The Republican Party dominated the voter turnout totals in the Williamson County May 3 primary elections.
According to the Williamson County government elections website, 20,550 total votes were cast countywide. Of those, 18,240 were cast in Republican primaries, while 2,310 were cast in Democrat primaries.
Republican early voters cast 9,798 votes, and 1,003 were Democrat early voters. Republican votes cast in person on May 3 totaled 10,486, with Democrat votes at 1,241. A total of 266 absentee ballots were cast: 200 Republican and 66 Democrat.
Total voter turnout was 11.18 percent. Williamson County has 183,745 registered voters.
The full results can be viewed here.
Republican Primary Contested Race Victors – County Commission
Ricky Jones and Lisa Lenox won the primary for County Commission District 1. Judy Herbert and Betsy Hester won the County Commission District 2 GOP contest.
In the primary for County Commission District 5, Greg Sanford and Mary Smith were victorious. In the County Commission District 7 race, Tom Tunnicliffe and Bert Chalfant won.
Barb Sturgeon and Drew Torres won the County Commission District 8 race. Meghan Guffee and David Landrum were victorious in the District 10 race, as were Brian Beathard and Sean Aiello in District 11. The victors in District 12 were Brian Clifford and Steve Smith.
Voters chose two candidates from the fields in the contests for Williamson County Commission.
Republican Primary Contested Race Winners – Judicial Contests
Attorney Deanna Hood handily won the Republican primary for Circuit Court Judge, 21st Judicial District, Division II race over opponent Shane McNeill.
Incumbent Judge Sharon Guffee shellacked Connie Reguli in the race for Juvenile Court Judge to the tune of 50 percent of the vote, or 75 percent to 25 percent. Reguli is currently awaiting sentence for felony convictions and would likely have been unable to serve if she survived the primary and was elected in the general.
Other Republican Races
In the Williamson County Clerk’s race, incumbent Jeff Whidby blew out former Speaker of the Tennessee House of Representatives Glen Casada 12,860 votes to 4,218.
Josh Brown won the County Board of Education, District 4 race, defeating Elliott Franklin. Donna Clements, Eric Welch, and Drason Beasley won districts 8, 10, and 12, respectively.
The Williamson Families PAC-endorsed candidates went 1 for 3 in contested school board races and 4 for 8 in contested county commission races.
Incumbent Mayor Rogers Anderson was unopposed. No official candidate ran in the Democrat primary for mayor, although there were 58 write-in votes.
Williamson County is an overwhelmingly Republican county. Democrats left most of the seats unopposed.
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Aaron Gulbransen is a reporter at The Tennessee Star and The Star News Network. Email tips to [email protected]. Follow Aaron on GETTR, Twitter, and Parler.
Photo “Election Day 2020” by Phil Roeder. CC BY 2.0.
How many of these “Republican” voters are actually Democrats who cross over to get their liberal and “moderate” choices nominated? It is obvious that Tennessee votes primarily Republican but then the state and local operations legislate and regulate like Democrats. It’s the big lie that gets ignored. How about having closed primaries? It is not the cure all but it might help.
With only 11% turnout, it sounds like the Williamson Families PAC has some real work to do in turning out the vote, especially since their endorsed candidates only won 1 of 3 contested school board races and 4 of 8 contested county commission races. If we’re going to take our country back, it HAS to include, if not start locally!
Republicans dominate Williamson County, but all too often not the right kind of Republicans. Thank-you to the conservative Williamson – Families PAC for your efforts in getting the right kind of Republicans elected. Victory of seven out of eleven endorsed Republicans for the County Commission and two out of four for the School Board is a record of which to be proud.
In August when the turnout will be bigger the W-F PAC has endorsed Daniel Jordan (Dist. 3) and Evan Bledsoe (Dist 5) running for the Wiliamson Cty Commission and Debbie Pace (Dist. 6) and Doc Holladay (Dist 10) running for the School Board as Independents against Republicans who didn’t make the cut. Hopefully Williamson Republicans will vote for those conservatives while casting a vote for Andy Ogles and Marvelous Marc Green for Congress.
It will be a miracle if the democrats haven’t embroiled America in WWIII with the Russians by the time the election comes around. these people will stop at nothing to control America.