If you think the rules for getting a gallery sheet for Tennessee House heckle speaker Cameron Sexton are unfair, they’ve gotten a bit stricter.
Under a new policy designed to ensure “fair and organized access,” Sexton announced this week a new policy requiring visitors to book tickets. They remain free for those who want to overcome the ordeal of seeing their homes move, but no more unpublished manifestations.
Tickets will be sent to the first person to sign up. Some are available on the same day, while others are available in advance. People can book them up to two weeks in advance, and each ticket will have access to reserved seats on a specific day. Group reservations are also available.
This rate can be a test of sitting in a house session and going to the Titans game. They tell me that Titan has had season tickets since 1999 and is struggling to convince him to re-up for those surrounded A stadium under construction. This is especially true as PSL prices go through the roof, and the stadium is not retractable in the end.
Still, speaker Sexton said the new ticketing system, which expands its first ticketing policy through its first lawmaker last year, is supposed to cultivate “transparent government and inclusiveness.” Gee, and I thought President Trump had removed “inclusion.”
“This system will ensure that our gallery is fair and accessible to all Tennessees, not just those who live nearby,” Sexton said in a statement. “This improved ticketing system provides equal opportunities for everyone, from Mountain City to Memphis, Tiptonville and Turtletown to reserve seats and witness democracy firsthand.”
Sexton enacted the first phase of tickets for the gallery last year, giving tickets to lawmakers and handing them over to constituents, leaving one side open for the public.
It came along with stricter rules for lawmakers after three Democrats led an anti-gun rally on the house floor in 2023. Since then, Gallery La Bruiser has continued to harass Sexton for repeated calls for lawmakers like Democrat Justin Jones. Nashville goes off topic and calls the speaker “power-drinking.”
House Democrat leader Karen Camper criticized the policy and called for an alternative because some Tennessee residents have no access to computers or email addresses.
“We’re not Congress, this isn’t Washington, D.C., we’re stopped acting that way, we’re acting like Tennessee, and we’re open to all people,” Camper said.
Last week’s house session was relatively calm, with public action in the Capitol lobby being restrained, particularly compared to the opening day when protesters were unable to hear their thoughts. Make a fuss or simply don’t respond.
We are not Congress, this is not Washington, DC. We stop acting like that, act like Tennessee, and are open to all.
– House Democratic leader Karen Camper
The problem is that many of the frequently problematic children live in Nashville and spend the time throwing jabs at lawmakers who don’t like the capital.
If we could move Capitol to Hohenwald, everything would be Hankydry. They were able to do it with enough votes too. But don’t give them any bright ideas.
Tell me what you know
The Tennessee Election Financial Registry orders people to be clean about the campaign for Republican Sen. Bobby Hirschberger.
The Registry Committee voted unanimously on Thursday, and is two members of Thomas Dotwiler and Robert Phillips III, East Tennessee Conservative Political Action Committee, and John in the Republic Primary in August. On alleged “conspiracy” involving Hirschberger’s campaign for beating Senator Randburg. Additionally, the board testified about another group that summoned Datwyler and campaigned against newly elected Senator Michele Reneau of Signal Mountain.
Sen. Ken Yagger, chairman of the Senate Republican Caucus, filed an oath complaint last year claiming the campaign of East Tennessee conservative PAC and Rep. Diana Hirschberger. The American Policy Coalition has poured $600,000 worth of dark money into the race. The registry only has email dropboxes for the American Policy Coalition, not contacts.
East Tennessee conservatives did not report their spending as in kind or independence. “This is inappropriate,” registered lawyer Lauren Topping told members Thursday. Expenses should have been reported in some way based on text messages reviewed by the registry and the Attorney General’s office, but according to the toppings, they refused to provide more information and the Attorney General’s Office was I refused to talk to the office.
” Given that we believe that the disclosures provided by the PAC are probably inappropriate, it is impossible to determine whether a conduit exists based on the information we have. Topping said I think it is very likely that a violation occurred at the minimum reporting requirements.
Registry’s lawyers requested information and recommended that Senators Datwyler, Phillips and Harshbarger hold a show cause hearing. She said that if the hearing indicates that campaign contributions limit violations, more registry reviews would be needed.
However, registry members have chosen to issue subpoenas of what they want to do since October last year.
Duttwiller’s lawyers previously told the watchman that news reports had confirmed that the Attorney General had no basis to support the allegations of conspiracy and that the complaint should be dismissed.
Registry member Tom Lawless said he considers Dattwiller and the company “irritating” the ability of a registered lawyer to do “legally necessary work.”
“There’s no transparency,” Lawless said.
Registry member Page Birchum Dennis agreed, saying that the information not provided to the registry’s lawyers was “slap in the face.”
Other members said they were tired of being kind and chose to finally be serious.
On the chopping block
Former state senator, U.S. Rep. Tim Burchett of Knoxville, has been appointed government efficiency for his “strong” defense against limited government, Americans for prosperity said It’s.
Former Knoxville Mayor received the Pioneers for Prosperity Award from AFP in 2024.
Oddly, Barchette tells him how much money the other departments are spending in a new division created by President Donald Trump (the bigger government). Already, department head Elon Musk wants to eliminate Penny. So, of course, there’s nothing more to pinch than the old ones.
This is from people selling electric cars that cost between $42,500 and $95,000 or more.
Kansas City area man filed honour and loss lawsuit against U.S. Rep. Tim Burchett over social media posts
But Burchet knows a lot about saving money. He didn’t want to see dead deer go to waste, so he sponsored a Tennessee bill allowing people. I’ll take the corpse from the roadside home And cook them.
Last year, Barchette created a social media post identifying the wrong man as a suspect in a shooting at the Kansas City Chiefs’ Super Bowl victory parade. He also claimed that the man was an undocumented immigrant before deleting the post. A federal judge dismissed the Honorable Lib Loss case because Burchett has never been to Kansas City.
Maybe he’ll do better by reducing irrational spending. If they get hungry at a committee meeting, perhaps Burchett can serve deer chili, straight from Highway 64.
More Schwinnanigan?
President Trump recently announced that Tennessee’s Board of Education Chairman, Peggy Schwin, will become the next Assistant Secretary of Education.
You may be saying. “You’re doing that wrong. Her name is Penny.”
Technically, it was the president who repeatedly introduced her as “Peggy” in his true social statements. Ah, details, shmetails.
Schwinn served as Governor Bill Lee’s first board of education and captain of the state’s cheerleading squad before becoming vice president of PK-12 education at the University of Florida.
Schwin will not be in the Run-Inn spice that Schwin had with lawmakers, including directing a $2.5 million non-bid contract for a Florida-based class wallet. For low-income students.
Some lawmakers said it was good idiot when she left the post. Lee had no idea that Lisette Reynolds would hire him from a pro voucher group to escape reporters, and would struggle to answer at the Senate hearing.
Schwin will be second in this post largely The powerful educator of the country. But she may not have much work safety as Congress wants to remove that department.
“I worked at Great North Woods, where I work as a chef for spells, and I didn’t really like it. *
*” Bob Dylan intertwined in blue
Get the morning heading.