NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Tennessee's Republican legislative supermajority will remain unchanged after Democrats failed to flip seats in a handful of competitive races, but the minority party didn't give up any ground, either.
Republicans will continue to hold 75 out of the 99 seats inside the House chamber, the same amount the GOP held before Tuesday. Over in the Senate, Republicans will have 27 members while Democrats will continue to have just six.
''We were able to hold all 75 seats, which was a great thing under a lot of money spent by the other side,'' House Speaker Cameron Sexton said Wednesday. ''And we're looking forward to coming back with our supermajority intact at 75 and continuing to do what we've been doing to move Tennessee ahead.''
Some Democratic officials expressed relief that their numbers didn't diminish as Republicans enjoyed big wins nationally, with former President Donald Trump winning a second term and the GOP winning control of the U.S. Senate. In Tennessee, Trump and Republican U.S. Sen. Marsha Blackburn both ran up their margins to almost 30 percentage points, outpacing their previous statewide elections.
Blackburn defeated state Rep. Gloria Johnson. She was one of three Democratic lawmakers who centered the national spotlight on Tennessee after Republicans targeted them last year in an expulsion push. They were protesting on the House floor for gun control changes after a deadly elementary school shooting in Nashville.
In her concession speech Tuesday, Johnson promised to supporters: ''We're going to flip some state House seats.''
Though they gained no ground, Democrats in key races outperformed a rough election, said Rep. John Ray Clemmons, the House Democratic Caucus chairman.
"It may not look like progress," Clemmons said. ''But in this environment, and given the national political headwinds that we were facing at the top of the ticket, holding the line was truly remarkable.''