TN Campus Speech Law Named for Racist Podcaster

Rep. Gino Bulso, a Williamson County Republican, claims that a man who repeatedly denigrated women of color on his podcast “encouraged everyone to love others.”

Bulso sponsored the “Charlie Kirk Act” which aims to prevent Christian Nationalist and white supremacist speakers from facing backlash on college campuses. Yes, Bulso wants Tennessee college campuses to be a more welcoming environment for men like Kirk who, like David duke, cloaked their racism not in a white hood, but in a suit and smooth talk.

WPLN reports on Bulso’s effort to protect future Kirks:

HB 1476/ SB 1741 would require colleges and universities to sign the University of Chicago’s policy on freedom of speech — and prohibit administrations from uninviting a speaker based on their opposition to abortion or LGBTQ rights.

Meanwhile, the state’s leading Democratic candidate for Governor, Jerri Green, says she’ll work to keep Kirk’s “Turning Point USA” political clubs off of Tennessee high school campuses.

Public schools exist to serve all students—regardless of race, religion, gender identity, sexual orientation, immigration status, or political belief. Organizations that are allowed into these spaces must meet that same standard. Turning Point has repeatedly demonstrated practices and messaging that many educators, civil rights advocates, and families view as discriminatory and exclusionary. Its public rhetoric has too often targeted marginalized groups, framed diversity and inclusion efforts as threats, and promoted ideological litmus tests that chill open discussion rather than encourage it. That approach undermines the fundamental mission of public education: to create safe, inclusive environments where students can learn to think critically and engage respectfully with differing views.

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The Kansas Voucher Saga

Utah’s Backwards March

What’s Up with Vouchers in TN?

TC Weber tracks down the latest in the ongoing fight over expanding school vouchers:

Take the voucher expansion bill.

The House recently amended its version, pushing the program to 35,000 students next year—an increase of 15,000.

The Senate? They want 40,000.

Because of course they do.

The House version also adjusts “hold harmless” funding—meaning districts would only receive funding for students who actually take vouchers, not for overall enrollment losses.

That’s not a small tweak.

That’s a structural shift.

And it has the potential to hit district budgets hard.

The big question now is whether there are enough votes to get anything across the finish line.

Republicans have a supermajority, but even within that, there’s division.

And when divisions show up this late in session, strange things can happen.

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Keeping Turning Point Out of TN Schools

A Note on Standardized Testing

MNPS School Board Elections 2026

TC Weber offers some insight into this year’s round of Nashville school board elections:

Did you know the Metro Nashville Public Schools board is holding an election this year?

Go ahead. Be honest.

Yeah. That’s what I thought.

Let me catch you up.

This year, the even-numbered seats are up—Districts 2, 4, 6, and 8.

Districts 2 and 8? Incumbents. No challengers.

District 4 has two candidates.
District 6 has three.

All Democrats.

Which means once the primaries are done, all four winners will run unopposed.

So if you’re looking for sweeping change…

You might be looking in the wrong place.

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Chicago Takes on Trump’s Vouchers

Keep Turning Point Out of TN Schools