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Early Voting Drops Statewide as Davidson, Shelby See Major Declines

More than 2.2 million Tennesseans cast ballots during early voting over the past two weeks as turnout nearly reached 46 percent, nearly 3 percent fewer than the 2020 presidential election total. 

Early voting in person totaled 2,132,610, and 82,253 were cast by mail, for a total of 2,214,870 through Oct. 31st, the final day of early voting, according to the Secretary of State’s office.

Though some involved in the presidential election are calling it the most important one in this era, early voting numbers don’t quite match that view, falling 2.89 percent. Tennessee typically sees about half of voters go to the polls early.

Early voting turnout in the 2020 presidential election between current President Joe Biden and Donald Trump, who was the incumbent at the time, hit 2,280,767, nearly 66,000 more than cast ballots so far in this year’s election between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Trump.

Both early voting totals, though, are much higher than in 2016 when 1.67 million Tennesseans cast ballots early as Trump defeated former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, the Secretary of State’s figures show.

Enthusiasm across Tennessee through the 14 days of early voting was evident, as Tennessee saw more than 2.13 million registered voters cast their ballots in person — a new record.

– Doug Kufner, Tennessee Secretary of State’s office

Among the state’s biggest counties, Davidson, typically a stronghold for Democrats, showed a major decline in early voting from four years ago, dropping off 13.3 percent as 219,411 cast ballots early compared to 253,123 in 2020. 

Davidson County Elections Administrator Jeff Roberts said the difference could be that 34,000 people voted by absentee ballots during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 compared to 13,000 this year, a difference of 21,000. All of those are counted as mail-in ballots.

Absentee balloting fell off by nearly 61 percent this fall to 82,253 from 210,428 in 2020 when many voters were afraid to go to the polls and risk catching COVID-19. The American Civil Liberties Union sued the state to give voters more exceptions to vote absentee four years ago.

Davidson County was split into three congressional districts before the 2022 vote, a move that gave Republicans an advantage in winning all three seats and forced longtime Democratic U.S. Rep. Jim Cooper to step away from Congress.

Early voting in Shelby County, another focal point for Democrats, fell off even more dramatically, dropping by 20.9 percent to 257,733 this fall from 326,007 in 2020. Shelby County’s decrease of 68,274 early voters topped the total state decline of 65,900.

Hamilton County, in contrast, saw a 13.2 percent increase with 117,254 casting ballots early compared to 103,590 four years ago.

Knox County reported a small decrease, down .61 percent to 170,736 from 171,790 in 2020.

Rutherford County also reported a 2.7 percent decrease in early voting, dipping to 117,040 from 120,281 four years ago. In addition, Williamson County dipped .57 percent, from 122,277 in 2020 to 121,585 this year. 

Secretary of State spokesperson Doug Kufner said early voting ran well because of the work of county election commission staff and poll workers statewide.

“Enthusiasm across Tennessee through the 14 days of early voting was evident, as Tennessee saw more than 2.13 million registered voters cast their ballots in person — a new record. Seventy-six counties also exceeded their in-person early voting turnout from 2020. We anticipate a robust Election Day turnout, and we encourage all registered Tennesseans who have not yet voted to make their voice heard on Nov. 5,” Kufner said in a statement.

In spite of disruptions from Hurricane Helene, most of the counties that suffered from massive flooding reported early voting increases. In some instances, election officials in those counties had to change voting sites because of flood damage and road outages.

Greene County, for instance, experienced an early voting increase of 30.4 percent with 19,851 casting ballots this year, compared to 15,220 in 2020.

Carter County saw early voting increase by 21.2 percent with 14,753 participating this year compared to 12,169 four years ago.

Washington County experienced a 6.8 percent jump in early voting totals, going to 45,825 from 42,909.

Johnson County saw a small increase of 1.92 percent as early voting went up to 5,474 from 5,371 in 2020. Cocke County also saw a bit of an increase with early voting jumping 3.3 percent, to 10,670 from 10,325 in 2020.

