Does Memphis win the battle but lose the war with gun-control referendum?
Jay Ballard, an attorney from the Tennessee Attorney General’s office, stood in a Memphis courtroom Wednesday, Sept. 11, and quoted Memphis Mayor Paul Young.
“I believe putting it on the referendum as a ballot item is going to be futile because local law cannot trump state law. Even if we approve this referendum, it does not change how we operate on the ground in Memphis. I think that’s confusing to our residents,” Ballard said, reading from Young’s remarks about the gun referendum that put the Memphis City Council into direct conflict with the State of Tennessee.
Moments later, Shelby County Chancellor Melanie Taylor Jefferson ruled the gun referendums could go on the Nov. 5 ballot. She agreed with the City Council’s legal argument that even if the ballot questions are against Tennessee law, that law only applies if the proposals pass.
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Samuel Hardiman
Samuel Hardiman is an enterprise and investigative reporter who focuses on local government and politics. A native Rhode Islander who lives Downtown, he enjoys tennis, golf and reading.
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