How to read attacks, scandals and campaign noise in the Tennessee governor’s race
by Brandon Burley and The Redemption Project
Every governor’s race eventually reaches the same point.
The policy arguments keep going, but the campaign noise gets louder. Candidates get labels. Opponents test attacks. Supporters repeat phrases until they sound like facts. A complaint becomes a scandal in one post and a nothingburger in another. A legitimate question becomes a smear. A smear gets dressed up as public accountability.
That is where voters have to slow down.
Public controversy is not one thing. A corruption conviction is not the same as a campaign finance complaint. A complaint is not the same as a finding. A dismissed complaint is not the same as a full public audit. A campaign insult is not evidence. A nickname is not a record. And a candidate’s ideology, even if controversial, is not the same thing as misconduct.
That distinction matters in the 2026 Tennessee governor’s race because several narratives are already forming around the candidates. Some deserve real attention. Some require more evidence. Some are ordinary campaign combat. Some are just political shorthand meant to make voters react before they think.
The job of voters is not to ignore controversy. It is to classify it correctly.
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