Unicoi County saw a slight decline of 1.73 percent to 6,067 this year from 6,174 four years ago.

Tennessee Lookout is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Tennessee Lookout maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Holly McCall for questions: info@tennesseelookout.com. Follow Tennessee Lookout on Facebook and X.

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Politics Politics Feature

August 1st Races of Note

The historic congressional district of Memphis, currently and for many years designated as Tennessee’s 9th, has generally been one of long incumbencies.

The seat’s current inhabitant Steve Cohen, a Democrat and a longtime member of the state Senate, won it in 2006, after Harold Ford Jr., who had succeeded his father in the seat, had let go of it to seek an open U.S. Senate seat. 

The two Fords, both Democrats, had served the 9th for a total of 32 years, beginning in 1974 when Ford Sr. pried it loose in what was then regarded as an upset, from Dan Kuykendall, the only Republican ever to hold the seat, at least in modern times.

Kuykendall had won the seat in 1966, defeating liberal Democrat George Grider, who in 1964 had won a Democratic primary race against Cliff Davis, a longtime member of the old Crump political machine who had held the Memphis seat for a full quarter century.

From an historical perspective, the relatively brief Grider/Kuykendall period, during which Republicans had, both locally and statewide, enjoyed a resurgence, was the only real time of rapid flux in the district’s — which is to say, the city’s — voting habits.

Before then, Memphis and the 9th had voted the traditional Southern Democratic party line. And, after that, with the Fords’ advent, that line bore the imprimatur of the growing political dominance of African Americans.

Cohen, white and Jewish, won the seat in 2006, taking advantage of a split among a dozen-odd Black primary opponents, and he has held it ever since — successfully taking on a series of name Black primary opponents and defeating them all, one-on-one, usually with ease.

He would seem clearly on that record to have represented his majority-Black district faithfully.

Cohen’s main current primary challenger is no slouch. Lawyer Corey Strong is a former Democratic Party chair with a background in education and military affairs (U.S. Naval Academy, two tours of Afghanistan).

Faced with Cohen’s enduring popularity and his million-dollar war chest, Strong has done the best he can, chiding Cohen for his often antic behavior and claiming the incumbent has not helped to keep the city’s infrastructure current (despite an impressive record of securing grants and Cohen’s recent announcement of $400 million for a new I-55 bridge).


Senate candidate Gloria Johnson (Photo: Jackson Baker)

Other races of note on the August 1st ballot:

• A free-for-all in the Democratic primary for the U.S. Senate, with Knoxville state Rep. Gloria Johnson (she of the “Tennessee Three”) vying with Memphian Marquita Bradshaw and others for the right to take on Republican incumbent Marsha Blackburn in November

• Another brisk competition in the Democratic 8th District congressional primary, with Sarah Freeman, Leonard Perkins, Lawrence A. Pivnick, Lynnette P. Williams, and Brenda Woods, competing for a November shot against GOP incumbent David Kustoff

• A Democratic primary challenge to District 30 state Senator Sara Kyle from Erika Stotts Pearson

• A primary challenge to District 84 Democratic state Rep. Joe Towns from Vernell Williams

• A primary challenge to District 86 state Rep. Justin J. Pearson (he of the “Tennessee Three”) by David Page

• A Democratic primary challenge to District 93 state Rep. G.A. Hardaway from Lashanta Rudd

• A hot race in the Democratic primary for the open District 96 state House seat involving contestants Eric Dunn, Telisa Franklin, Gabby Salinas, Orrden Williams, and David Winston

• A Republican Party challenge to District 97 state Rep. John Gillespie from Christina Oppenhuizen

• A general election race for General Sessions Court clerk between Democrat Tami Sawyer and Republican Lisa Arnold

Shelby County Republican chairman Cary Vaughn with General Sessions clerk candidate Lisa Arnold (Photo: Jackson Baker)

Along with other offices to be decided this year, five of the nine seats on the Memphis-Shelby County School Board are on the August ballot. Candidates are:

