News from the South - Tennessee News Feed
Gov. Bill Lee’s performative Christianity places political agenda over faith
by Gabe Hart, Tennessee Lookout
June 16, 2025
Twenty-five years ago — in what could easily be described as another life — I was a youth minister in a Southern Baptist church. I knew every verse to cherry-pick to support my personal views on anything from abortion to same-sex marriage.
That year, in the first presidential election in which I was allowed to vote, I voted for George W. Bush because…well, abortion and stuff. Four years later, I was completely out of the SBC and voted for John Kerry.
What changed?
After the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, a proliferation of politics began to swirl from the pulpit at my church, a toxic mix of ideology and scripture. Until then, whatever naive political beliefs I had sprang from MY belief system. As misguided as it was, that system was my own, for better or worse — not something dictated to me verbatim from a lectern.
One Sunday, my pastor referenced Fox News to buttress a point about a specific social issue, and a line was drawn. The “compassionate conservatism” espoused by the Bush presidency had started to curdle. Something was spoiled. Fundamental Christianity had been weaponized, and I wanted no part of it.
Comparatively speaking, those were the good ol’ days.
Since Gov. Bill Lee was elected in 2018, he has consistently spoken of how his personal faith influences his decision-making. He has proudly made a grandstanding show of signing performative bills into law that reinforce his idea of Christianity (see the Adult Entertainment Act of 2023 and the Heartbeat Bill of 2020) while simultaneously discriminating against same-sex couples (see SB 1304 of 2020) and preventing LGBTQ+ children from being fostered by families if the families so choose in the Tennessee Foster and Adoptive Parent Protection Act of 2024.
Recently, Lee may have committed his most damnable offense — a Faustian promise to support President Donald Trump’s crackdown on undocumented migrants by creating a Centralized Immigration Enforcement Division and vowing to be “supportive of his (Trump’s) strategies moving forward.”
Did Lee envision a racial profiling dragnet in South Nashville when he made that promise?
In early May, the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, along with assistance from the Tennessee Highway Patrol, made traffic stops in an area of Nashville that is heavily populated with immigrants. Witnesses observed vehicles being stopped and people being detained. When the dust settled, nearly 200 suspected migrants without permanent legal status had been arrested.
Mothers. Fathers. Children. Did all 200 people have violent criminal records? Was each person arrested a legitimate threat to their community? Anyone with common sense knows the answers to those questions.
When Nashville Mayor Freddie O’Connell denounced the ICE raids, GOP lawmakers at the state and federal levels attacked. House Republicans in Washington announced a federal investigation of O’Connell; Sen. Marsha Blackburn implored the Department of Justice to look into the matter. Based on O’Connell’s remarks, border czar Tom Homan threatened more raids.
As he is prone to do, Lee remained silent, complicit in the chaos.
After the Covenant School mass shooting tragedy three years ago, Lee called a special legislative session to address the lax firearm regulations in the state. It was one of the few times Lee has even slightly pushed against his supermajority of political bullies. Nothing happened other than Lee slinking from the public spotlight, muting himself out of righteous self-preservation.
U.S. border czar: Nashville mayor, a critic of immigration sweeps, now faces investigation
I’ve met Lee twice. He spoke with students, genuinely listened to their ideas and posed for pictures. In my very limited time with him, I came away believing he truly cares for people on a personal level. People I have spoken with who know him say he’s a good man and I don’t doubt that.
But when you hitch your political wagon to a brand of Christianity that has been bastardized by a powerful group of people hellbent on power, your personal witness automatically falters. When you pledge blind loyalty to a man like Trump and set up systems within your state that allow innocent children to be hurt, people to be discriminated against and families torn apart, it might be time to stop leaning so heavily on Christian rhetoric to advance your political causes.
Recently, I’ve dipped my toe back into a faith community. Testing the waters, you could say. Ironically, most of my core beliefs about politics and humanity were formed by my time in church, by the actual teachings of Jesus Christ. He had strong thoughts about powerful political structures like the one we have in Tennessee. He also had very specific language about the way we should treat vulnerable people in society, specifically foreigners.
“For I was hungry and you put me in jail, I was thirsty and you confiscated my water,
I was a stranger and you arrested me…Whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.”
Wait. Sorry. That must have come from the Trump translation, not the King James Version.
Faith in anything is an extremely personal matter to be respected, but when that faith is used as a manipulative weapon to further a political agenda, it becomes blasphemous.
Our leaders should act more like O’Connell and less like Lee, placing humanity above legalistic righteousness.
GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.
Tennessee Lookout is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Tennessee Lookout maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Holly McCall for questions: info@tennesseelookout.com.
The post Gov. Bill Lee’s performative Christianity places political agenda over faith appeared first on tennesseelookout.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Center-Left
This content critiques conservative policies and political figures, particularly Tennessee Governor Bill Lee and his alignment with Donald Trump, focusing on issues like abortion, LGBTQ+ rights, immigration enforcement, and the intermingling of religion and politics. It expresses skepticism toward conservative Christian political influence and calls for more compassionate, humanitarian leadership, aligning with progressive or center-left values on social justice and immigration. However, the tone is measured and personal rather than overtly polemical, situating it in a Center-Left stance rather than far-left advocacy.
