The move by Republicans in Tennessee to expel two Black Democrats from the state Legislature for protesting gun violence on the House floor was stunning to many observers.
I think “ReidOut” frequent guest Elie Mystal framed the sentiment best in this tweet.
As Mystal describes, Tennessee Republicans expelled two Black House members, Justin Jones and Justin Pearson, on Thursday, while a vote to expel a white House member who protested alongside them, Gloria Johnson, failed.
In remarks after the voting, Johnson spoke about the obvious double standard.
The racism here seems quite clear, even if we just use this week’s events as evidence.
But we don’t have to do that. There’s a broader pool of evidence indicating this is a racist power grab meant to suppress a multiracial, multigenerational Democratic movement that’s burgeoning in Tennessee. (As I’ve written previously, conservatives are attempting these power grabs more frequently these days.)
Jones was a well-known activist for years before becoming a Tennessee lawmaker, and he helped lead the successful push to remove a statue of Nathan Bedford Forrest, a slaveholder who served as a Confederate general, from the state Capitol grounds. During a speech on the House floor Thursday before his ouster, Jones said his outspokenness on social justice issues had made him an “uppity Negro” in the eyes of a colleague.
Pearson, the other expelled lawmaker, recently received backlash from Tennessee Republicans for wearing a dashiki — traditional garb in many African countries — on the House floor. Foreshadowing this week’s events, the House GOP tweeted that Pearson should maybe consider not being a lawmaker.
That incident matches claims from state Sen. London Lamar, who told MSNBC’s Chris Hayes on Thursday that Tennessee Republicans had punished her as well for wearing pro-Black clothing and speaking out against racism.
“They are pretty weak when it comes to their egos,” Lamar said.
That…
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