Tennessee politics has never been short on drama — but what is unfolding right now around the newly redrawn 9th Congressional District may be the most consequential political story in this state in a generation. Republicans in the Tennessee General Assembly did what Democrats have done for decades — they redrew the map.

In 2002 Democrats redrew congressional lines to consolidate political power, and Republicans have now responded in kind, this time breaking Memphis into three separate congressional districts and giving that city — which has earned the painful distinction of being one of the top cities in America for violent crime — three separate voices in Washington instead of one. Whether you agree with the method or not, the move was legal, it was constitutional, and it was political — just as it has always been in American democracy.

In a matter of days, Governor Bill Lee called a special session, the Tennessee General Assembly changed state law, redrew the lines, and ignited a firestorm of lawsuits, protests, and political ambition stretching from the streets of South Memphis all the way to the suburbs of Rutherford County. The new map passed both chambers on May 7 and Lee signed it into law the same day. Now the new 9th District runs from south Memphis across the southern part of Tennessee before turning north into Marshall, Maury, Williamson and Rutherford counties — more than 200 miles of new political territory that will help define congressional representation in Tennessee for years to come.
There is wisdom in what is happening here that goes beyond the politics. Scripture reminds us in Ecclesiastes 4:12 that “a cord of three strands is not easily broken.” Three congressional voices for Memphis — if those representatives choose to work together for their constituents rather than for their own ambitions — could ultimately serve that city far better than one solitary voice ever did. The question is whether Memphis will seize the opportunity or spend the next decade fighting the map in court while crime continues to claim lives on its streets.
Three lawsuits are already in federal court. Two Republicans have jumped into the race. And the people of Middle Tennessee — including right here in Rutherford County, specifically parts of Smyrna and La Vergne — are now part of a district that will help define the future of our state. This is the story of how we got here and what comes next.
Candidates running for Tennessee’s 9th District:
Tennessee’s 9th District now spans 10 counties eastward along the southern border of the state, all the way to parts of Williamson County near Nashville.
Candidate |
Party |
Location |
Status |
|---|---|---|---|
Charlotte Bergmann |
Republican |
Memphis |
Qualified* |
Arthur Gibson |
Republican |
Memphis |
Petition Issued |
Brent Taylor |
Republican |
Eads |
Signatures Approved |
Jeremy Thompson |
Republican |
Fayetteville |
Signatures Approved |
Todd Warner |
Republican |
Lewisburg |
Signatures Approved |
M. LaTroy A-Williams |
Democratic |
Memphis |
Qualified* |
Steve Cohen |
Democratic |
Memphis |
Qualified* |
Jeannie Michelle Head |
Democratic |
Lewisburg |
Petition Issued |
London Lamar |
Democratic |
Memphis |
Petition Issued |
Justin J. Pearson |
Democratic |
Memphis |
Qualified* |
Michael Sanford |
Democratic |
Memphis |
Petition Issued |
Jim Torino |
Democratic |
Columbia |
Qualified* |
Brenda Woods |
Democratic |
Bolivar |
Petition Issued |
Dennis Clark |
Independent |
Memphis |
Qualified* |
Arthur Gibson |
Republican |
Memphis |
Petition Issued |
Trevor Murphy |
Independent |
Franklin |
Petition Issued |
Notes from the Tenn. Secretary of State: *Candidates who previously qualified for the 2026 congressional election may continue to seek office in a newly drawn district if it retains the same district number.
How the Map Changed
In April 2026, Tennessee lawmakers began considering a mid-decade redistricting plan ahead of the 2026 House elections. The push came after the United States Supreme Court ruled in Louisiana v. Callais that Louisiana’s redistricting map was an unconstitutional racial gerrymander under the Fifteenth Amendment. Following that ruling, Tennessee Republicans moved quickly.
On May 1, Governor Lee called a special session beginning May 5 to review the state’s congressional map. Republicans argued the redistricting was done for political purposes — to give President Trump another vote in Congress — and not based on race. Democrats called it a power grab. The protests that followed inside the Capitol walls were, in my 26 years of public service, some of the most disgraceful behavior I have ever personally witnessed — but that is a story for another column.
The new 9th District starts in Memphis, meanders across rural southern Tennessee, and ends more than 200 miles away in suburban Williamson County south of Nashville. That means communities from Shelby County to Marshall County to Maury County to Williamson County — and portions of Middle Tennessee including areas near Smyrna — are now represented under one congressional district. Voters in these communities deserve to know who is asking for their vote.
The Republican Primary
Two Republicans have entered the race for the

new 9th District, and they could not be more different in background.
Rep. Todd Warner — Marshall County
Republican Rep. Todd Warner of Chapel Hill in rural Marshall County announced he will run for the 9th U.S. Congressional District. Warner is a farmer and state legislator who makes no apologies for where he stands.
“I’m not a politician picked by insiders, consultants and lobbyists,” Warner said in his announcement statement. “I’m a Tennessee fighter who will never back down, never surrender, and never apologize for putting Tennessee first. The swamp can keep their endorsements. I’m running for the people who feel like nobody in Washington fights for them anymore.”
Warner wore a Trump flag on the House floor during the redistricting vote last week — a visual statement that left little doubt about where his loyalties lie.
Sen. Brent Taylor — Shelby County
Republican Sen. Brent Taylor of Eads in Shelby County announced his candidacy the same day the legislature adopted


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