News from the South - Tennessee News Feed
LGBTQ Tennesseans are fleeing the state. Hear from those who chose to stay
SUMMARY: Tennessee’s recent anti-LGBTQ legislation has led many lifelong residents to leave the state for more accepting places. Despite efforts by the Biden administration to challenge these laws, the Supreme Court upheld Tennessee’s ban on gender-affirming care, affecting half of U.S. states. Some, like native William Gwynn, fear losing the Tennessee they once knew, while others, including transgender students and local artists, choose to stay and fight for change. They find hope in supportive communities, schools, and a determination to build a more inclusive future, even amid the state’s challenging political climate.
The post LGBTQ Tennesseans are fleeing the state. Hear from those who chose to stay appeared first on wpln.org
News from the South - Tennessee News Feed
FOX13 Exclusive: Memphis mother shares grief of losing daughter, son to gun violence
SUMMARY: In April, Memphis siblings Jasmine Ellington, 26, and Michael Ellington, 25, were killed in a shooting where over 70 rounds were fired. Their mother survived multiple gunshot wounds and is speaking out for the first time. The shooting stemmed from a domestic dispute involving Jasmine’s child’s father, Lorenzo Cross, who, along with Malik Merryweather, remains at large. Two brothers, Martavius and La Cameron Jenkins, are charged and facing a preliminary hearing. The family seeks justice for the deaths and trauma caused, urging the public to help locate the remaining suspects to ease their ongoing fear.
Jasmine and Michael Ellington were shot and killed in Frayser in April. Their mother was also shot that night and is now speaking out for the first time about what happened.
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News from the South - Tennessee News Feed
Tennessee governor defends voucher application process
by Sam Stockard, Tennessee Lookout
July 7, 2025
Responding to criticism about Tennessee’s applications for private-school vouchers, Gov. Bill Lee said this week the state doesn’t need to know whether students were enrolled in private schools before seeking the funds.
Lee told reporters this week the Department of Education created the rules and application based on the bill lawmakers passed this year. The governor’s administration is coming under fire for subsidizing private schools with the $146 million program.
The applications for 20,000 vouchers don’t ask where students previously attended school or were enrolled in a private school. Nor do they request financial information from parents applying for “universal” scholarships, those without income restrictions.
The governor said in a press conference last week the data is not required by the legislation and noted “it’s not necessary to have, particularly because what we hope for is universal school choice, where every family regardless of their child’s past educational history has access to a scholarship.”
The Department of Education and the governor’s refusal to ask for critical data on private and previously participating schools is deeply troubling – especially when other states with similar voucher schemes have faced significant fraud and abuse.
– Rep. Caleb Hemmer, D-Nashville
Families of more than 38,000 students applied for the funds this spring, nearly $7,300 each, to pay for tuition and other private-school costs after lawmakers narrowly passed the voucher program. Those were divided almost evenly between families without income limits and those at 300% of the poverty level with an estimated income of $175,000 for a family of four.
Another 5,000 slots could be offered next year.
Republican Rep. Jody Barrett of Dickson, a vocal critic of the program, told the Lookout the legislature should require a state study to determine whether students are using the money to continue attending private schools and where they live so lawmakers can decide if the program should be changed.
Democratic Rep. Caleb Hemmer of Nashville, who is trying to obtain information about the program’s applicants, called it the “educational equivalent of Cash for Clunkers,” a 2009 federal rebate program designed to boost the economy and encourage people to buy fuel-efficient cars.
In light of Lee’s comments, Hemmer said Tennessee residents “deserve full transparency” when funds are being “diverted” from public schools.
“The Department of Education and the governor’s refusal to ask for critical data on private and previously participating schools is deeply troubling – especially when other states with similar voucher schemes have faced significant fraud and abuse. We can’t afford to blindly walk into a system that lacks oversight and accountability,” Hemmer said in a statement.
Reports on Arizona’s private-school vouchers show the state’s budget ran into problems because funds had to be diverted from other programs to pay for the education program.
The legislature passed Lee’s main initiative even though the state’s own financial impact analysis showed 65% of the students who receive the vouchers would be enrolled in private schools already. Students from private schools surrounded the governor when he signed the bill into law at the State Capitol.
The governor further defended his initiative by saying, “Tennesseans broadly of multiple backgrounds and economic diversity want to have this for their kids.”
Data such as previous enrollment and income level for “universal” scholarships is “not helpful,” Lee said.
The state’s Education Savings Account program for low-income students in Memphis, Nashville and Chattanooga requires applicants to report their household income.
GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.
Tennessee Lookout is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Tennessee Lookout maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Holly McCall for questions: info@tennesseelookout.com.
The post Tennessee governor defends voucher application process appeared first on tennesseelookout.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Center-Right
This content primarily presents the perspective of Gov. Bill Lee, a Republican, defending a private school voucher program, which is typically supported by conservative and center-right political actors advocating for school choice and reduced government regulation in education. The article also includes criticisms from Democratic and Republican legislators who express concerns about lack of oversight and transparency. While the criticisms provide balance, the tone and framing largely focus on defending free market principles in education, aligning more with center-right views.
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