There’s a question I’ve been asking my fellow Tennessee House members lately — one that cuts past the politics and gets to the heart of the matter.
Why do you serve?
It’s a simple question, but the answers reveal everything about a person’s character and calling.
When I sat down with State Representative Clark Boyd of Lebanon, the answer didn’t take long to surface. It was right there in who he is.
Clark Boyd is a lot of things. He’s a husband to his wife Jada. He’s a father to Wilson and Blair Ellen. He’s a deacon and Sunday School teacher at Immanuel Baptist Church in Lebanon, where he teaches — of all people — newly married couples. He’s a small business owner running a State Farm Insurance agency. And he’s a veteran who served as a Captain in the United States Army Reserve, giving eleven years of his life to the Army and Army National Guard.
That’s not a résumé. That’s a life built on responsibility to others.
Boyd was born in Georgia in 1978 and earned his Bachelor of Science degree in Human Development and Learning, with a Minor in Military Science, from East Tennessee State University. The combination tells you something. Human development. Military science. He studied how people grow, and then he learned how to lead them. That’s the Clark Boyd you get in the Tennessee House of Representatives.
He first ran for office back in 2014, challenging for a State Senate seat before ultimately finding his way to the House after Wilson County commissioners appointed him to finish out a term following Representative Mark Pody’s move to the Senate. He’s been winning elections decisively ever since — and his colleagues have taken notice.
Just this past February, the Tennessee House Republican Caucus unanimously elected Boyd to serve as House Majority Whip for the 2026 legislative session, making him the fourth-ranking officer in the House Republican Caucus. That’s not a title handed out for showing up. That’s the kind of trust earned through years of consistent, principled work.
So back to the question — why does he serve?
Boyd puts it plainly: “As a conservative Christian, husband, father, veteran and small business owner, I believe in our Tennessee values and will work to keep taxes low and protect your God-given rights.” There’s no mystery in that statement. What you see is what you get with Clark Boyd.
I’ve been in public service for 26 years now. In that time I’ve had the opportunity to meet some truly great people — and some not so great ones. I’ve watched politicians who don’t serve for the right reasons, who refuse to meet with constituents unless they happen to be a major donor or someone with significant influence. That kind of self-serving attitude is more common than most people realize, and it’s a disservice to every taxpayer who puts their trust in elected officials.
That’s what makes Clark Boyd stand out so clearly.
I can honestly say — without hesitation — that Clark Boyd is the real deal. He’s a man of genuine character. The kind of man who treats a farmer from Cannon County the same way he treats a CEO from Lebanon. The kind of man whose faith isn’t something he puts on for Sunday and takes off on Monday. I’ve watched him operate in the Capitol, and what you see in public is exactly who he is in private.
I could easily see Clark Boyd as Governor of this great state one day. I mean that sincerely. Tennessee needs leaders who are rooted in something deeper than ambition, and Clark Boyd is rooted in faith, family, community, and a military service ethic that doesn’t quit. That’s a rare combination in any arena, but especially in politics.
I respect that more than I can say. His insurance agency in Lebanon isn’t a footnote — it’s the small business reality that shapes how he thinks about legislation. His military service isn’t a campaign bio line — it’s eleven years of choosing something harder than what most people would choose.
There’s a verse from Galatians that comes to mind when I think about people like Clark Boyd. “Let us not grow weary of doing good, for in due season we will reap, if we do not give up.” Public service is long work. It’s early mornings, late sessions, tough votes, and endless constituent calls. The ones who last are the ones doing it for the right reasons.
Clark Boyd is doing it for the right reasons.
As I continue this series of conversations with Tennessee House members — asking each one why they serve — I’m encouraged by what I’m finding. Men and women of faith, of family, of real community roots, showing up every day at the Capitol because they genuinely believe Tennessee is worth fighting for.
Clark Boyd is one of those people. Lebanon is fortunate to have him. And so is Tennessee.