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Tennessee congressional race becomes unlikely test of blue wave

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Fresh off Democrats’ domination in the off-year elections, a congressional race in Tennessee has become an unlikely test for whether a national blue wave is building that could produce a seismic shakeup in next year’s midterm election.

The special election to fill the seat of retired Republican Rep. Mark Green, set for Tuesday, Dec. 2, was hardly on the national radar a month ago.

Now, the race between Democrat Aftyn Behn, a 36-year-old liberal state representative, and Republican Matt Van Epps, a combat veteran, has Democrats dreaming of an unexpected House pickup. Meanwhile, top Republicans ‒ including President Donald Trump ‒ are circling the wagons and pumping in millions to try to stop a disaster.

Tennessee’s 7th congressional district was never supposed to be competitive. It’s the creation of Tennessee’s Republican-controlled legislature, which drew its boundaries in 2022 by splitting Democrat-stronghold Nashville into three districts, each dominated by conservative rural counties and different Middle Tennessee suburbs. One was District 7, which includes parts of Nashville’s Davidson County and 13 other countries.

Trump won Tennessee’s congressional District 7 by 22 percentage points over Kamala Harris in the 2024 election. But both Democrats and Republicans are bracing for a close election next week. A poll from Emerson College Polling/The Hill found Van Epps leading by only 2 percentage points, 48% to 46%, within the survey’s margin of error.

Even if Behn doesn’t win the race ‒ something that would have been unthinkable a few week ago ‒ a defeat by single-digits could signal major trouble for Republicans in the 2026 midterms.

“It’s a sign of just how far the Republican Party has fallen and how much trouble they’re in, not only in this election, but as we head into the midterms next year,” Democratic campaign strategist Simon Rosenberg said. “This is a weakened and struggling political party.”

Republicans unleash last-minute attack blitz against Behn

Democratic hopes in reliably red Tennessee come as an NPR/PBS News Marist Poll taken Nov. 10 to 13 found Democrats have opened a sizeable 14-point lead nationally, 55%-41%, when voters are asked which party they plan to back in the midterms. It’s the largest Democratic lead in the poll’s so-called “generic ballot” since 2017, which came during Trump’s first term.

The Nov. 4 off-year election, in which Democrats swept race in Virginia, New Jersey, New York and elsewhere, was widely interpreted as repudiation of Trump and his handling of inflation and the economy. Trump’s approval rating has since dropped to a second-term low 36%, according to a Gallup poll released Nov. 28.

In response to a tighter-than-expected race, the main political action committee linked to Trump, MAGA Inc., has spent more than $1 million to boost Van Epps, with millions more coming from PACs tied to the Club for Growth and other conservative groups. The Democratic-backed House Majority PAC last week dropped a $1 million ad buy in the race.

In recent weeks, Republicans have unleashed an onslaught of attacks on Behn to try to paint her as a “far-left lunatic” they’ve labeled the “AOC of Tennessee.” That includes highlighting past social media posts from Behn questioning whether police should be dissolved, remarks that religion being prominent in the state legislature makes her “uncomfortable,” and commenting that “men and women” can give birth.

Trump has held a pair of tele-town halls for Van Epps, and used his X account and its 109 million followers to urge Tennessean to vote for the GOP candidate. House Speaker Mike Johnson plans to campaign with Van Epps in the district on Dec. 1, the eve of Election Day.

Republicans fear their voters sleep-walking through an election that comes right after the Thanksgiving holiday, when Americans often tune out of politics.

“The RNC has made a targeted investment to ensure Republicans turn out and keep this Trump district red,” Republican National Committee spokeswoman Kiersten Pels said in a statement. “Aftyn Behn is a radical candidate wildly out of touch with TN-07, and with staff on the ground, an aggressive GOTV program, and nearly half a million dollars in this race, we’re confident Matt Van Epps will hold the seat and Democrats won’t gain an inch of momentum heading into 2026.”

