebuffed the idea of his candidacy, calling him “untested” outside of the city, which only makes up a sliver of the 7th District.
“I don’t think that being the councilman for downtown Nashville is a badge of honor outside of Nashville,” Copeland said.
Other Middle Tennessee districts that shifted due to redistricting have also drawn new candidates, most notably the 6th Congressional District, where Barry, the former mayor of Nashville, is scouting a candidacy.
Barry, who ran against former U.S. Rep. Mark Green in the 7th Congressional District in 2024, pulled a petition to run in the 6th District on Tuesday, later telling the Banner she was undecided and hopeful that the districts wouldn’t change before this year’s elections.
“After Republicans shamelessly changed the rules in the middle of an election year, we owe it to ourselves as Democrats to fight back. I pulled a petition and I’m taking a serious look at the newly drawn (6th) district,” Barry wrote late Tuesday. “My hope is that the courts will call a halt to this madness, but in the interim, we need to be prepared to fight on every front for the future of our state and our country.”
Metro Councilmember Mike Cortese, who was running in the District 5 Democratic primary, now plans to run in District 4, where he lives. Other Democrats jumping into the fray include Saletta Holloway in the 7th and Miriam Leibowitz in the 6th.
The New Ninth
In Memphis, where Cohen has one foot out the door, vowing not to run in the redrawn 9th District, his former intern, Sen. Lamar, is planning to take his spot.
“It’s important that we meet the moment that we’re in right now,” Lamar, the youngest woman and the youngest Black person to ever be elected to the state senate, told the Banner Tuesday. “And when I think about everything I’ve been able to accomplish throughout being an effective legislator in the supermajority Republican legislature, I think that that is the type of leadership and track record we need to take on this new fight.”
Lamar said she would not run against Cohen if the districts returned to their current state and he decided to continue his candidacy. She did say she spoke to Pearson and urged him to run in the newly drawn 5th District, where he now lives. The new 5th is the most noticeably gerrymandered district in the state, reaching from Maury and Williamson counties all the way to the Arkansas border, an apparent effort to boost the prospects of Rep. Andy Ogles, the Republican Congressman who was seen as the most easily targeted Republican in the state under the original districts.
“I did my part as a good Democrat, and he’s gonna make whatever decision he wants to make,” Lamar said of Pearson. “But I’m gonna do what I gotta do, because I offer something different.”
During his rally, Pearson did not name any specific candidates, but seemed to position himself as the most revolutionary candidate in a field of “status quo” opponents, denouncing lawmakers who work within the supermajority system.
“It isn’t about committees [or] weak bills that people have passed because, y’all, whatever committees they were on didn’t stop this from happening, whatever friendships they said they were building, didn’t stop one of the most significant acts of political violence from happening in the 21st century,” Pearson said of the redistricting. “In three days, they took away the only Black-majority district in the state of Tennessee, leading the Neo Confederacy in their actions to take away and dilute Black political power. It’s time to stop trying to play old games.”


3 Responses
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6pFr0qvpxKI
Something is wrong with all black people – Pastor David Manning
Pearson does realize he is in the party of slavery and segregation…. doesn’t he? Funny he demands segregation for his race and projects the integrators as neo-confederates. Cognitive Dissonance.
Watching the Tennessee congress’s Democrats rant and stand on the furniture showing they are still feral and scream “No Jim Crow” is so telling of their intelligence. These Democrats either don’t know or are told by the DNC who voted in all the Jim Crow laws, poll taxes etc..
News flash from history….. THE DEMOCRATS CREATED JIM CROW LAWS !!
Today, Democrats would like us to forget that they were the party of Jim Crow, the Klan and racists such as Woodrow Wilson, the globally thinking progressive who, upon taking office as president, promptly segregated the U.S. Civil Service and instituted policies designed to discriminate against blacks and other minorities. Democrats in the South enforced a vicious Jim Crow system of outright discrimination against blacks, particularly measures aimed at preventing them from voting. They opposed Republican-sponsored civil rights legislation at the state and federal levels. Republicans again passed the 1964 Civil Rights Act by 89% of Republicans and 52% of Democrats.
Democrats Resisted. Democrats have had their knee on the neck of blacks with Southern Democrats had overtly and proudly imposed segregation and terrorized blacks, the national Democratic Party decided instead to be more subtle and get them as dependent on government as possible. As LBJ so elegantly put it, “I’ll have those ni**ers voting Democratic for the next 200 years.” At the same time, the Democrats started a persistent campaign of lies and innuendo, falsely equating any opposition to their welfare state with racism.