Campaign signs are seen outside an early voting polling site...

Campaign signs are seen outside an early voting polling site at the Southeast Library in Nashville, Tenn., on Oct. 24, 2024. Credit: AP/George Walker IV

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Tennessee's Republican legislative supermajority will remain unchanged after Democrats failed to flip seats in a handful of competitive races, but the minority party didn't give up any ground, either.

Unofficial election results show that Republicans will continue to hold 75 out of the 99 seats inside the House chamber, the same amount the GOP held before Tuesday. Over in the Senate, Republicans will have 27 members while Democrats will continue to have just six.

“Last night (Tennessee) gave Republicans from the State House to the White House a historic mandate to pursue conservative policies that benefit workers and families,” Republican Rep. Jeremy Faison, the House GOP caucus chairman, wrote on social media. “Democrats were sent home and didn’t gain an inch in a resounding defeat.”

Some Democratic officials expressed relief that their numbers didn’t diminish as Republicans enjoyed big wins nationally, with former President Donald Trump winning a second term and the GOP winning control of the U.S. Senate. In Tennessee, Trump and Republican U.S. Sen. Marsha Blackburn both ran up their margins to almost 30 percentage points, outpacing their previous statewide elections.

"It may not look like progress," said Rep. John Ray Clemmons, the House Democratic Caucus chairman. “But in this environment, and given the national political headwinds that we were facing at the top of the ticket, holding the line was truly remarkable.”

Democrats had invested heavily in Allie Phillips' bid to flip a Republican-controlled House seat just north of Nashville. Phillips shot to national fame when she shared on social media that she was unable to get an abortion in Tennessee for a non-viable pregnancy under the state's abortion ban and was forced to travel to Washington, D.C., to get the health care that she needed.

Yet despite the boost from national media coverage, Republican Rep. Jeff Burkhart won reelection by nearly 10 percentage points.

Over in Nashville, Democrat Shaundelle Brooks won an open House seat, defeating Republican Chad Bobo. Republicans had sought to gain ground in the Democratic district in Tennessee's liberal-leaning capital city, but Brooks had a nearly eight-point lead over Bobo as of Wednesday.

Brooks' son, Akilah DaSilva, was among the four people killed and two wounded in a mass shooting at a Nashville Waffle House in 2018. The tragedy kickstarted Brooks' gun control advocacy in a state with lax firearms laws.

On the flip side, Democrats were unable to chip away at Republican control around Memphis when GOP Rep. John Gillespie was reelected by four points over Democrat Jess Huseth.

With the Republican supermajority intact, GOP Gov. Bill Lee and legislative leaders wasted no time preparing once again to enact a universal school voucher program in Tennessee. On Wednesday, Lee and other key lawmakers unveiled a proposal outlining a voucher policy that would allow families to use public funds for private school tuition.

Lee had pitched a sweeping voucher proposal earlier this year, but Republican infighting on how exactly the policy should be implemented prompted the governor to abandon the idea.

It's unclear if he'll have more consensus in 2025. Lee took the extra step during the August primary election of endorsing Republican school choice proponents, and none of those candidates lost on Tuesday.

In neighboring Kentucky on Tuesday, voters soundly rejected a voucher-style ballot measure intended to allow state lawmakers to allocate public tax dollars to support students attending private or charter schools.

Separately, Tennessee voters approved several ballot initiatives ranging from gun control to transit improvements.

In Memphis, voters approved a non-binding ballot measure that sought to require permits to carry a handgun, ban the possession of AR-15 style rifles and implement a so-called red flag ordinance, which allows law enforcement officials to remove firearms from those found to be an imminent danger to themselves or others.

While the measure was put in front of voters, city officials and other supporters acknowledged that it wouldn't be enacted without support from the Tennessee Legislature, which has rebuffed almost all its provisions.

In Nashville, voters signed off on a $3.1 billion transportation proposal that supporters say will improve the city's bus system, sidewalks and traffic signals. Under the plan, Davidson County — which encompasses Nashville — will increase its sales tax by half a cent to fund the transit improvements.

“What Nashvillians can look forward to is sidewalks that connect to one another, traffic lights that are smart enough to keep the maximum amount of traffic moving, a transportation system that makes sense and is convenient when you need it, and roads with safety improvements for the first time in decades," Nashville Mayor Freddie O'Connell said in a statement.

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