• District 2: Ernest Gillespie III, Althea Greene (incumbent), and Natalie McKinney

• District 3: Jesse Jeff, Stephanie Love (incumbent), Ozell Pace Jr., and Angela Rogers

• District 4: James Q. Bacchus, Alvin Crook, Eric Harris, Tamarques Porter, and Anecia Washington

• District 5: Mauricio Calvo (incumbent), Audrey Elion, and Sable Otey

• District 7: Chavez G. Donelson, Danielle Huggins, Frank William Johnson (incumbent), Towanna C. Murphy, and Jason Sharif


Saturday of this week will see the end of early voting for the August 1st Shelby County general election and the state and federal primary elections. 

As a reminder, Monday through Friday, early voting locations are open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., with the exception of the Shelby County Election Commission site which is open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Weekend times for all sites are 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday, July 27th.

Early voting sites (in Memphis except where otherwise indicated) are:

• Abundant Grace Fellowship Church, 1574 E. Shelby Drive

• Anointed Temple of Praise, 3939 Riverdale Road

• Arlington Safe Room, 11842 Otto Lane, Arlington

• Baker Community Center, 7942 Church Road, Millington

• Briarwood Community Church, 1900 N. Germantown Parkway

• Collierville Church of Christ, 575 Shelton Drive, Collierville

• Compassion Church, 3505 S. Houston Levee Road

• Dave Wells Community Center, 915 Chelsea Avenue

• Ed Rice Community Center, 2935 N. Watkins Street

• Gaisman Community Center, 4223 Macon Road 

• Glenview Community Center, 1141 S. Barksdale Street

• Greater Lewis St. Baptist Church, 152 E. Parkway N.

• Greater Middle Baptist Church, 4982 Knight Arnold Road

• Harmony Church, 6740 St. Elmo Road, Bartlett

• I.H. Clubhouse, 4523 Canada Road, Lakeland

• Mississippi Boulevard Church Family Life Center, 70 N. Bellevue Boulevard 

• Mt. Pisgah Missionary Baptist Church, 1234 Pisgah Road

• Mt. Zion Baptist Church, 60 S. Parkway E.

• New Bethel Missionary Baptist Church, 7786 Poplar Pike, Germantown

• Raleigh United Methodist Church, 3295 Powers Road

• Riverside Missionary Baptist Church, 3560 S. Third Street

• Second Baptist Church, 4680 Walnut Grove Road 

• Shelby County Election Commission, James Meredith Building, 157 Poplar Avenue

• Solomon Temple MB Church, 1460 Winchester Road

• TN Shakespeare Company, 7950 Trinity Road, Cordova 

• White Station Church of Christ, 1106 Colonial Road 

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Politics Politics Feature

Election 2023: It’s On!

Some months after the first major organized debates made it obvious which of the 17 declared mayoral candidates should be taken seriously, the six people who best answer that description were dueling again last Monday night at the studios of ABC24.

Those were Sheriff Floyd Bonner, former NAACP president Van Turner, businessman J.W. Gibson, state House Democratic Leader Karen Camper, school board member Michelle McKissack, and Downtown Memphis Commission CEO Paul Young.

The same lineup, more or less, was due to be involved in two more high-profile TV forums later in the week, at channels WREG-TV and WMC-TV. Missing in those engagements will be former Mayor Willie Herenton, who leads such polls as have been conducted but has stayed clear of all forums so far, including the one last Monday night.

Some of the brickbats previously thrown by one candidate against another were thrown again and doubtless will be again later in the week.

Bonner took barbs from opponents Turner, McKissack, and Young on issues ranging from excessive jail deaths to his reasons for wanting to leave his current job for that of mayor. McKissack was questioned about why the board of MSCS had not yet been able to put its recently tarnished past behind it. Gibson and Young got into a back-and-forth about whether the Downtown chief had been feckless about following through on projects the city was “on the hook” for.

And even the absent Herenton was taken to task, by moderator Richard Ransom, for the former mayor’s refusal to make himself publicly accountable, and by McKissack for affecting an air of old-fashioned paternalism.

