Tennessee
Bernie Sanders Backs Justin Pearson, House Candidate at the Heart of Tennessee Voting Rights Fight
An outspoken progressive running for Congress in the Tennessee district at the center of Republicans’ efforts to sabotage voting rights and maintain control of the House earned the endorsement of Sen. Bernie Sanders on Tuesday.
Tennessee state Rep. Justin Pearson found himself the unexpected front-runner in the Democratic primary when two-decade incumbent Rep. Steve Cohen dropped out last month, after new gerrymandered maps throttled his chances of winning reelection. The redrawn 9th Congressional District and sudden shakeup mean that rather than running against the last Democrat representing Tennessee in the House, Pearson is facing a Republican machine bent on delivering an all-GOP delegation for President Donald Trump.
The new map hurts the chances for Pearson — or any Democrat — to win in November, but the candidate said he’s running on a platform focused on wealth, income inequality, and corporate overreach that aims to appeal across party lines. “You’ve got a number of disaffected Republican voters, you’ve got a number of distraught MAGA voters, and you’ve got fired-up Democrats, which is a perfect recipe for success for us,” Pearson told The Intercept. “Because our tent is big enough for everybody who is feeling that this status quo was rigged and broken against working-class folk, and want to see a future that is more just.”
It’s a message similar to the one that buoyed Sanders’s 2016 and 2020 presidential campaigns.
“As billionaires and Big Tech take more and more control over our lives and our government, we need leaders like Justin J. Pearson who have the experience and track record of standing up to the rich and power-hungry elites,” Sanders said in a statement.
Tennessee is one of several Republican-led states where officials rushed to protect Trump and the GOP’s chances of keeping power in what is expected to be a particularly difficult midterm cycle for Republicans mired in an unpopular war on Iran and an ever-increasing cost of living. After the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in April to gut a key provision of the Voting Rights Act, Trump said he spoke with Tennessee Republican Gov. Bill Lee, who called the next day for a special session to redraw the maps.
Using a practice known as “cracking,” the new map breaks the majority-Black district concentrated in and around Memphis across three red districts, diluting the power of Black voters in the area. Pearson said he believed the antidemocratic move, while detrimental to his chances, was unpopular with voters.
“A lot of people were really upset about the gerrymandered maps,” Pearson said. “I had about half a dozen Republicans who said they’re going to be voting in our campaign and I’d be the first Democrat they’d be voting for in their lifetimes.”
Pearson, who launched his campaign against Cohen in October with the backing of the progressive outfit Justice Democrats, received Sanders’s endorsement the day after getting one from the Working Families Party, and four days after he returned from a listening tour in rural and Republican counties in the newly drawn district. His campaign said more than 750 people attended the gatherings.
Attendees expressed frustration with being unable to afford housing, healthcare, and the things they need to live their daily lives, Pearson said. He said voters couldn’t afford “more of the same” when running against Cohen, and has now directed that message at his likely Republican opponent, state Sen. Brent Taylor.
“Both of them were millionaires, both of them benefited from a status quo that’s broken,” Pearson told The Intercept. “Both of them don’t like me.”
Also running in the August 6 Democratic primary are state Sen. London Lamar, who launched her campaign with Cohen’s endorsement after he dropped out, and Jim Torino, a former executive at a healthcare company focusing on people with disabilities and founder of a social welfare nonprofit. Perennial candidate M. LaTroy Alexandria-Williams filed to run but has not filed any reports with the Federal Election Commission.
Pearson is the top fundraiser in the Democratic primary race so far, with just under $2 million, according to the campaign. Most of that has come from contributions under $200, according to the FEC data; the campaign said its average donation is $31. Torino has raised $117,000, and Lamar has not yet had to file any reports with the FEC.
In addition to Sanders, Justice Democrats, and the Working Families Party, Pearson has backing from groups including MoveOn; Sunrise Movement; Indivisible; IMEU Policy Project and its Peace, Accountability, and Leadership PAC; as well as Reps. Summer Lee, D-Pa.; Ayanna Pressley, D-Mass.; Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich.; Delia Ramirez, D-Ill.; and Ro Khanna, D-Calif.
Pearson said he believes federal legislation is needed to force states to support working people and improve public safety.
