Tuesday, February 03, 2026

Trump's Crony Socialism is the Wrong Way to Beat China.

 by The Editorial Board, Wall Street Journal, Feb.2, 2026 -What would Republicans have said if the Biden crowd acquired government stakes in companies with ties to its friends and family? ... State capitalism and political cronyism are in fashion these days, despite a history of failure.

The Commerce Department recently announced a $1.3 billion loan and $277 million in direct funding for USA Rare Earth, in return for an equity stake and warrants that are worth about 10% of the company. 

... “This investment ensures our supply chains are resilient and no longer reliant on foreign nations,” Secretary Howard Lutnick said. If only. While the Texas and Oklahoma investments are promising, the government deal doesn’t solve America’s rare-earths challenge. It’s also fraught with political risk.

.... But government ownership of companies raises the risk that politics will influence business decisions. See how the French government has used its minority stake in automaker Renault to limit layoffs and dictate investments in the country.

Government ownership also increases the risk that officials will exercise favoritism to avoid losses and benefit cronies. ... 

The Administration has also taken stakes in other mineral companies, including  ... Trump officials don’t care about such apparent conflicts. But Republicans in Congress could put limits on state socialism in appropriations bills. Think of how a future Democratic President would imitate the Trump investment model—how about the government buying shares in electric-vehicle startups?

A better idea to counter China’s rare-earth dominance is to coordinate development of mines and processing facilities with allies, as the White House has sought to do with Australia. The Administration could also guarantee government purchases of rare earths and fast-track permitting, as Mr. Trump’s Operation Warp Speed did for Covid vaccines.

It’s a mistake to think that the only way to beat China is to emulate its statist model. (read it all)

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Trump’s Push to ‘Nationalize’ Elections, Explained

by Chad de Guzman, Time, Feb. 3, 2026 - As President Donald Trump continues to allege widespread electoral fraud benefitting Democrats, his latest attempt to upend U.S. elections in the name of correcting that fraud is a call for the Republican Party to “nationalize” voting.

Dialing in Monday on the podcast of former FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino, who stepped down last month and returned to podcasting, Trump repeated unsubstantiated claims of noncitizen voters skewing election results, saying it is “amazing that Republicans aren’t tougher on it.”

“The Republicans should say, ‘We want to take over, we should take over the voting, the voting in at least many, 15 places,’” Trump told Bongino. “The Republicans ought to nationalize the voting.”  ....

What the Constitution says

The Constitution decentralizes the U.S. election process and has specifically left the President out. Article I, Section 4, Clause 1 states that “the Times, Places and Manner of holding Elections for Senators and Representatives, shall be prescribed in each State by the Legislature thereof; but the Congress may at any time by Law make or alter such Regulations, except as to the Places of chusing [sic] Senators.” 

In practice, this means local officials across thousands of jurisdictions administer elections and tabulate votes, with safeguards built in that the American Bar Association says makes it “almost impossible for systems to be breached on a scale to affect federal or state results.” (read it all)

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Monday, February 02, 2026

It is Happening: Trump Says Republicans Should ‘Take Over’ Voting ‘In At Least 15 Places.’

 by Rod Williams, Feb. 2, 2026- It is now out in the open. Trump plans to steal the midterms.  President Trump told Republicans today that they should “take over the voting in at least 15 places.”   

If Republicans lose the midterm, Trump's agenda will be dead. I also suspect that a lot of Trump's corruption will be exposed, his cronies brought to justice and more than likely, Trump will be impeached. I think Trump will do everything possible, legal and illegal, to ensure he does not lose the midterm. As we know, he has attempted a coup once; stealing an election or suspending the Constitution or using force to hang onto power is not something he would have moral qualms about doing, and a lot is at stake. 

Since we do not actually have national elections but instead have 50 separate state elections, stealing a "national" election is not easy, but it could be accomplished and I think Trump plans to do it. Since we have 50 different state election mechanisms, one cannot steal an election by simply taking over a national election commission, since there is no such entity. Nevertheless, I think it is possible to steal a national election. I think he has already started the process.

He has been renewing and amping up his claim that the 2020 election was stolen. I don't think this is by accident. He is laying the groundwork to steal the election. He is building support for the claim that the Federal government must take over the election process in some cities to ensure that the elections are fair.

I am also convinced that putting troops into American cities is about more than mass deportation. He wants to accustom Americans to accepting a militarised force in American cities. 

This is what I see as Trump's plan to "win" the midterms:

Mid-decade redistricting: While this is not illegal, it is unprecedented and breaks tradition. Normally redistricng only occurs once every ten years following a new census. By creative jerrymandering, Republicans may pick up a couple or a few seats. This is already happening. 

