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This story originally appeared in Common Dreams on April 4, 2023. It is shared here under a Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0) license.
Tennessee House Republicans on Monday initiated the process of expelling three Democratic lawmakers who joined protesters in demanding stricter gun laws following the Nashville mass shooting that left three young children and three adults dead.
Days after last weekâs shooting, thousands of demonstrators flooded the Tennessee state Capitol to decry GOP lawmakersâ inaction in the face of deadly gun violence. Inside the House chamber, Democratic Reps. Justin Jones, Gloria Johnson, and Justin Pearson took to the podium with a bullhorn and led demonstrators in chants supporting gun control legislation.
As The Tennessean reported, Tennessee House Republicans cast the trioâs actions as an âinsurrectionâ and, at the end of Mondayâs session, âintroduced three expulsion resolutionsâ claiming that the three Democrats âdid knowingly and intentionally bring disorder and dishonor to the House of Representatives through their individual and collective actions.â
A vote on the resolutions is expected on Thursday. âDemocrats will have little power to block expulsions,â The Tennessean noted.
The Tennessee Black Caucus of State Legislators said in a statement that âthis political retribution is unconstitutional and, in this moment, morally bankrupt.â
âThe people who elected us are calling for meaningful action to end gun violence and the people have a right to be heard through their duly elected representatives,â the statement added.
While the House moved to schedule the vote, demonstrators inside the chamber chanted âFascists!ââto which Republican House Speaker Cameron Sexton responded by ordering the galleries cleared and calling on state troopers to remove protesters.
âMedia forced out at as well,â tweeted Jones, whoâalong with Johnsonâhas already been stripped of his committee assignments. Jones said a Republican lawmaker shoved him and grabbed his phone as he was recording a video of demonstrations inside the chamber on Monday.
âThis is a sad day for Tennessee,â he wrote.
The GOP-controlled Legislatureâs expulsion efforts came after thousands of Nashville students walked out of their classrooms earlier Monday to demand action on gun violence, which is now the leading cause of death for children in the United Statesâa country with more guns than people.
Far from backing gun control legislation, Tennessee Republicans have sought to make firearms even more readily accessible in recent years. The New York Times reported last week that Tennessee lawmakers âhave passed a series of measures that have weakened regulations, eliminating some permit requirements and allowing most residents to carry loaded guns in public, open or concealed, without a permit, training, or special background checks.â
Facing expulsion, the Democratic trio in Tennessee has continued to voice solidarity with those rallying for change in the streets and at the state Capitol.
Pearson, one of Tennesseeâs youngest lawmakers, told a local media outlet that âthe thousands of children and adults who marched outside of the Peopleâs House are not insurrectionists.â
âMy walk, my colleaguesâ walk to the House floor was in a peaceful and civil manner, and it was not an insurrection,â Pearson said, pushing back on the state GOPâs characterization of the protests.
Jones, who like Pearson took office earlier this year, vowed Monday that âweâll not be intimidated.â
âTHE PEOPLE are demanding we act to stop kids from being murdered in school,â Jones wrote on Twitter.
This story has been updated with a statement from the Tennessee Black Caucus of State Legislators.
Source: Therealnews.com