“We need to put this ban on AI data centers, we need to increase the minimum wage nationally, because the states won’t do it,” Pearson said. “I’m in a state House, they refuse to do it. We need to have national gun safety laws passed, because states refuse to do it.”
In May, Pearson drew the ire of his Republican colleagues when he marched with protesters before the special session to redraw the state’s maps. Three years earlier, Republicans voted to expel him and another Black Democratic lawmaker after they and one other Democratic colleague led a protest against the legislature’s inaction on gun control after a deadly elementary school shooting in Nashville. Local officials reappointed Pearson and his colleague, state Rep. Justin Johnson, to the state House shortly after the vote.
Pearson, Cohen, two other Democratic congressional candidates, four registered voters, and the Tennessee Democratic Party filed a federal lawsuit challenging Tennessee’s maps last month, but they dropped it last week, citing a political environment hostile to their cause. Pearson said other cases before the federal courts had “a higher probability of success,” pointing to voting rights suits from the American Civil Liberties Union and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
Still, he expressed hope for his long-shot campaign in Tennessee. He pointed to a stop on his listening tour in the city where the Ku Klux Klan was founded in 1865, and where Pearson, who is Black, welcomed 150 people at a rally — his largest crowd throughout the tour.
There is a “renewed vigor and enthusiasm because of what the Republicans have done — to show up in spite of them, in spite of what they’ve tried to do,” Pearson said. “I think that’s not something they probably calculated for when they did this racist redistricting.”
Tennessee
Tennessee program helping feed children amid food funding fight
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Tennessee
See which Tennessee companies are asking for $3B in tariff refunds
Businesses can apply for tariff refunds. Will consumers see any of it?
Businesses aren’t required to share tariff refunds with customers, but some businesses say they plan to pass on some amount of relief.
Some of the United States’ largest companies are seeking billions in tariff refunds from the government, but whether customers will see any reimbursements remains unknown.
A USA TODAY analysis of over 630 Securities and Exchange Commission filings found that at least 90 publicly traded companies plan to seek refunds, highlighting their efforts to reclaim billions of dollars following the U.S. Supreme Court striking down the tariffs imposed by the administration of President Donald Trump under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, or IEEPA. Other tariffs remain in place.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection has begun processing refund claims for the $166 billion that may be at stake. Among the largest, Ford is seeing a $1.3 billion refund; General Motors, $500 million; and UPS, $500 million, according to their filings.
Of the three, only UPS announced plans to refund customers. “UPS will disburse refunds 60-90 days after we receive the funds from CBP,” the company said on its website.
Here is how much Tennessee companies are seeking in reimbursements.
How much could TN companies get back from Trump tariffs?
USA TODAY compiled the government filings from 92 firms that mention tariffs collected under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. Of those 92 companies, over two dozen have a noteworthy business presence in Tennessee.
In total, Tennessee companies requested $3.014 billion from the government.
Here is how much the companies with headquarters or significant manufacturing facilities in Tennessee are requesting in refunds from the government:
- Canadian Solar Inc.: $93 million
- Capri Holdings LTD: $65 million
- Cardinal Health: $200 million
- Columbia Sportswear: $80 million
- Deere & Co.: $272 million
- Eastman Chemical Co.: $22 million
- FedEx: amount sought not specified
- Flowserve Corp.: $35.4 million
- Fluence Energy Inc.: $57 million
- General Motors Co.: $500 million
- Integra LifeSciences Holdings: $18.7 million
- Magna International Inc.: $160 million
- Mantiwoc Company: $25 million
- Newell Brands Inc.: $120 million
- Osh Kosh Corp.: $19.7 million
- Procter & Gamble: $200 million
- TJX Companies Inc.: $490 million
- Tootsie Roll Industries Inc.: $1.3 million
- UFP Industries Inc.: $20 million
- Under Armour Inc.: $70 million
- Walmart: amount sought not specified
- West Fraser Timber: $3 million
- Whirlpool: $50 million
- Williams Sonoma Inc.: $197.8 million
- Yeti Holdings Inc.: $66.5 million
- Zebra Technologies Inc.: $75 million
- Zimmer Biomet Holdings Inc.: $77 million
Are some companies passing on tariff refunds to customers?
