‘This is how we cement President Trump’s agenda’: Tennessee Republicans celebrate state’s new congressional maps – live

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GOP Tennessee senator heralds new state maps: 'This is how we cement President Trump's agenda'

In response to the Tennessee General Assembly passing a new congressional map, one of the state’s two Republican senators heralded the news.

“This is how we cement President Trump’s agenda and usher in America’s Golden Age here in Tennessee, and how we become America’s conservative leader,” said Marsha Blackburn, who has served in the US Senate since 2019, is a fierce ally of the president, and is running for governor in this year’s midterm elections.

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Meanwhile, Republican lawmakers in South Carolina have started the process of extending their legislative session to redraw the state’s congressional map, an attempts to eliminate the only Democratic House district.

Democratic congressman Jim Clyburn announced the move in a series of posts to X:

double quotation markRepublicans in the South Carolina state legislature began the process of extending their session to allow for the redrawing of the state’s congressional map — with one goal in mind: eliminating the state’s only Democratic House district that is occupied by a Democrat.

Clyburn noted that South Carolina’s sixth district, which is also majority-Black, is in jeopardy amid redistricting attempts.

Speaking about the plans to redraw, Clyburn added in a subsequent post:

double quotation markThis fight is bigger than one district. It’s about whether our democracy belongs to the people, or to politicians who change the rules when they don’t like the results. We cannot let them succeed.

The official Democrat social media on X has commented on the Tennessee’s redrawing of its districting map.

The post read:

double quotation markRepublicans in Tennessee have officially passed a new congressional map, carving up the only majority-Black district just days after the Supreme Court gutted the Voting Rights Act.

This is another shameful power grab by the GOP in their attempt to rig the midterms.

Democrats have largely decried the new map, which eliminated the only Democratic and majority-Black district in the state.

Eric H. Holder, the US attorney general from 2009 to 2015, has commented on Tennessee’s latest redistricting map:

double quotation mark

Memphis is not just any city; it holds a central place in the national story of our quest for racial justice in this country and how, over time, we have increasingly achieved civil, voting, and economic rights for all Americans. Black citizens protested, marched and died there for the right to vote.

We are not the same country we were in years past, but what is being done to Memphis by Tennessee Republicans—at the behest of the White House—shows that the protections once afforded by Section 2 of the 1965 Voting Rights Act do indeed remain necessary to this day.

Now, Memphis is going to be connected to another dark chapter in our country’s story, one where we are entering a revised, modern-day Jim Crow, where politicians act with impunity to diminish the voting power of Black and Latino communities across the country. Republicans want us to believe that Tennessee’s newest and repressive gerrymander is justified for partisan reasons—as if that were somehow consistent with the best of American democracy. The reality is that there is no moral justification that can be made for knowingly splitting apart a historically Black community and drowning out its votes by pairing it with extremely wealthy, predominantly white suburbs hundreds of miles away. In fact, it is immoral.

Tennessee Republicans shamelessly and happily racing to diminish the voting power of Black citizens shows just how detrimental the Roberts Court’s decision to gut the Voting Rights Act is to our democracy. The Court has put in place a nefarious permission structure. This move by Tennessee will be the first of many immoral, flagrant racial gerrymanders that we will see from Republican-led states unless and until we can enact federal legislation to protect the rights of voters and to reform an out-of-control and unprincipled Supreme Court.

Make no mistake, this fight will be hard, it will be long, and there will be setbacks as well as many victories. Martin Luther King, Jr. once said, ‘The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.’ But the arc does not bend on its own. It’s now on us, again, to do the necessary work to pull that arc towards justice—together.

Republican senator Bill Hagerty of Tennessee shared his endorsement of Taylor in a post on X. Resharing Taylor’s announcement that he would run for Congress in the redrawn ninth district, Hagerty said:

double quotation markBy sending [Taylor] to Congress, the Ninth Congressional District will have a conservative fighter who will stand up for our communities and deliver results where they matter most.

Republican senator Martha Blackburn of Tennessee also wrote several posts on X in support of Taylor:

double quotation markI’ve vowed time and time again to make Tennessee America’s conservative leader. Electing [Taylor] to serve Tennessee’s Ninth Congressional District is how we get that done. I’ve had the privilege of working with Senator Taylor for many years now, and one thing has remained true: he loves Tennessee, he’s ready for the job, and he’s exactly who President Trump needs in Washington. It’s an honor to give Brent my complete and total endorsement. Let’s get this done!

Sam Levine

Sam Levine

The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) formally pled not guilty on Thursday to charges related to allegations the organization committed fraud and conspired to money launder.

The 11-count indictment filed last month accuses the civil rights organization of committing fraud in connection to a program in which it paid informants to monitor rightwing extremist groups. The program no longer exists.

“The charges against the SPLC are provably wrong; they are based on inaccurate facts and a misapplication of law,” Bryan Fair, the organization’s interim president and CEO, said in a statement. Our informant program was successful in accomplishing its purposes: Threats and attacks were prevented, criminal activity was stopped, and information was gathered to dismantle the efforts of hate and extremist groups. There is no question that the information the SPLC shared with law enforcement saved lives.”