Intimidation: By having his ICE thugs pull people off the streets and break down doors without warrants and even retain and sometimes "disappear" people, he is giving people reason to feel intimidated. That a few people get murdered by his army of thugs is intimidating. Since those people murdered by ICE are white and American citizens, it is not just the undocumented or the brown-skinned among us who have reason to fear ICE or Border Patrol. On election day, the presence or the fear that ICE might be present at polling locations will suppress voter turnout. 

Invoking the Insurrection Act: In areas where the demonstrations are large and turn violent, Trump will use that as an excuse to invoke the Insurrection Act and will say it is impossible to conduct elections while an insurrection is underway, and in those areas in rebellion, elections must be cancelled.

Seizing voting machines and cancelling election results: In some instances, Trump will claim voter fraud took place and it is necessary to invalidate the election or necessary to seize voting machines and have the Federal Government count the ballots.  

Refusing to seat the winning candidate: Under Article I, Section 5 of the U.S. Constitution, the House of Representatives acts as the final judge of its members' elections and qualifications, allowing it to seat, exclude, or expel members. The Speaker will claim some of the elected candidates are either ineligible to serve or were fraudulently elected and the House will refuse to seat them.

I don't think I am exaggerating or unnecessarily alarmed. I know those who have drunk the Trump Kool-aid who will say I have TDS, but I think what I have outlined above is very possible, if not likely. Today Trump saying that the Federal government needs to "take over" the voting in 15 places should alarm everyone who cares about America remaining a democracy. I know some Trump loyalists don't care. Some will justify everything and anything Trump does. They will buy his argument that some parts of the country are in rebellion, and of course you can't have elections in parts of the country engaged in insurrection. Some of our fellow Americans are ready to embrace dictatorship. Many have aready but are in denial. 

While I suspect what I have laid out is probably under consideration by Trump, it is not destined to succeed. Our institutions are still strong and we are still a nation of laws. For it not to succeed, people need to stand up and not be intimidated. Companies, Universities, local governments, civil society, and journalists need to be bold and fearless in standing up to Trump. There needs to be an army of lawyers ready to take Trump to court and seek injunctions. And, Democrats need to win the midterm by a margin so big that the election is too big to steal. Republicans are facing a strong headwind now and are likely to lose the midterm unless Democrats screw this up. The worst thing Democrats could do is nominate woke left-wing nut jobs like they did in the recent Tennessee 7th Congressional election. I think by nominating sane, sensible candidates, institutions and civil society being bold, and by lawyering up, Trump's attempt to steal the midterm can fail. I hope it does; a lot is on the line. 


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CRFB Statement on Overdue President’s FY 2027 Budget February 2, 2026

Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, Feb. 2, 2026 - Under the law, the President is required to submit his budget for the upcoming fiscal year today, on the first Monday in February. However, there are reportedly no plans to release the budget today, and some press reports indicate that we may not get the President’s budget until March. 

In fact, President Trump has yet to release a full budget proposal since taking office last year. And no president has submitted their budget by the statutory deadline in 11 years, since 2015. 

The following is a statement from Maya MacGuineas, president of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget: 

If you don’t budget, you can’t govern. Yet once again, the President’s budget is late – and there’s no explanation for the missed deadline. The President’s budget is incredibly important for kicking off the budget process and showing the Administration’s priorities. But President Trump has been in office over a year, and we’ve yet to see his fiscal plan. 

When the President does release his budget, it should include an actionable plan for getting our nation’s finances on sustainable footing. That budget should select a responsible fiscal target like reducing deficits to at least 3% of GDP, rely on realistic economic forecasts and credible budget estimates, and put forward specific tax and spending policies that put debt on a sustainable path.  

With debt approaching record levels and deficits projected to average over 6% of GDP per year, significant reforms will be needed. We won’t be able to fix the debt without touching Social Security, Medicare, defense, or revenue – the math just doesn’t work. And we can’t count on heroic growth rates or crashing interest rates. Most forecasters expect long-term economic growth of less than 2% per year; a budget that assumes 3% sustained annual growth over the next decade is not a serious budget. 

Unfortunately, policymakers actually added $1.5 trillion to the ten-year debt last year – a number that will go up significantly if the Supreme Court rules that many of the President’s tariffs are illegal. 

The President’s budget offers an opportunity to start turning things around. We need the President to lead. 


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Sen. Rand Paul Does Not Trust the Trump Admin. The Video Doesn't Support What They're Saying About the Killing of Alex Pretti


Rod's Comment: God Bless Rand Paul. It is one of the few Republicans willing to stand up and call out the Trump administration.

