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Contest for Tennessee Senate District 29

State Senate District 29
primary - Partisan - State Senate District 29

About this office

The Tennessee State Senate is the upper chamber of the state legislature, with 33 members elected from single-member districts to four-year terms. Seats are staggered so roughly half are on the ballot every two years. Senators pass state laws, approve the state budget, confirm gubernatorial appointments, and β€” together with the House β€” propose constitutional amendments. Candidates must be at least 30 years old, U.S. citizens, Tennessee residents for at least seven years, and district residents for at least one year.

Term length: 4 years.

This role calls for

  • Integrity β€” Acts in the interest of constituents and the public good rather than for personal gain, and remains independent of undue influence from donors, lobbyists, and party leadership.
  • Understanding of the constituency β€” Grasps both the economic-development needs of the district and the day-to-day concerns of individual residents β€” safety, healthcare, education, infrastructure.
  • Persuasion β€” Engages, listens to, and persuades both fellow legislators and constituents. Can change minds and explain votes honestly.
  • Legislative craft β€” Reads, drafts, and amends statute with care. Understands how specific bill language translates to outcomes, and knows the body of law being modified.
  • Coalition-building β€” Finds common ground across partisan and factional lines, brokers compromises that hold, and forms working majorities even when consensus is hard to reach.

Derived from the office's statutory duties and operational reality. Candidate summaries below map each candidate's documented experience to these requirements.

Campaigns

Democratic Primary 1 candidate
Raumesh Akbari

Raumesh Akbari

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Akbari served in the Tennessee House and Senate, providing direct experience with legislative processes including drafting, amending, and voting on bills. Her role as Chairwoman of the Senate Democratic Caucus demonstrates leadership within the chamber’s organizational structure. As an attorney, she possesses statutory training relevant to policy judgment on statewide matters. She held committee positions in Education and Commerce, addressing key budget and regulatory areas. Her board memberships with the National Civil Rights Museum and Downtown Memphis Commission indicate engagement with constituent relations across Shelby County.
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