• Meanwhile, the early voting schedule starts this Friday, September 15th, and will continue through Saturday, September 30th. Venues are listed below.

Times of accessibility are 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Friday, and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturdays. One exception: the Downtown Election Commission HQ will be accessible from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.

Abundant Grace Fellowship Church, 1574 E. Shelby Dr., Memphis 38116

Anointed Temple of Praise, 3939 Riverdale Rd., Memphis 38115

Briarwood Community Church, 1900 N. Germantown Pkwy., Cordova 38016

Dave Wells Community Center, 915 Chelsea Ave., Memphis 38107

Glenview Community Center, 1141 S. Barksdale St., Memphis 38114

Greater Lewis Street Baptist Church, 152 E. Parkway N., Memphis 38104

Greater Middle Baptist Church, 4982 Knight Arnold Rd., Memphis 38118

Leawood Baptist Church, 3638 Macon Rd., Memphis 38122

Mississippi Blvd. Church – Family Life Center, 70 N. Bellevue Blvd., Memphis 38104

Mt. Zion Baptist Church, 60 S. Parkway E., Memphis 38106

Pursuit of God Church, 3759 N. Watkins, Memphis 38127

Raleigh United Methodist Church, 3295 Powers Rd., Memphis 38128

Riverside Missionary Baptist Church, 3560 S. Third St., Memphis 38109

Second Baptist Church, 4680 Walnut Grove Rd., Memphis 38117

Shelby County Election Commission, James Meredith Bldg., 157 Poplar, Memphis 38103

Solomon Temple MB Church, 1460 Winchester Rd., Memphis 38116

TN Shakespeare Company, 7950 Trinity Rd., Cordova 38018

White Station Church of Christ, 1106 Colonial Rd., Memphis 38117

• Mayoral and council races will be reviewed in a special section of next week’s Flyer, in partnership with MLK50, and will largely focus on the issue of public safety.

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Politics Politics Feature

Commission Races and Early Voting Info

The outcome in a majority of the 13 Shelby County Commission seats was established in the May primaries. The occupants of the remaining five seats remain to be determined in the August 4th election. For all practical purposes, what is at stake is how large the Democratic majority on that body will be when it convenes its new term in September. The two GOP incumbents here are expected to win. A Democratic victory in the three other contested races, considered likely, would result in a 9 to 4 Democratic majority.
County Commission Races
District 1: Republican incumbent Amber Mills faces Democrat Donna McDonald-Martin.

District 4: Republican incumbent Brandon Morrison vs. Democratic challenger Britney Chauncey.

District 5: Democrat Shante Avant and Republican Todd Payne tangle for an open seat.

District 7: Henri Brooks, Democrat, vs. Shirelle-Dakota Brown, Independent.

District 13: Incumbent Democrat Michael Whaley faces Republican Ed Apple.

Early Voting Hours and Locations
Early voting for the August 4th election begins on Friday, July 15th, at the following locations. The Shelby County Election Commission location will be open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. that day. All others will be open from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. All locations will be open on Saturday, July 16th, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and will be closed on Sunday, July 17th. From Monday, July 18th, to Friday, July 23rd, all locations will be open from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m., except for the Election Commission, whose hours will be 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. The same schedule will be kept the week of July 25th through July 29th. On Saturday, July 23rd, all locations will be open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. On Saturday, July 30th, the final day of early voting, all locations will be open from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Abundant Grace Fellowship Church, 1574 E. Shelby Dr., Memphis 38116