Of the $166 billion on the table, U.S. consumers are unlikely to see much of it end up in their pockets. Earlier, Trump had even floated the idea that the revenue from these tariffs could be used to send $2,000 checks to Americans, but those plans never materialized.
Cardinal Health, a major medical supply distributor, incurred roughly $200 million in tariffs and passed some of those costs on to its customers. The company plans to refund customers for any portion of tariffs incurred as a result of price increases during that period.
However, given that its customers include businesses, hospitals, and pharmacies, it’s uncertain whether these savings will reach end consumers.
FedEx is also expecting to recover, but did not specify by how much in its filings. Like UPS, the company does plan to pass money on to customers.
Amelia Ables, FedEx Communications Advisor, told USA TODAY in an email statement that supporting consumers remains a priority. “As the U.S. government issues IEEPA tariff refunds to FedEx, we are fully committed to refunding any applicable duties, including the interest received from Customs and Border Protection.”
On a May earning’s call, Walmart’s executive vice president and chief financial officer, John David Rainey, said the company would invest the refund in lowering its prices.
“We are availing ourselves of the process to get refunds. We would definitely bias and try to prioritize price investment for that, given what we’ve seen, both in terms of the pressure on consumers from fuel prices,” Rainey said.
On the call, Rainey said the refund amounts to less than 0.5% of the company’s U.S. annual sales. CNBC estimated it at around $2.42 billion.
An April Federal Reserve study on the effect of tariffs on consumer prices showed that sweeping tariffs kept prices elevated for core goods, which includes cars, furniture and other products and excludes the volatile prices of food and energy.
Major companies are pushing to reclaim tariff payments, despite a warning from President Trump. In April, during an appearance on CNBC’s “Squawk Box,” Trump was informed that Apple had initially decided not to apply for a refund. He responded by saying it was “brilliant” if companies chose not to seek refunds.
Selling refund rights at a discount
A few examples of companies selling their refunds to investors also emerged in USA TODAY’s analysis. These companies reported selling their refund rights outright to financial firms, accepting less than full value in exchange for immediate cash.
The Justice Department is appealing the court order that compelled the U.S. government to reimburse companies. While the appeal would not affect the current cases being processed by Customs and Border Protection, if successful, it could mean some businesses would have to file lawsuits individually, which can be an expensive process.
The IEEPA tariffs are just one set they are dealing with. After the Supreme Court ruled them invalid, President Donald Trump announced other sweeping tariffs, some of which were recently deemed invalid as well.
USA TODAY contributed to this report.
Jordan Green covers trending news for The Commercial Appeal and Tennessee. She can be reached at jordan.green@commercialappeal.com.
Tennessee
Flag Day: East Tennessee couple builds wooden American flags by hand
SEVIERVILLE, Tenn. — Dennis and LaNelle Fawver don’t wave a fabric flag. They build them by hand out of wood.
Six years ago, the couple made their very first wooden American flag — not to sell, but to give to Dennis’s younger brother, who had just been diagnosed with stage four cancer.
“So, we were in the middle of making our very first one when we got a call that my younger brother had stage four cancer and he was about to pass,” Dennis Fawver said.
They finished that flag, put his name on it and a cancer awareness ribbon and took it back to him for a surprise.
“As soon as we gave it to him, you know, he just smiled and got bright and seemed happy,” Dennis Fawver said.
His brother, Randy Behrends, later passed away. But that moment of joy sparked a business, and Dennis says it still drives every flag he makes.
“It just shows patriotic. I mean, just red, white, and blue,” Dennis Fawver said.
The Fawvers make flags for every branch of the military, law enforcement, medical workers, corrections officers and even fully custom flags with names and sayings.
For LaNelle, a former nurse, the reward is different — it’s the moment someone unwraps one.
“I just like seeing people’s faces when they get them. We make a lot of birthday presents, a lot of anniversaries, Father’s Day presents. That’s a biggie for us. And to see the dads and the reactions on their faces when they see it, that’s the best part. I enjoy making them happy when they see. They get something that means something to them,” LaNelle Fawver said.
That joy — the same joy his brother showed — is what keeps Dennis going.
“So that kind of inspired us like, well, if he liked it that much, you know, and other people commented. So we just started making them and would give them away to friends and family,” Dennis Fawver said.
The Fawvers sell their wooden flags at the Great Smoky Mountains Flea Market and online.
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