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TheVoiceOfJoyce Tennessee struggles to redistrict their maps in 3 days. It’s a 60/40 state and instead of negating Memphis, where MLK,Jr was shot , Tennessee should have to Democratic districts representing the population. You can have your voices heard now, before redistricting is complete. Local voting proceeded and the incumbents won. Stop Memphis from being eliminated and protest!

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Keep us strong. You power public media.Donate todayWednesday, May 6, 2026Good morning! Emily SinerYesterday was the first day of Tennessee’s special session concerning the redistricting of our state, and lots happened. We’ll get to that.

But first, some local election news. We also had a local primary — and with zero Republican candidates on the local ballot, the election was a decisive one.

You can find full results here from Metro Reporter Cynthia Abrams.

The next planned election in Tennessee is for statewide primaries, on Aug. 6. That, however, could look a lot different if leaders in the state legislature get their way.

WHAT TO KNOW

Rep. Justin Pearson, D-Memphis, center, links arms and leads a march up the steps of the Tennessee Capitol. Credit: Marianna Bacallao / WPLN NewsTo recap: Tennessee’s Republican supermajority is heeding a call from President Donald Trump to give the GOP more seats in Congress.

Gov. Bill Lee — initially hesitant about the timeline — called the special session after a phone call with the president. Lawmakers will likely only have three days to redistrict, a process that usually takes months.

So what happened on Day 1?

➡️ Hundreds of protesters marched to the Tennessee Capitol. Rep. Justin J. Pearson, D-Memphis, helped lead the protest and told WPLN News that these new maps threaten to undo years of progress for Black voters. “Mid-decade redistricting is new but attempts to take away the voting rights of Black people is not new,” Pearson said.

➡️ A Republican-led rules committee struck down Democratic proposals to give the public more feedback in the redistricting process, either by holding public feedback meetings with constituents or by releasing the proposed maps publicly 72 hours before a final vote. The House Ad Hoc Committee also voted to ban disruptive observers from the entirety of the special session.

➡️ A group of protesters in the room stood up and began singing the “Star Spangled Banner” while some shouted obscenities at committee members.

➡️ Martin Luther King III sent a letter to Tennessee legislative leaders expressing “grave concern” about the plan to divide Memphis’ congressional representation. “This decision undermines the work that my father, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., carried out to help secure passage of the Voting Rights Act,” he wrote, noting that his father was assassinated in Memphis. 

➡️ Not all Republicans seem enthusiastic. State Rep. Mark White, from Memphis, told local reporters that he doesn’t think “now is the time” to redistrict. Rep. Michele Reneau, R-Signal Mountain, asked her constituents to weigh in. “In the last presidential election, Tennessee voters split roughly 60% Republican and 40% Democrat,” Reneau wrote. “A proportional approach would reflect that balance more closely than a map designed for a single-party outcome.”

Hearings on the new maps begin this morning.

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On today’s episode of the NashVillagerpodcast 
with host Nina Cardona
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Who was Sen. Anna Belle Clement O’Brien? She might have become known as a political grand dame just for playing an important supporting role in the careers of the men in her family, but this woman decided her place was in the House and Senate, too. Plus, the local news for May 6, 2026, and this week’s edition of What Where Whens-day.

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