Sam Stockard
Reporter
Sam Stockard is a Nashville-based reporter with more than 30 years of journalism experience as a writer, editor and columnist covering the state Legislature and Tennessee politics for The Daily Memphian.
There are 1058 articles by Sam Stockard :
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September 2018
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State Government With questions surrounding the shooting of Martavious Banks by a Memphis Police officer, state Rep. G.A. Hardaway is set to renew legislation requiring the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation to take control of officer-involved shooting probes. -
State Government TNReady testing, women’s health services biggest differences between White, Schonbaum
Danielle Schonbaum, Democratic candidate for House District 83, is looking to upset the status quo in the General Assembly. -
Education Randy Boyd may become interim UT president
Knoxville businessman Randy Boyd won’t be Tennessee’s next governor, but he is likely to be named the next president of the University of Tennessee – at least on an interim basis. -
Education UT President Joe DiPietro leaving office in November
University of Tennessee President Joe DiPietro is set to leave active service in mid-November, three months before he will officially retire as head of the state system. -
View From the Hill: Hanging on to the party line
When it comes to bipartisanship, Tennessee politicians talk a good game. But in the ballot-box battle, they’re all about party. -
State Government Legislative panel looks to cut open records exemptions
Open records advocates believe they’re on the verge of major victories in eliminating and changing exceptions to Tennessee laws to offer a more transparent look at how government runs. -
State Government Salinas says incumbent Kelsey out of touch with Senate District 31
Democratic state Senate candidate Gabby Salinas, a three-time cancer survivor, moved with her family to the United States from Bolivia as a child to seek treatment at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. -
Civil rights cold-case legislation warms Memphis lawmakers
State Rep. Johnnie Turner can hardly believe civil rights cold-case legislation worked so fast, leading to the reopening of an investigation into the 1940 death of NAACP leader Elbert Williams.
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