Tennessee state Rep. Justin Jones, one of two Black state lawmakers who won back their seats after being dubiously removed from office by Tennessee Republicans, has filed a federal lawsuit over his expulsion.
The lawsuit claims House Speaker Cameron Sexton and others violated Jones’ constitutional rights to free speech and due process.
“The people of District 52 deserve to have their voices heard without the threat of undemocratic silencing and retaliation,” the Democrat wrote on X.
Sexton does not appear to have publicly commented on the lawsuit as of Wednesday.
Today my attorneys filed a federal lawsuit to hold Tennessee House Speaker Cameron Sexton responsible for his unconstitutional and discriminatory actions.
— Rep. Justin Jones (@brotherjones_) October 3, 2023
The people of District 52 deserve to have their voices heard without the threat of undemocratic silencing and retaliation. pic.twitter.com/3iLOOssTQ1
“Time and again over the past year Defendants have blocked Representative Jones from expressing views on critical issues that he was elected to express, ensuring that viewpoints dissenting from their own are silenced, neither heard nor spoken,” the lawsuit says. “This censorship violates the constitutions of Tennessee and of the United States and is an anathema to a free, democratic society.”
In April, Jones and Rep. Justin J. Pearson were expelled from the Tennessee House for protesting gun violence on the House floor. Rep. Gloria Johnson, a white Democrat who also participated in the protest, survived her expulsion vote. They became known as the “Tennessee Three.”
Pearson and Jones were reinstated on an interim basis almost immediately, and they have since won back their seats in special elections prompted by their removal.
Jones — a well-known social justice activist who has drawn ire from conservatives in Tennessee for years — expressed concerns that he could face mistreatment upon his return to the House, and it certainly looks like those fears have materialized.
Jones — a well-known social justice activist who has drawn ire from conservatives in Tennessee for years — expressed concerns that he could face mistreatment upon his return to the House, and it certainly looks like those fears have materialized.
During a special legislative session in August, Sexton used new rules to silence Jones after the Democrat was speaking on the House floor. Sexton twice declared Jones to be out of order, leading to a House vote that kept him from being recognized to speak for the rest of the day. Coincidentally or not, Jones had announced earlier in the day that he planned to initiate a vote of “no confidence” in Sexton as speaker.








