Tennessee state Rep. Gloria Johnson has announced her Democratic candidacy for the U.S. Senate, setting up a potential race against the Republican incumbent, Marsha Blackburn, if Johnson makes it through her primary.
Johnson achieved political stardom this year as one of the three Tennessee lawmakers targeted by conservative colleagues after they protested on the state House floor against gun violence, days after a shooter massacred six people at a Nashville elementary school. Johnson — a white woman — was spared expulsion from the Legislature, unlike her two Black colleagues. But she has been a vocal ally to her since-reinstated colleagues, and her activism has given her prominence on the national stage.
Johnson’s campaign announcement focused on gun violence, abortion rights and defeating right-wing special interest groups.
There is a movement afoot in Tennessee. Now I'm running for US Senate because our work doesn't stop here. Join us. pic.twitter.com/6XKFLuRfkc
— Rep. Gloria Johnson (@VoteGloriaJ) September 5, 2023
On Tuesday morning, Johnson held her first campaign rally outside of a Knoxville high school where she once taught. She recalled the traumatic day in 2008 when a student was killed in a shooting at the school, Central High.
Johnson said Blackburn opposes gun safety legislation because the GOP senator “gets millions from the NRA,” adding that it symbolizes someone who’s “working for corporations, billionaires and special interests.”
She also mocked Blackburn for recently pushing an “outrageous” conspiracy theory about the Biden administration wanting to ban barbecue grills. (It wasn’t the first time she has dragged Blackburn for this claim.)
“Folks, nobody loves grillin’ out more than me,” she said.
If Corrupt Marsha Blackburn and her billionaire backers got their way, we’d all be working today.
She doesn’t care if your family can afford the grill — or even the food to put on on it.
But keep grilling up those lies… I’ll tell the truth! https://t.co/Wsfm7t7zD3








