justin jones

Read the closing statements by the 3 Tennessee House members who faced expulsion

A protest on the House floor on March 30, 2023, led to ouster proceedings against three Democratic lawmakers. From left are Gloria Johnson of Knoxville, Justin Jones of Nashville, and Justin Pearson of Memphis.

Here are the closing statements delivered by Reps. Justin Pearson (D-Memphis), Justin Jones (D-Nashville), and Gloria Johnson (D-Knoxville) before the state House voted on expulsion resolutions last week. Pearson and Jones were ousted, while the Johnson was spared by a single vote.

Justin Pearson:

All glory and honor to God, who makes all things possible. Who takes the son of teenage parents, Kimberly Owens Pearson and Jason C. Pearson, and brings into an institution built by enslaved people’s hands. All glory and honor to God, who brings those who have been marginalized and excluded into this place and tells them that you still have a voice, that you still are somebody and that the movement for love and justice cannot be stopped. Because we’ve still got a heartbeat, because we’ve still got a movement for love that needs us. We’ve still got people who are calling on us to act and to do something, to all you who still believe that the best days for democracy are ahead. For all of you who still believe that our better days in Tennessee are ahead.

I want to tell you that I still believe with you. And how is it — that even now with this persecution on this holy week after my own brother Justin Jones, Representative Jones, gets expelled from the House — that we still have hope and faith and belief that the democracy of Tennessee, faith hope and the belief in the democracy of the United States of America? How is it that you still have hope, you descendant of enslaved people? How is it that you still have hope? Well, it’s because even from the bottom of slave ships. my people didn’t quit. Even in cotton fields and rice fields, my people didn’t quit. Even when they were whipped and chained and told they had no name, my people didn’t quit. Even when they incarcerated us, locked us up for a crack cocaine epidemic created by President Ronald Reagan to fund their war in South America, my people didn’t quit. Even when they defunded our schools, separated us and called us colored and white, even when they put us on lynching trees in the state of Tennessee, specifically in Shelby County, my people did quit.

Even now, as our own brothers and sisters lay to rest, because of the failure of people in positions of power to do something — because people are refusing to pass just laws to end the epidemic of gun violence in the state of Tennessee — my people have yet to quit. And so even now, amidst this vote, amidst this persecution, I remember the good news. Hallelujah, Jesus.

I remember that on Friday, the government decided that my savior Jesus, a man that was innocent of all crimes, except fighting for the poor, fighting for the marginalized, fighting for the LGBTQ community, fighting for those who are single mothers, fighting for those who are ostracized, fighting for those persons on the periphery, my Savior, my black Jesus. He was lynched by the government on Friday. And they thought that all hope had been lost. Outside it rained, and it’s thundering and everybody said everything was over. And it was some black women who stood at the cross. It was some black women who watched what the government did to that boy named Jesus.

They were witnesses, as you have been witnesses, to what is happening in the anti-democratic state of Tennessee. They were witnesses to what was going on. And I gotta tell you, it got quiet on Saturday. Yes, I tell you it was a sad day on Saturday. All hope seemed to be lost. Representatives were thrown out of the state House. Democracy seemed to be at its end. Seemed like the NRA and gun lobbyists might win. But there was good news for us. I don’t know how long this Saturday in the state of Tennessee might last.

But oh, we have good news, folks. We’ve gotten good news that Sunday always comes. Resurrection is a promise. And it is a prophecy. It’s a prophecy that came out of the cotton fields. It’s a prophecy that came out of the lynching tree. It’s a prophecy that still lives in each and every one of us in order to make the state of Tennessee the place that it ought to be. So I’ve still got hope. Because I know we are still here. And we will never quit.

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New TNJ edition alert: All eyes on Tennessee as House GOP throws out two Democrats after gun protest

Reps. Justin Pearson (D-Memphis), right, and Justin Jones (D-Nashville) attend a House floor session on April 6, 2023. (Erik Schelzig, Tennessee Journal)

The latest print edition of The Tennessee Journal is out. Here is what’s in it:

— Republicans vote out Dems Jones and Pearson, balk at Johnson.

— A look back at notable past protest actions that didn’t result in ousters.

— Obituary: Mickey Barker, lone dissenter in landmark Tennessee abortion case.

Also: Former top GOP official had kids at school where fatal shooting took place, Scott Cepicky denounces Chris Todd, and moving the line between Shelby and Fayette counties.

As always, access the your copy of the TNJ here.

Or subscribe here.

