During a wild and unpredictable election year, for some it was easy to forget the other candidates on the ballot. Nevertheless, the entire Tennessee House of Representatives and half of the Tennessee Senate was also up for election last week. The Tennessee General Assembly will see most of the same legislators return in January with essentially the same number of Republicans and Democrats. There will still be some new faces on Capitol Hill, along with some new folks in leadership.
Tennessee’s Federal Elections
Donald Trump easily carried Tennessee as expected, taking 61% of the vote to Hillary Clinton’s 35%. Neither of Tennessee’s Senate seats were on the ballot. Of Tennessee’s nine congressional seats, eight were reelected easily. The ninth saw Republican David Kustoff win the West Tennessee seat vacated by the retiring Stephen Fincher. Every winner cruised to victory by double digit margins, with lowest performing one carrying 62% of the vote.
State Senate
State House of Representatives
The Tennessee House will have eleven new representatives when it reconvenes in January. Republicans added one seat to their super majority after defeating one Democratic incumbent, winning one seat vacated by a retiring Democrat, but then seeing one Republican incumbent unexpectedly lose his seat. The Republican super majority now sits at 74 with Democrats having 25 seats. House Republicans expect to see a shake-up in their leadership. Speaker Beth Harwell will be challenged by Rep. Jimmy Matlock for the speakership. Rep. Gerald McCormick announced several weeks ago he would not seek reelection to majority leader. Rep. Shelia Butt and Rep. Mike Carter have publicly announced their intention to run for the post, with current caucus chairman Glen Casada and Rep. Cameron Sexton also rumored to be vying for the position. Rep. Kevin Brooks has publicly announced his intention to seek the caucus chairmanship after previously serving as assistant majority leader.
New state representatives:
District 1 – John Crawford (R) (vacated by Jon Lundberg to run for state senate)
For complete results on last week’s elections in Tennessee, visit the election results page of the Tennessee Secretary of State's website.