Anointed Temple of Praise, 3939 Riverdale Rd., Memphis 38115

Arlington Safe Room, 11842 Otto Ln., Arlington 38002

Baker Community Center, 7942 Church Rd., Millington 38053

Berclair Church of Christ, 4536 Summer Ave., Memphis 38122

Briarwood Church, 1900 N. Germantown Pkwy., Memphis 38106

Christian Life Church Memphis, 9375 Davies Plantation Rd., Bartlett 38133

Collierville Church of Christ, 575 Shelton Dr., Collierville 38017

Compassion Church, 3505 S. Houston Levee Rd., Germantown 38139

Dave Wells Community Center, 915 Chelsea Ave., Memphis 38107

Glenview Community Center, 1141 S. Barksdale St., Memphis 38114

Greater Lewis St. Baptist Church, 152 E. Parkway N., Memphis 38104

Greater Middle Baptist Church, 4892 Knight Arnold Rd., Memphis 38118

Harmony Church, 6740 Elmo Rd., Bartlett 38135

Mississippi Blvd. Church – Family Life Center, 70 N. Bellevue Blvd., Memphis 38104

Mt. Pisgah Missionary Baptist Church, 1234 Pisgah Rd., Cordova 38016

Mt. Zion Baptist Church, 60 S. Parkway E., Memphis 38106

New Bethel Missionary Baptist Church, 7786 Poplar Pike, Germantown 38138

Raleigh United Methodist Church, 3295 Powers Rd., Memphis 38128

Riverside Missionary Baptist Church, 3560 S. Third St., Memphis 38109

Second Baptist Church, 4680 Walnut Grove Rd., Memphis 38117

Shelby County Election Commission, James Meredith Bldg., 157 Poplar Ave., Memphis 38103

Solomon Temple MB Church, 1460 Winchester Rd., Memphis 38116

The Pursuit of God Church (Bellevue Frayser), 3759 N. Watkins, Memphis 38127

TN Shakespeare Company, 7950 Trinity Rd., Cordova 38018

White Station Church of Christ, 1106 Colonial Rd., Memphis 38117

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News News Blog

Half of Tennessee Voters Voted Early

Tennessee Secretary of State

Half of Tennessee’s registered voters have already cast their ballots in this year’s presidential election.

Early voting ended Thursday, October 29th. Election Day is Tuesday, November 3rd.

Tennessee Secretary of State Tre Hargett said in the 14 days of early voting, 51 percent of registered voters here cast their ballots. In six counties — Cheatham, Davidson, Loudon, Rutherford, Williamson, and Wilson — early voting turnout surpassed all voting totals from the 2016 election.

“County election commissions across the state have worked diligently to administer a safe, sensible, and responsible election during early voting, and we will see the same thing on Election Day,” said Hargett.

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Tennessee Early Vote Turnout “Smashes” Record

Tennessee Secretary of State

In 11 days, more than 1.8 million Tennesseans voted early, a turnout that “smashes” the state’s early voting record for turnout.

Tennessee Secretary of State Tre Hargett said when polls closed Monday, 1,808,546 voters had cast ballots ahead of Election Day on November 3rd. The number beat the previous record set during the 2016 presidential election when 1,689,989 voters cast early ballots.  

Monday’s total shows an average of 164,413 Tennessee voters casting ballots each day. Should that average carry on through Thursday, more than 2.3 million Tennessee voters will have voted early this year.

“This election, Tennesseans are engaged and are taking advantage of the convenience of early voting,” Hargett said in a statement. “In the final days of early voting as well as on election day, Tennesseans can cast their votes in clean, safe, and secure environment.”

The final day of early voting is Thursday. Election day is Tuesday.

To find more information about voting in Tennessee (hours, polling places, and more), find the GoVoteTN app in the App Store or on Google Play. Also, check GoVoteTN.com.

Hargett’s office said while voting, Tennesseans are encouraged (not mandated) to wear a face covering and maintain a six-foot distance from poll officials and other voters.

Tennesseans must bring valid photo identification to cast their ballot. For more information about what types of ID are acceptable can be found on sos.tn.gov or by calling toll free 1-877-850-4959.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Early Voting Sites for August 6 Election

The following sites are available through August 1st, for early voting. Hours are 11 a.m.-7 p.m. daily, except for Saturday, July 25th (10 a.m.-4 p.m.) and Saturday, August 1st (8a.m.-4 p.m.).