Legal experts have said the case against SPLC is weak. Trump and allies have nonetheless touted the case to attack the organization and raise doubts about rightwing extremism.

Tennessee state senator announces bid for Congress in re-drawn district

Republican state senator Brent Taylor announced that he would run for Congress in the re-drawn ninth district, launching a challenge against the incumbent Democrat, Steve Cohen, who has represented the district since 2007.

The newly passed congressional map now splits up Shelby county, where Memphis sits, into three districts – effectively separating a majority-Black voting bloc.

“As your Congressman, I will continue to fight every single day to ensure the liberals’ harmful, negligent policies never take root in Tennessee,” said Taylor, who has served in the state Senate since 2022. “I’ve cleaned up the streets of Memphis, and now I’m ready to clean up Washington DC.”

Tennessee’s two GOP senators, Marsha Blackburn and Bill Hagerty immediately endorsed Taylor’s bid for national office.

Tiago Rogero

Tiago Rogero

There had been some tension ahead of the Trump and Lula’s meeting, particularly on the Brazilian side, as relations between the two have fluctuated since Trump began his second term.

Last year, the US president imposed an additional 40% tariff on Brazil, widely seen as an attempt to influence the trial of his former ally, the Brazilian ex-president Jair Bolsonaro, over an attempted coup.

Some had feared Trump might stage a kind of “ambush” with Lula at the White House, citing examples of his contentious meetings with Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, and South Africa’s Cyril Ramaphosa.

But, according to reports so far, the meeting between Trump and Lula went better than expected: what had been scheduled as a brief meeting followed by a lunch ended up running for nearly three hours.

Although it was Lula’s fourth visit to the White House – during his non-consecutive third term he was received twice by George W Bush and once by Barack Obama – it was his first under Trump. The Brazilian president posted photos in which he and Trump appear smiling and shaking hands.

GOP Tennessee senator heralds new state maps: 'This is how we cement President Trump's agenda'

In response to the Tennessee General Assembly passing a new congressional map, one of the state’s two Republican senators heralded the news.

“This is how we cement President Trump’s agenda and usher in America’s Golden Age here in Tennessee, and how we become America’s conservative leader,” said Marsha Blackburn, who has served in the US Senate since 2019, is a fierce ally of the president, and is running for governor in this year’s midterm elections.

Trump says meeting with Lula went 'very well' and included discussions about trade and tariffs

Donald Trump issued a post on Truth Social, summarizing his meeting with the Brazilian President, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. The summit was initially open to the press. But, after what appeared to be a three-hour delay, members of the Brazilian media left the White House.

“We discussed many topics, including Trade and, specifically, Tariffs,” Trump wrote on social media. “The meeting went very well. Our Representatives are scheduled to get together to discuss certain key elements. Additional meetings will be scheduled over the coming months, as necessary.”

Tennessee Senate passes new congressional map that guts lone Democratic district

Following from the House’s earlier vote, the Tennessee Senate has now passed the new congressional maps that gut the state’s lone Democratic, majority-Black district.

The new plan splits up the 9th congressional district, represented by Steve Cohen in the US Congress, into three Republican constituencies.

As my colleague, George Chidi, notes, the district had closely occupied the south-west corner of the state. Now three districts snake out from Memphis’ dense center, with two crossing the Tennessee River to reach Nashville’s suburbs 200 miles away.

“If Republican policies are so great, why are we changing the lines to rig elections?” asked Vincent Dixie, a state representative from Nashville, during debate on Thursday, pleading for Republicans to refrain. “Where is your humanity in this?”

Here's a recap of the day so far

Donald Trump will welcome Brazil’s president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, to the White House on Thursday. The meeting, which appears to be running behind, will be an opportunity for the Brazilian president to meet with Trump to avert steep US tariffs ahead of an October election where Lula will face-off against the son of his imprisoned predecessor, Jair Bolsanaro.

Following Marco Rubio’s closed-door meeting with Pope Leo XIV, the state department said that the pair discussed the “situation in the Middle East and topics of mutual interest in the Western Hemisphere”, according to a readout from spokesperson Tommy Pigott. “The meeting underscored the strong relationship between the United States and the Holy See and their shared commitment to promoting peace and human dignity,” he said.

House lawmakers in the Tennessee General Assembly voted to pass new maps that gets rid of the a majority-Black congressional district in the state. The ninth district is also the only Democratic controlled consituency in Tennessee. The new plan splits up Shelby county – home to Memphis – into three Republican-controlled districts. The Tennessee Senate will now vote on the maps before they’re ratified.

Susan Collins – the five-term Republican senator from Maine facing a competitive re-election race – has released her first television spot ahead of the midterms. In the ad, she highlights her seniority in the upper chamber, and notes the millions of dollars she has steered towards Maine as chair of the influential Senate appropriations committee. On Wednesday, Collins also revealed a decades-old medical condition she said affects her appearance, but not her ability to do her job.

The White House press pool notes that they have still not be called to gather at that Oval Office for the bilateral meeting with Donald Trump and Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

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