Archive for January, 2010

Rutherford County Says Goodbye to a Legend

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

Willie Brandon was one of the most genteel, hardest working men this County has ever known. He passed away peacefully on Tuesday at the age of 103. The Daily News Journal tells his story, interviews those who knew him best, and has photos through the years.

Brandon, the grandson of a slave, told stories stretching back nearly two centuries. He knew the history of Murfreesboro firsthand, and worked as a cook at James K. Polk Hotel, City Cafe and Sewart Air Force Base before becoming a custodian at the courthouse in 1979.

Brandon served at the courthouse until February 2009, when he fell while turning the lights off upstairs, his immediate supervisor Janie Davis said. When another custodian discovered him, she contacted Davis, who called for an ambulance.

“I visited him before Christmas, and I am very glad I did,” said Bob Bullen, a Rutherford County commissioner. “He was very frail, but his mind was as crisp as ever. He kept up with current events.”

Bullen, who retired three years ago from MTSU, remembered his friend.

“Mr. Brandon was a highly intelligent, perceptive gentleman whose work ethic and sense of values stood above us all,” said Bullen. “To converse with him was an enlightening experience. He was a courthouse institution. With his passing, he now becomes a Rutherford County legend.”

Kim McMillan Receives National Endorsement

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

kim-mcmillanClarksville, Tennessee – January 4, 2010 - Kim McMillan has received the endorsement of the Women’s Campaign Forum in her 2010 campaign for Tennessee’s Governor. The WCF is dedicated to advancing the political participation and leadership of women who support reproductive health choices for all. It is the oldest national non-partisan political committee founded of its kind.

“I appreciate the confidence that WCF has placed in my candidacy and their support for my campaign. The organization’s efforts to increase the number of women who hold elected office is vital as we move toward equality in representation,” McMillan said.

“WCF works tirelessly to improve women’s representation by empowering women from all walks of life to become voters, activists, volunteers, and most importantly, candidates. Kim McMillan is a leader for women nationwide and we are proud to be part of her team. We thank her for her leadership and proudly endorse her candidacy,” said Sam Bennett, WCF President/CEO.

According to WCF’s research, thirty years ago, women held only 3% of the seats in Congress, 11% of statewide elected offices and 10% of state legislature seats. Today, women have more than doubled those numbers to 17% of Congress, 24% of statewide elected offices and 24% of state legislature seats nationwide.

“This endorsement isn’t simply given to every woman who puts her name on a ballot,” Bennett said. “Each candidate’s qualifications are extensively reviewed in a rigorous vetting process. Her leadership as the first female House Majority Leader, her public policy experience, her time as an attorney and in the administration and classroom at Austin Peay State University are all significant contributions and make her the most qualified candidate in Tennessee’s gubernatorial race.”

Nineteen states, including Kentucky and North Carolina, and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico have elected female governors. A woman has never been elected to serve as Tennessee’s governor.

Former Tennessee Lt. Gov. Wilder (D-Macon) Dead at 88

Friday, January 1st, 2010

John Shelton Wilder through the 44 years he served

John Shelton Wilder through the 44 years he served

The Tennessean reports the sad news:

The old lion of the Tennessee legislature has died. Former Lt. Gov. John Wilder, who led the Tennessee Senate longer than anyone in history, died at Baptist Hospital in Memphis early today at age 88, after suffering a stroke at his home earlier this week.

Wilder’s death comes just a year after he finally retired from the seat he held for 44 years, 36 of them as speaker of the Senate and lieutenant governor of Tennessee.

Tennessee may never see his like again.

He was the longest-serving lieutenant governor in the nation. He may, in fact, have been the longest-serving, freely elected legislative leader in the world. He was “Gov. Wilder,” even after he lost his leadership post, even after left his seat.

For four decades, he was a fixed point in a political landscape that shifted around him until it was almost unrecognizable to the old Democrat from Fayette County.
Wilder built his long career on compromise, moderation and an innate sense of fair play. He shared power with Senate Republicans back when his party had a lock on power and there was really no need to do so.

He was a charming, quirky character, prone to rambling speeches and “Wilderisms” — fortune cookie bits of wisdom that left generations of reporters squinting at their notes in confusion.

“The Senate used to go quack quack,” he said once, in a sly reference to senators’ old practice of hiding their vodka out of Donald Duck juice cans during long floor sessions. “The Senate don’t go quack quack no more.”

He battled special interest groups like loan sharks and the price-fixing liquor lobby. A Democrat in the Jeffersonian tradition, he preached against government debt and counseled fiscal responsibility.

In the 1960s, he defied his neighbors and most of the rest of West Tennessee agribusiness interests by encouraging the black tenants on his farms to register to vote. When other farmers drove those sharecroppers out of their fields, Wilder allowed them to camp in his.