Tennessee Legislature Hasn’t Passed Duration of Residency Requirement for Congressional Candidates Yet

Both houses of the Tennessee legislature have passed bills establishing a duration of residency requirement for congressional candidates. However, the versions in each house differ, and so far the two houses have not agreed on the details of the bill.

The Senate wants the restriction to only apply to candidates running in a primary. The House wants to restrict all candidates. Both bills require residency of three years in the state. The Senate bill has no restriction on residency in the district, but the House bill also requires residency in the district.

The bill is SB 2616. If it becomes law, it will be void under the U.S. Supreme Court decision U.S. Term Limits v Thornton, issued in 1995.

Colorado Republican Candidate for U.S. House Sues Secretary of State Over Petition Validity

On March 21, Republican congressional candidate Erik Aadland sued the Secretary of State in state court, alleging that he does have enough valid signatures to be on the Republican primary ballot for U.S. House, 7th district. See this story. The Secretary of State’s office had determined that he was short 46 signatures.

The primaries are on June 28, 2022.