Abundant Grace Fellowship Church
1574 E. Sheby Dr. , Memphis 38116

Agricenter International
7777Wanut Grove E. Memphis 38120

Anointed Temple of Praise
3939 Riverdale Rd Memphis 38115

Arlington Safe Room
11842 Otto Ln Arlington 38002

Baker Community Center
7942 Church Rd Millington 38053

Berclair Church of Christ
4536 Summer Avenue Memphis 38122

Briarwood Church
900 N Germantown Pkwy Memphis

Collierville Church of Christ
5754 Sheton Dr Collierville 38017

Compassion Church
3505 S. Houston Levee Rd Germantown 38139

Dave Wells Community Center
915 Chelsea Ave Memphis 3807

Glenview Community Center
1141 S. Barksdale St Memphis 8114

Greater Lewis Street Baptist Church
SE Corner of Poplar and E. Parkway N. 38104

Harmony Church
6740 St. Elmo Rd Bartlett 38135

James Meredith Building (SCOB)
157 Poplar Ave, Memphis 38103

Mississippi Blvd. Church – Family Life Center
70 N. Bellevue Blvd Memphis 38104

Mt. Pisgah Missionary Baptist Church
1234 Pisgah Rd Memphis 38016

Mt. Zion Baptist Church
60 S. Parkway E Memphis 38106

New Bethel Missionary Baptist Church
7786 Poplar Pike Germantown 38138

Raleigh United Methodist Church
3295 Powers Rd Memphis 38128

Riverside Missionary Baptist Church
3560 S. Third St Memphis 38109

Second Baptist Church
4680 Walnut Grove Rd Memphis 38117

Solomon Temple MB Church
1460 Winchester Rd Memphis 3811

The Pursuit of God Church (Bellevue Frayser)
3759 N. Watkins Memphis 38127

The Refuge Church
9817 Huff N Puff Rd Lakeland 38002

White Station Church of Christ
1106 Colonial Road Memphis 38117

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Herenton Rouses Women Supporters with Promise of Victory

Willie Herenton won’t be, as Gail Floyd-Tyree called him on Saturday, “the first boss to go back in that chair.” Several others, including three-time Mayor Ed Crump (who once literally owned the name “Boss”) have managed to get back into the JB

Herenton at his Saturday rally

office of mayor after serving in it previously.

But Herenton — who, as several speakers (including himself) noted at a jam-packed “Women for Herenton” rally, was there from 1991 through 2009 — agrees with Tyree, the executive director of Local 1377 of the AFSCME union, who gave him a rousing introduction. He, too, believes strongly that he can get back into City Hall in the role of mayor.

And there was much about Saturday’s rally, held in a cavernous warehouse-sized space on South Third Street, that could just about convince anybody.

First, there were the numbers, upwards of a thousand women, all patently excited and happy to be there. Then there was the enthusiasm, simmering to begin with, and periodically fired into high decibels in the course of the event. Finally, there were the obvious signs of organization and preparation — a forest of large-sized “HERENTON” signs handed out by helpers at appropriate moments, much in the manner of a national political convention.

And, perhaps most convincingly, there were the several voter-registration tables around the sides of the hall, staffed by teams of women supporters who, from time to time, appeared deluged by new applicants.

JB

Women supporters came out en masse.

The event was so emotionally rousing as to remind onlookers of the first Herenton campaign in 1991, the one that, by a razor-thin margin of 142 votes over incumbent Dick Hackett, made Herenton the first elected black mayor in Memphis history. And it more or less overpowered the more recent memory of the half-hearted Herenton run for Congress against incumbent Steve Cohen in 2010, a Democratic primary race Herenton lost by a margin of 4 to 1.

Both Herenton’s campaign manager, Robert Spence, and AFSCME’s Floyd-Tyree, generated some abundant advance energy on behalf of Herenton. Said Spence: “I heard our opponent’s theme” (meaning current Mayor Jim Strickland, running for reelection).

