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Harris heads to Tennessee after lawmakers expelled over gun protests By Reuters

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IntroductionBy Cheney Orr and Julia HarteNASHVILLE/WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris visit ...

By Cheney Orr and mt5Julia Harte

NASHVILLE/WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris visited Tennessee on Friday, planning to meet with state lawmakers after two members of her Democratic party were expelled from the legislature for siding with protesters pushing for stricter gun control measures after last month's deadly shooting at a Nashville school.

Harris heads to Tennessee after lawmakers expelled over gun protests By Reuters

On Thursday, the Tennessee House of Representatives' Republican supermajority voted to remove Democratic Representatives Justin Jones and Justin Pearson, two young Black legislators, over demonstrations pushing for stricter gun laws. The move to oust a third Democratic member, Gloria Johnson, a white woman who stood with them during the protest on the House floor, failed by one vote.

The partisan battle in Nashville comes after three 9-year-old students and three adults were killed in a March 27 school shooting in the city, the latest high-profile mass shooting in the United States. Like much of the country, Tennessee is also grappling with questions of political representation and changing demographics ahead of the 2024 presidential election.

Republicans said the three Democrats broke decorum by leading the demonstration in the well of the House floor, and deserved to be punished via expulsion instead of lesser forms of discipline, such as censure. Just two state lawmakers have been expelled since the U.S. Civil War.

On Thursday, President Joe Biden decried the expulsions of the state lawmakers on Twitter, calling them "shocking, undemocratic, and without precedent."

Harris echoed those remarks on Friday, tweeting: "This is undemocratic and dangerous."

The White House, which announced the trip, did not provide other details about the meeting, scheduled for Friday evening.

Tennessee Representative Yusuf Hakeem, a Democrat, said Harris's visit "lets us know firsthand that the White House is very interested and concerned in a meaningful way," adding that he does not expect the protests will fade away.

"What these young people are saying is if you are not listening to us... you are going against democracy, you are going against fair play," he told MSNBC in an interview.

Nearly 50 organizations, led by the gun safety advocacy group the Newtown Action Alliance, called for nationwide student walkouts in solidarity with those in Tennessee.

Jones on Friday told MSNBC he faced a "toxic work environment" since arriving at the statehouse in January: "Colleagues make snide remarks on elevators, in committee, belittling remarks, patronizing remarks."

Jones said it was unclear whether Republicans would block the two from rejoining the legislature if they were re-appointed. Jones's former Nashville district and Pearson's former Memphis district are among the most diverse in the state.

Members of the Tennessee General Assembly's Black Caucus decried the move at a news conference on Friday, saying Republicans had sunk to new lows.

"It looked like a Jim Crow era," caucus vice chair and Democratic Representative Jesse Chism said.

Even some Republicans blasted the expulsion.

"You stand for something bigger than what happened today," former Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele told Jones on MSNBC late on Thursday. "You represent a future that America has been leaning towards, for a long time."

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