Here is how lawmakers voted in ousting Jones and Pearson, keeping Johnson

Rep. Justin Jones (D-Nashville) speaks during a House floor session on April 6, 2023. (Erik Schelzig, Tennessee Journal)

Here is how House members voted in their 72-25 decision to oust Rep Justin Jones (D-Nashville) from the chamber:

This is the 69-26 tally for ousting Democrat Justin Pearson of Memphis (image credit: Blaise Gainey of WPLN):

Here is the vote on the expulsion resolution for Rep. Gloria Johnson (D-Knoxville). It fell one vote short of the 66 needed to pass.

Images from Thursday’s House floor session

Protesters hold up signs during a House floor session on April 6, 2023. (Erik Schelzig, Tennessee Journal)

Protesters crammed in to the Capitol on Thursday as House Republicans were preparing to launch ouster proceedings against Democratic Reps. Justin Pearson of Memphis, Justin Jones of Nashville, and Gloria Johnson of Knoxville.

Here are some photos from the floor session.

Rep. Justin Jones (D-Nashville) speaks during a House floor session on April 6, 2023. (Erik Schelzig, Tennessee Journal)
Rep. Justin Pearson (D-Memphis) watches while Rep. Gloria Johnson (D-Knoxville) speaks during a House floor session on April 6, 2023. (Erik Schelzig, Tennessee Journal)
Protesters hold up signs in the gallery during a House floor session on April 6, 2023. (Erik Schelzig, Tennessee Journal)
Senate Speaker Cameron Sexton (R-Crossville) listens while Rep. Gloria Johnson (D-Knoxville) speaks during a House floor session on April 6, 2023. (Erik Schelzig, Tennessee Journal)
Reps. Justin Pearson (D-Memphis), right, and Justin Jones (D-Nashville) attend a House floor session on April 6, 2023. (Erik Schelzig, Tennessee Journal)
Rep. Gloria Johnson (D-Knoxville) seeks recognition during a House floor session on April 6, 2023. (Erik Schelzig, Tennessee Journal)

New TNJ edition alert: Chaos at the Capitol, redistricting lawsuit headed for trial

Rep. Justin Jones (D-Nashville) uses a bullhorn to lead the House gallery in chants. At left are Reps. Justin Pearson (D-Memphis) and Gloria Johnson (D-Knoxville). (Image credit: John Partipilo, Tennessee Lookout.)

The latest print edition of The Tennessee Journal is out. Here is what’s in it:

— Chaos grips House in wake of fatal school shooting in Nashville.

— Legislative roundup: Despite previous rejection, Senate OK’s teacher dues withholding ban.

— Legal challenge of House, Senate redistricting maps is headed to trial.

— Interest groups spent as much as $100 million on lobbying last year.

Also: Reaction to the Covenant School shooting from the president, governor, mayor, and more; Stephen Crump taking over as head of district attorneys association, the most recent House composite photo is already fading, and a corn contest between lawmakers.

As always, access the your copy of the TNJ here.

Or subscribe here.

Bush, Jones vow to fight ballot exclusion; DeBerry won’t

Republican U.S. Senate candidate Byron Bush and Democratic U.S. House candidate Justin Jones are vowing to fight their exclusions from the primary ballot in August. But longtime state Rep. John DeBerry of Memphis says he won’t challenge fellow Democrats’ decision to remove him.

Bush, who also ran for the Senate in 1994, was deemed ineligible to run as a Republican because he hadn’t voted in three of the last four primaries. Jones failed to submit 25 valid signatures for his effort to challenge incumbent Jim Cooper (D-Nashville). DeBerry was excluded by Democrats because of his pattern of voting with Republicans on issues like abortion and school vouchers.

“The so-called party of inclusion is everything but inclusive,” DeBerry told the Commercial Appeal . “It’s all about thinking with one brain, marching in step and following the company line, sitting there like a brainless idiot and letting them tell you what to do.”

Jones, who is best known for leading protests against the Nathan Bedford Forrest bust at the state Capitol, said hehe missed the cut by a single signature. He blamed the coronavirus pandemic for making it more difficult to collect the signatures.

“We have heard ‘no’ since we announced this campaign,” Jones said in a Twitter post.”We fought then. And will continue fighting now.”

Bush, who was also a Republican candidate for the Senate in 1994, was among five candidates running to succeed Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Maryville) this year who were deemed not to be bona fide Republicans.

Bush had used his current campaign as a platform for railing against state judges following his losing legal battle to prevent a property foreclosure in 2012. Bush, a Nashville dentist, drew a modicum of attention by running local ads during the Super Bowl.

(Bush’s full statement after the jump)

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