“‘Good at the basics.’ What is that? When did somebody come to office saying the best they could do was mediocre? … We can do better than that,” said Spence. “And the basics don’t even get good. Trash on the streets. Potholes. Crime. … We know who ran the city in an exceptional and extraordinary way. … The Lion is walking in the jungle, and they can’t stop it.”

Spence was outdone and then some by Floyd-Tyree, whose union is one of several that have endorsed the former mayor. Saying that she was “confirmed in my soul that this is divine intervention,” Tyree concluded a passionate speech thusly: “You can’t be in the presence of Willie Herenton and not know he’s a boss. Walks like a boss, talks like a boss. He’s the boss!” And: “Where we taking our boss?” The answer came back: “City Hall!”

Expectations in the hall were so high that it would have been virtually impossible for Herenton himself not to deliver. And he did.

After some pro forma early praise for his volunteer workers and an expression of his belief in the power of the spiritual realm, Herenton said, “There’s power in the vote of women, too. We made history in 1991 when you elected Willie Herenton as the first African-American mayor. You didn’t stop there. You reelected me in 1994, you reelected me 1997, in 2000, in 2004, and 2007. And guess what, you’re going to elect me in 2019!”

Herenton was wrong. The actual reelection sequence was 1995, 1999, 2003, and 2007. But it hardly mattered. The women roared their agreement.

Herenton continued. “Someone asked me a question: Willie, can you do it? I took them to the book: Philippians 4:13.” There was a roar. “I see we’ve got some church folks in here,” said Herenton, who then quoted the scripture: “‘’You can do all things through Christ!’

“Sometimes the Lord makes the lowly overcome the highly,” Herenton said. He made note of opponent Strickland’s much-touted $1 million campaign budget. “They’ve got the money power. But we’ve got people power. That’s what’s going to take us over the top on October 3rd.

“This crime problem is deep. It bothers me, this present administration is weak on crime. A lot of people in our community, they have no hope. They’ve given up. They have no inspiration. We’ve got to embrace the values that our parents gave us.” With a nod to his sister in the audience, he said, “Our mother taught us: Work. Education. Church. Work hard and you can be successful. Somehow or another we’ve got to bring those values back. … There’s so much hatred, so much jealousy, so much envy among our people.

“I want you to know that this election is very critical to the future of our city. You’ve asked the question of why am I going back into public service. Because it’s late in the evening for me. I want to tell you. I want you to hear me. It’s late in the evening, but the God I serve is still using me.”

The whoop from the crowd was so great as to befit one who had freshly emerged from Sinai with brand new tablets.

And indeed, Herenton had a revelation of sorts for the women. But first there was another Biblical reference, one that might not have gone down well amid a group of feminists but one that scored well with this audience.

“When I look in the Bible,” Herenton said, “I see that first God made man, and he made women, the helpmate. There were great women in the Bible. Esther, Ruth … I could go on and on. … Since the beginning of Biblical times, there have been women of value, women of courage, women who nurtured civilization. And today women are still relevant.

“I am appealing to you. You have been there for me in every election. Women have voted overwhelmingly for me. And I’m asking you to do it again.”

The women shouted their assent. Then Herenton favored them with the great revelation:

“Before I take my seat, let me tell you what we’re going to ask you to do. This is real strategic. Early voting starts September 13th. We have you guys in our database, and we’re going to reach out to you, because I don’t mind telling you part of what our strategy is. We’re going to win this election in early voting. We going to have a caravan of buses. We’re going to have vans called the Herenton Express. We’ll do an early voting like they have never seen before.”

And there was a warning: “Let me tell you why we have to overwhelm in early voting. In Memphis, with technology, they can steal the election. We’re going to win so overwhelmingly that they can’t steal this election. We need to come out in record numbers.”

Apologizing “for my emotionalism,” Herenton said, “I don’t know how to do a fake. I’ve just got to be real.” And, with another exhortation to “go back to our values,” he proclaimed, in the words of “that old church song we used to sing, ‘Victory is ours!’”

Altogether, a boffo performance. If Herenton can continue to generate energy on this scale, Strickland, opponent Tami Sawyer, and the rest of the 11-candidate field will have something to take very seriously.

