The Redemption Project Newsroom

The Redemption Project Newsroom

Season 4: Civic Conversations

Green’s organization, Atwater’s advocacy and the rest of the Democratic field: what the candidates are asking voters to see

Before Tennessee Votes

The Redemption Project's avatar
Brandon Burley's avatar
Newsroom TRP's avatar
The Redemption Project, Brandon Burley, and Newsroom TRP
Jul 14, 2026
∙ Paid

Editor’s note: This article is part of TRP’s side-by-side series on Tennessee’s Republican and Democratic primaries for governor. Each installment applies the same civic question to both races while recognizing that the two primaries are not the same kind of contest.

Every campaign is trying to define the race before voters define it for themselves.

In Tennessee’s Democratic primary for governor, the candidates are not only competing over policy. They are competing over visibility, experience, biography, party infrastructure and whether voters know enough about the field to make a serious choice.

Jerri Green is asking voters to see organization and elected-office credibility. Carnita Atwater is asking voters to see Memphis advocacy and prior statewide experience. Tim Cyr is asking voters to see a rural veteran, farmer and practical problem-solver. Adam “Ditch” Kurtz is asking voters to see a grassroots outsider rejecting corporate politics. Kevin Lee McCants is asking voters to see an unusual state-and-federal campaign built around economic change, artificial intelligence and workforce disruption.

Those are not just descriptions.

They are campaign narratives.

Green’s message begins with organization. She is a Memphis City Council member, and Tennessee Firefly describes her as the only Democrat in the 2026 governor race who has won elected office. Her campaign website describes her as a lifelong Tennessean, lawyer, public servant, educator and mother of three who has lived in Memphis, Nashville and Knoxville

Share The Redemption Project Newsroom

Her campaign message uses the phrase “One Tough Mother” and emphasizes common sense, compassion, courage, working families, public schools, health care and fundamental freedoms. Her campaign site lists policy priorities including paid family and medical leave, affordable child care, a living wage, labor rights, public school funding, Medicaid expansion, background checks, red flag laws, gun locks, reproductive freedom and clean air and water.

Green is also the candidate with the clearest public campaign structure. Her events page lists statewide “Meet Jerri” events across Tennessee communities, and her campaign site lists endorsements from elected officials, labor groups and progressive organizations.

Atwater is asking voters to see a different story.

Paid subscribers receive early access to every article because their support helps make this work possible. That said, I believe civic knowledge should remain accessible, so this article will unlock for all readers in 24 hours. If you’d like immediate access — and want to support independent, systems-focused journalism — consider becoming a paid subscriber.

User's avatar

Continue reading this post for free, courtesy of The Redemption Project.

Or purchase a paid subscription.
Brandon Burley's avatar
A guest post by
Brandon Burley
Your home for Christ centered public policy, criminal justice, explaination, and conversation.
Subscribe to Brandon
Newsroom TRP's avatar
A guest post by
Newsroom TRP
The Newsroom for The Redemption Project
Subscribe to Newsroom
© 2026 Brandon L. Burley / The Redemption Project · Privacy ∙ Terms ∙ Collection notice
Start your SubstackGet the app
Substack is the home for great culture