On the Democratic side, former Vice President Kamala Harris attended Nov. 18 rally in Nashville to urge supporters to vote for Behn, marking the 2024 Democratic nominee for president’s return to the campaign trail.

Jane Kleeb, a vice chair of the Democratic National Committee, called the Tennessee congressional race “an uphill battle” for Democrats as she knocked on doors for Behn in Nashville recently. But she pointed to the recent off-year elections, which saw Democrats outperform Republicans with independent voters and win big in some down down-ballot races.

“If this trend line continues, we’ll be able to say that we have not only overperformed for Democrats ‒ we got Democrats off the couch who were frustrated with us and didn’t vote in ‘24 ‒ but we’re now changing the hearts and minds of independents and Republicans to be with us,” Kleeb said. “So this is a critical race for our party.”

Dems look to unabashed progressive to win red district

Behn, a former community organizer and social worker, doesn’t fit the same centrist profile as Abigail Spanberger in Virginia and Mikie Sherrill in New Jersey, who helped deliver Democrats’ strong performance on Nov. 4 with their lopsided, double-digit victories in gubernatorial races.

Nor does Behn match the typical southern Democrat trying to win a conservative seat.

Before she was elected to her Nashville state House seat in 2023, Behn burst onto the political scene as a a progressive activist. She was forcibly removed from Tennessee Republican Gov. Bill Lee’s office in 2019 when she and others staged a sit-in to demand the resignation of a Republican lawmaker accused of sexual assault. She was also booted from the House chambers for interrupting proceedings.

In her congressional race Behn has leaned into a similar affordability theme that carried Democrats in the off-year elections, highlighting her support to end the state’s grocery tax and campaigning on lowering health cost. She has embraced a pragmatic slogan: “feed kids, fix roads, and fund hospitals.”

Behn has an enthusiastic base of young, progressive voters and a robust social media presence, often posting videos from the front seat of her Jeep Wrangler.

“We are so close to winning this race, which is why these rumors are getting more wild, so I can’t wait to see what they come up with next,” Behn said in a recent video taken from her Jeep as she addressed some of the recent attacks.

The Trump-backed Van Epps, a West Point graduate and former lieutenant colonel in the Tennessee Army National Guard, is a former commissioner of the Tennessee Department of General Services.

Van Epps has touted his endorsement from Trump and committed to “advancing President Trump’s America First agenda.” It’s a strategy that typically works in districts that voted overwhelmingly for Trump. However, the Emerson College poll found Trump’s job approval is suddenly underwater in the district, with more voters disapproving of his job performance than approving by a 49%-47% margin.

Republican political consultant Mike DuHaime, a former RNC political director, said Trump’s low approval rating is a big concern for Republicans in swing districts. Many Republicans are tying themselves closely to the president, and “In a red state it’ll work, in a red congressional district it’ll work,” DuHaime said.

“But if you get into these swing districts you have to look at where Trump’s approval number is,” DuHaime said, adding: “All politics has become national and that’s very difficult in a swing area if the president loses popularity.”

Nathan Gonzales, who runs the nonpartisan election handicapping service Inside Elections, said it’s likely that the Behn overperforms but unlikely that she wins based on how Democrats have performed in other elections this year and the margin that Trump carried the district.

But even a close defeat could buoy Democrats, providing more evidence that the GOP is struggling to match Trump’s margins without him on the ballot. 

“The ingredients are in place for a good Democratic cycle,” Gonzales said, adding: “When you look at what’s happened over the last 11 months, I’m not sure what the good news is for Republicans.”

Rosenberg said a 10-point electoral shift in the national landscape in favor of Democrats could not only flip the House to Democratic control, but also open a path for Democrats to regain control of the Senate, which previously seemed a longshot. Republicans currently hold a 53-47 seat advantage in the Senate.

“This Tennessee race being competitive is confirmation that Republicans are now playing defense while we’re playing offense,” Rosenberg said. “We’re playing on their side of the field in a way that makes it far more likely that the House is going to flip and the Senate will be competitive next year.”

Contributing: Vivian Jones of the Tennessean

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