The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: March 31, 2025
Today: March 31, 2025

Tennessee House kills bill that would have banned local officials from studying, funding reparations

TSU Board Tennessee
April 24, 2024

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Tennessee’s Republican-dominant House on Wednesday spiked legislation that would have banned local governments from paying to either study or dispense money for reparations for slavery.

The move marked a rare defeat on a GOP-backed proposal initially introduced nearly one year ago. It easily cleared the Republican-controlled Senate last April, but lawmakers eventually hit pause as the House became consumed with controversy over expelling two Black Democratic lawmakers for their participating in a pro-gun control protest from the House floor. That protest followed a deadly elementary school shooting in Nashville.

Interest in the reparations bill emerged again this year, just as lawmakers and GOP Gov. Bill Lee were in the process of finalizing the removal and replacement of every board member of the state's only publicly-funded historically Black public university, Tennessee State University. That sparked more outrage among critics who contend that Tennessee’s white GOP state leaders have long refused to trust Black local leaders.

As the TSU fallout increased, House members appeared hesitant to hold a potentially explosive debate over reparations. The bill was briefly debated on the House floor last week but support remained unclear.

“The idea of studying reparations doesn’t take anything from you,” Democratic Rep. Larry Miller, who is Black and from Memphis, said during the short House debate. “What’s inside of you to say, ‘Look, we can’t study our history. We can’t even talk about our history, you can’t even use your local tax dollars to study it.’ That is so antiquated.”

Ultimately, House leaders waited until the final week of session to return to the measure. But as Republican Rep. John Ragan, the bill's sponsor, approached the front of the House to begin his opening remarks, another Republican requested that the body “table” his proposal — a move that would effectively kill it for the year.

Nearly 30 Republicans joined House Democrats in tabling the bill, including Republican House Speaker Cameron Sexton.

Ahead of the vote, Ragan maintained his bill was needed, arguing that reparations advocates want to “take money from our grandchildren's pockets as a judgement for someone else's great-great-grandfather's actions."

“Is it right to say that the faults of a small percentage of long-past generations must be borne by all of today’s Americans? No. It’s never right to punish an innocent person for an act committed by another,” Ragan said Wednesday.

Under House rules, no other lawmakers were allowed to speak during the vote.

“We decided move on, go accomplish some other stuff,” Sexton later told reporters. “You can always come back.”

Tennessee lawmakers began seriously considering banning the consideration of reparations only after the state’s most populated county, which encompasses Memphis, announced it would spend $5 million to study the feasibility of reparations for the descendants of slaves and find “actionable items.”

The decision by Shelby County leaders was prompted by the fatal beating of Tyre Nichols by officers in January 2023.

Yet the idea to ban reparations has been floated in other states.

A Florida Republican lawmaker proposed a constitutional amendment this year that would have banned state or local governments from paying reparations, but the measure didn't pass. A Missouri Republican introduced a bill that would ban any state or local government entity from spending on reparations based on race, religion, gender identity, sexual orientation or economic class. It hasn't advanced to date.

Meanwhile, other states have willingly moved to study reparations, including California, New Jersey and Vermont.

Related Articles

‘We will fight’: Activists are unbowed after Hungary bans Pride events as part of wider LGBTQ+ crackdown South Dakota governor signs anti-transgender bathroom bill Jeanette Vizguerra, an undocumented mom once named to Time’s 100 Most Influential list, has been detained by ICE in Colorado Mexican president pledges stronger missing persons efforts after mass grave found
Share This

Popular

Business|Economy|Political|US

Expert predicts what will happen if Trump imposes sweeping tariffs

Expert predicts what will happen if Trump imposes sweeping tariffs
Americas|Business|Economy|Europe|Political

Brazil's finance minister says EU should see Mercosur deal as political, not just economic

Brazil's finance minister says EU should see Mercosur deal as political, not just economic
Business|Economy|Finance|Political|US

Fed officials cautious on rates amid tariff-related inflation risks

Fed officials cautious on rates amid tariff-related inflation risks
Americas|Business|Economy|World

Argentina's January-February mining exports hit 10-year record

Argentina's January-February mining exports hit 10-year record

Economy

Business|Economy|Finance|Political|Stock Markets|US

IMF's Georgieva: Recession not on the horizon despite tariff worries

IMF's Georgieva: Recession not on the horizon despite tariff worries
Americas|Business|Economy|Political

IMF says Argentina's request for 40% disbursement from new loan is 'reasonable'

IMF says Argentina's request for 40% disbursement from new loan is 'reasonable'
Business|Economy|Environment|Political|US

US regulator OCC withdraws guidance to banks for climate-related financial risk

US regulator OCC withdraws guidance to banks for climate-related financial risk
Business|Economy|Finance|Stock Markets|US

Wall Street closes out bruising quarter as outlook remains murky

Wall Street closes out bruising quarter as outlook remains murky

Access this article for free.

Already have an account? Sign In