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News News Blog

Library Card IDs May Be Used For Voting

lib_card.png

On Thursday, the last day of early voting, the Tennessee Supreme Court ordered the Shelby County Election Commission to accept Memphis photo library cards as a valid ID for voting.

Previously, the Court of Appeals had ruled that library cards should count as government-issued IDs, but Shelby County Election Commissioner Mark Goins and Secretary of State Tre Hargett appealed that ruling. After the appeal was filed, those who voted with a library ID card were given a provisional ballot.

Now, the state Supreme Court is ordering the Shelby County Election Commission to accept the library cards “as acceptable evidence of identification,” as the court has decided to take up the challenge.

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Politics Politics Feature

Early Voting Ends — and So Does the Early-Voting Reality Show

Phase One of the 2007 Memphis municipal election – early
voting – is over, as of Saturday. The final head-count of voters at the
Election Commission and at 14 satellite locations was nearly 75,000 – a huge
number — despite an alarm sounded week before last by incumbent mayor Willie
Herenton that the Diebold machines being employed for the vote were unreliable.

The mayor’s reaction was interpreted by his main
adversaries – councilwoman Carol Chumney and former MLGW head Herman Morris – as
a red herring and as what Morris called a “desperate” act. Whatever the case,
the record volume of responses during this year’s early voting attests to the
widespread public interest in both the mayor’s race and the 13 races for city
council.

And so crucial was the two-week period regarded that some
candidates – notably Reid Hedgepeth, running for the District 9, Position 3
seat; and Cecil Hale, vying for the District 9, Position 1 seat – devoted almost
all their time and energies to long stints of greeting voters at early-voting
sites (Hale taking pains always, both verbally and with signs, to remind
arriving voters that he was “U.S. Army, Retired”).

Even those hopefuls who varied their campaign activities to
include attendance at other events, including candidate forums, made a point of
logging considerable time at several of the early-site locations.

One of the East Memphis locations that was especially
favored was at White Station Church of Christ on Colonial Rd. There so many of
the District 9, District 5, and District 2 candidates gathered on a daily basis
that they often developed relationships transcending their rivalry for this or
that position.

That wasn’t inevitably the case, though. A distinct
coolness governed encounters between Hedgepeth and his supporters (prominent
among whom was his close friend Richard Smith, son of FedEx founder Fred Smith)
on one side and opponent Lester Lit, who had been critical of the political
newcomer — early, often, and explicitly — on the other. (It should be said that the Hedgepeth
crew, which also at various times and various locations included the candidate’s
mother and mother-in-law, were generally patient and gracious to an extreme.)

And, once in a while, cool turned into hot, as it did at
the Bert Ferguson Community Center location in Cordova, where competing District
2 candidates Brian Stephens and Todd Gilreath got into each other’s space one
too many times, leading to a heated verbal exchange between the two.

But mostly all was sweetness and light. Opponents stood
shoulder to shoulder with each other as they handed out literature to voters,
asked about each others’ families, and traded jokes and gossip in the manner of
ad hoc comrades in arms.

Entirely good-natured was the teasing that District 9,
Position 2 candidate Kemp Conrad took from his rivals for his habit of running
after new arrivals to be the first candidate they encountered. And, in the wake
of a now famous Commercial Appeal article outlining various
office-seekers’ financial and legal misfortunes, those who, like District 2
candidate Scott Pearce, took bigger-than-usual hits, got friendly (and maybe
even sincere) commiseration from other candidates.

Rarely, it should be said, was discussion of issues the
dominant leitmotif of exchanges between candidates and their respective
entourages – or, for that matter, in their conversations with prospective
voters.

Overall, as indicated, the atmosphere at White Station and
at other heavily frequented sites begat a kind of apolitical camaraderie among the
various competing hopefuls that one might associate with TV reality shows like
American Idol.

It remains to be seen what that might portend, for
better and for worse, in election years yet to come. But there is no
doubting that early voting is now a permanent part of the election culture in
these parts.