The Nashville Metropolitan Council is expected to meet Monday to consider the vacancy in the Tennessee state Legislature after two young Black lawmakers were expelled last week in votes that drew national attention to racial dynamics in the state’s top legislative body.

Democrats Justin Jones, Justin J. Pearson and Gloria Johnson had led supporters in chants calling for gun control measures after a shooting at a Nashville school killed six people, including three 9-year-old children. The three broke House rules and used a bullhorn when they were not recognized to speak. Tennessee House leaders cast the protest as an “insurrection” and voted last Thursday to expel Jones and Pearson from the Legislature. Johnson, who is white, survived her vote, which she suggested had to do with her race.

Last week, 23 members of the 40-seat Metropolitan Council, a majority, said they would vote to send Jones back to the Legislature. Vice Mayor Jim Shulman told NBC News that he expects the council will consider suspending the rules to allow a vote on a successor to fill Jones’ seat at today’s 5:30 p.m. ET meeting instead of holding a monthlong nomination period.

“He’s a duly elected representative of his constituents. They voted him in. They chose him. They want him to speak for them,” Councilmember Zulfat Suara said. “We cannot stop the voices of the masses or what the voters wanted, that would not be good for our democracy. What the state did [Thursday] is that: kill democracy.”

The Shelby County Board of Commissioners, the body charged with choosing Pearson’s successor, will meet Wednesday to consider action to reappoint Pearson to his seat, Chairman Mickell Lowery announced Sunday.

“I believe the expulsion of State Representative Justin Pearson was conducted in a hasty manner without consideration of other corrective action methods,” Lowery said in a statement. “I also believe that the ramifications for our great state are still yet to be seen.”

In interviews since their expulsion, Jones and Pearson said they have felt tensions among their fellow lawmakers since starting in the majority-white Legislature. Jones said he and Pearson had a “target” on them since they joined the Legislature because of their race, age and activist backgrounds.

Pearson added, “When you have people who make comments about hanging you on a tree and hanging Black people on a tree as a form of capital punishment, when you wear a dashiki on the House floor and a member gets up and they talk about your dashiki saying it’s unprofessional, they’re really sending signals that you don’t belong here.”

Democrats in Washington have rallied around Jones and Pearson since their expulsion. Vice President Kamala Harris traveled to Nashville on Friday to meet with the “Tennessee Three,” as the group has been called, praising them for “channeling” their constituents’ voices in speaking out against gun violence. President Joe Biden also called the lawmakers and invited them to visit the White House. He had called their expulsion “shocking, undemocratic, and without precedent.”

Black Nashville residents expressed outrage at the ousting of the two lawmakers, saying it silenced their voices. “It’s like our vote doesn’t matter,” one resident told NBC News.

Expulsion from the Legislature has been a rare punishment reserved for the most serious offenses, with only a such few instances in the last several decades. Unlike those cases, Jones and Pearson were not charged or convicted with breaking the law.

Under state rules, Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee, a Republican, must schedule a primary for Jones’ and Pearson’s seats within 60 days and a general election within 107 days.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

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