Tensions erupted in the Tennessee House of Representatives this week after Democratic State Representative Justin J. Pearson, during a debate on gun control legislation, went on an emotional tirade before launching himself at a Republican colleague.

During a committee hearing on House Bill 1392, lawmakers argued about how to handle gun violence, and this is when the shocking outburst occurred. In addition to criticizing his Republican colleagues for passing legislation he said was detrimental to underprivileged communities, Pearson, whose brother reportedly committed suicide in December with a firearm, accused them of doing nothing about the problem.

“I buried my brother,” Pearson declared in a fiery speech. “I planned his entire funeral… made sure he was taken care of, even in death. That’s what I’ve been doing.”

Pearson became more heated as he spoke, accusing Republicans of concentrating on legislation that “hurts transgender children” and the impoverished instead of tackling what he described as a “epidemic” of gun violence.

His remarks quickly turned into a tirade with Republican State Representative Andrew Farmer, who retaliated against Pearson’s description of the committee’s work ethic.

“I know every member in this committee’s been here this year working,” Farmer said. “I know you may have some things going on, but you have not. So I don’t think it’s fair for you to come in front of this committee and lecture us on hard work.”

In his enraged reply, Pearson referred to Farmer’s comments as “a pathetic excuse” and charged that the chairman had attacked him personally rather than responding to inquiries about gun control. There were gasps in the room and a cry for order when Pearson got so excited that he seemed to lunge at Farmer.

“If you can’t handle that, learn to shut up!” Pearson shouted, breaking decorum as other lawmakers tried to calm the situation. “Hard work isn’t just sitting here and passing legislation—it’s being in the community!”

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Farmer responded, “It seems that it’s very common in your party—when you disagree with a comment—to resort to yelling.” The exchange immediately drew criticism from Republicans.

It was necessary to remove Pearson after he finally got in Farmer’s face.

The committee tried to restore order and move forward with a vote on the bill as tensions rose. Several people in the room were stunned by the confrontation, but lawmakers eventually advanced.

When Memphis progressive lawmaker Pearson was briefly expelled from the state legislature in 2023 for taking part in an anti-gun demonstration on the House floor, he garnered national attention. However, he was swiftly reinstated amidst media hordes.

This comes as the Democratic Party as a whole remains in shambles after the 2024 election.

President Trump has said that America is “back” while he talks about his many accomplishments, some of which have been controversial, since taking office nine weeks ago.

Through a series of executive orders and actions, Trump has quickly increased his executive powers, questioned long-standing government policies, and cut the size of the federal workforce by a large amount during his second term as president, Fox News reported.

A count from Fox News also shows that Trump has signed about 100 executive orders since his inauguration on January 20. This is a much higher rate than any recent president had in their first few weeks in office.

Even though the president says “a lot of great things are happening,” the most recent polls show that many Americans don’t agree with his optimistic view of his job.

A Reuters/Ipsos poll done this past weekend (March 22–23) found that 46% of those asked liked Trump, while 51% didn’t think he was doing a good job of leading the country. The poll asked just over 1,000 adults across the country questions.

The poll was mostly done before the controversy over top White House national security officials talking about sensitive operational details of an upcoming U.S. military strike in Yemen on the messaging app Signal, which may have been against federal law.

There were a few more votes for Trump in the most recent national poll from March 14–17 by Fox News. With 49% saying they liked the job the president was doing and 51% saying they didn’t, Americans seemed to have mixed feelings about it.

The most recent national polls, which inquired about the president’s approval ratings, reveal that Trump’s ratings remain relatively low. Since the beginning of his second term, when the average of Trump’s polls showed that the president was approved of in the low 50s and disapproved of in the mid-40s, his numbers have gone down a little.

The economy and worries that Trump’s tariffs on America’s top trading partners will cause more inflation are both factors in the drop. For the majority of his presidency, former President Joe Biden’s approval ratings were significantly impacted by this major issue.

The poll from Fox News shows that 49% of people agree with the president.

This is the same level of approval that Trump had at his all-time high in Fox News polls, which he last reached in April 2020, near the end of his first term in office. This is six points more than where he was at this point in his first term (43% approval in March 2017).

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