The Republican Party has virtually unchecked power in Tennessee. The governor is a Republican, and the Republican Party enjoys a supermajority in the statehouse, which means that Republicans can pass anything they want to pass no matter how opposed Democrats are. Republicans in the state have already used their near-total power to push an agenda that not only compromises the health and well being of people across the state but also embraces white nationalist politics and relegates marginalized communities, regardless of their race or ethnicity, to the fringes of society.
Now, the party is considering rejecting $1.8 billion in federal funds to help low-income students, English learners and students with disabilities.
Now, the party is considering rejecting $1.8 billion in federal funds to help low-income students, English learners and students with disabilities at least partially because Republicans don’t want to comply with the federal government’s anti-discrimination policies.
According to The Associated Press, Tennessee House Speaker Cameron Sexton told reporters last week, “We should do everything that we can to be whole and autonomous and independent from the federal government.” He said, “When you take federal government money, their philosophies and what they want you to do is different than probably what the state wants to do.”
The AP notes that the federal dollars Sexton says the Volunteer State should reject make up about 20% of the state’s education budget.
According to a Sept. 25 report in the Tennessee Lookout, neither Sexton nor Lt. Gov. Randy McNally, who’ve appointed lawmakers to look at the requirements that come with taking federal money, would say what requirements they oppose.
The idea of rejecting the federal government’s “philosophies” is reminiscent of the bad old days of the Jim Crow South when officials in states like Tennessee defied federal mandates for desegregation and equal rights and, in the hopes of thwarting progress and maintaining a racial hierarchy, embarked upon a strategy of Southern resistance.
After the U.S. Supreme Court’s 1954 Brown v. Board of Education ruling outlawed segregation in public school, officials in Virginia and Arkansas completely closed some schools in defiance. And across the South, individual white parents withdrew their children from the public schools and sent them to the exclusively white private schools they created as a response to Brown v. Board.
This eerily similar talk of rejecting federal funds suggests that Tennessee Republicans, as their like-minded Jim Crow predecessors did, may be willing to sacrifice the needs of their constituents just to thumb their noses at the federal government.
Tennessee Republicans, as their like-minded Jim Crow predecessors did, may be willing to sacrifice the needs of their constituents just to thumb their noses at the federal government.
Consider the impact this strategy, this rejection of money for low-income students, students with disabilities and students learning English, would have on the most vulnerable communities in Tennessee. I’m talking here of communities that disproportionately face systemic barriers, including limited access to health care and institutionalized racism. I’m especially talking about places like Memphis (by far the Blackest city in the state and, according to recent reports, may be the largest majority Black city in the country).
By rejecting federal funding that could help alleviate some of these burdens, the Tennessee GOP would be callously and unnecessarily perpetuating a cycle of suffering and dispossession. But that pain wouldn’t stop at the boundaries of Memphis or Shelby County.
They’d also be exacerbating pain in cities like Jackson, Chattanooga and Knoxville. And in counties like Lake, Hancock and Bledsoe.