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Sunday, February 01, 2026

‘Spy Sheikh’ Bought Secret Stake in Trump Company

by Rod Williams, Feb. 1, 2026- With Trump's masked jack-booted thugs murdering American citizens on the streets of our cities and breaking down of doors and raidng homes without judicial warrants, with the release of more Epstein files revealing a massive cabal of influential elites engaging in sex with minors and seeking favor from Jeffery and the continuing concealment of the depth of the scandal, with uncertainty remaining about U.S. intentions toward Venezueala, Canada, and Greenland, with the continueing prosecution of political enemies by the Trump Injustice Department, with Trump's attack on the Second amendment, and much much more, it is hard to focus on the corruptions of Trump and his family. In normal times, the unprecedented corruption of Donald Trump would be a big story that would garner continuous coverage and Congressional inquiry. With Trump flooding the zone, it gets scant coverage. It should not be ignored. 

The Wall Street Journal has revealed that four days before Donald Trump’s inauguration last year, lieutenants to an Abu Dhabi royal secretly signed a deal with the Trump family to purchase a 49% stake in their fledgling cryptocurrency venture for half a billion dollars. Trump enriched himself and his family, putting at risk the security of the United States. Trump sold out his country. Here are excerpts from the story.

‘Spy Sheikh’ Bought Secret Stake in Trump Company 

Wall Street Journal, Jan. 31, 2026- ... The deal with World Liberty Financial, which hasn’t previously been reported, was signed by Eric Trump, the president’s son. At least $31 million was also slated to flow to entities affiliated with the family of Steve Witkoff, a World Liberty co-founder who weeks earlier had been named U.S. envoy to the Middle East, the documents said. 

The investment was backed by Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed Al Nahyan, an Abu Dhabi royal who has been pushing the U.S. for access to tightly guarded artificial intelligence chips, according to people familiar with the matter. Tahnoon—sometimes referred to as the “spy sheikh”—is brother to the United Arab Emirates’ president, the government’s national security adviser, as well as the leader of the oil-rich country’s largest wealth fund. ... 

The deal marked something unprecedented in American politics: a foreign government official taking a major ownership stake in an incoming U.S. president’s company.

... Trump’s election reopened the door for him. In the months that followed, Tahnoon met multiple times with Trump, Witkoff and other U.S. officials, including in a March visit to the White House where the sheikh told officials he was eager to work with the U.S. on AI and other issues, according to people familiar with the matter. 

Two months after the March meeting, the administration committed to give the tiny Gulf monarchy access to around 500,000 of the most advanced AI chips a year—enough to build one of the world’s biggest AI data center clusters. ...

The agreement was widely viewed as a coup for the emirate’s ruling family, overcoming longstanding U.S. national security concerns and allowing the country to compete with the most powerful economies in the world at the cutting edge of AI advances. Proponents hailed the deal for unlocking a flood of investment into the U.S. and for helping entrench American technology as the global standard. 

What wasn’t publicly known: Tahnoon’s emissaries had signed the deal to purchase 49% of World Liberty that January. 

... Of the first $250 million installment from the Tahnoon-backed company, called Aryam Investment 1, $187 million was directed to Trump family entities DT Marks DEFI LLC and DT Marks SC LLC, the documents said. In addition to the payout to Witkoff family entities, another $31 million was directed to an entity tied to co-founders Zak Folkman and Chase Herro. The Journal couldn’t determine how the second half of Aryam’s investment, which was due by July 15, 2025, may have been distributed.

... Disclosures on World Liberty’s website showed the Trump family’s equity interest fell to 38% from 75% last year, indicating someone had likely purchased a stake, but the company has never disclosed a buyer. 

... “President Trump only acts in the best interests of the American public,” said White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly, who said his assets are in a trust managed by his children. “There are no conflicts of interest.” She said Witkoff is working to “advance President Trump’s goals of peace around the world.”

Read it all at this link. Disgusting!


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Friday, January 23, 2026

Income, Health Insurance, Housing, and Education Measures in Tennessee’s Counties


by Rod Williams, Jan. 23, 2026- I love data. Being a student of political science and economics and having worked in a field where I had to work with data in securing grants, and simply caring about facts, and being analytical by nature, I like exploring data and seeing where it leads me. I also simply like knowing stuff.

I like fact-based arguments. It is not that two people cannot look at the same data and draw different conclusions, but at least when conclusions are based on data, there is a rational basis for one's opinion. It seems that more and more people take the view that an uninformed opinion is as valid as an informed opinion. Sadly, it seems, we are living in a post-truth era in which fewer people base their opinions on facts. In fact, it seems that often fact-based views are suspect, and a shared prejudice is more persuasive than a fact-driven opinion.

If you like data, The Sycamore Institute has released a treasure trove of data about Tennessee gleaned from analysis of U.S Census data. It is searchable and easy to use. One can look at poverty rates, homeownership rates, public assistance rates, housing cost-burdened rates, education levels, and much more, and compare them across grand divisions, or counties, or urban vs rural, and look at data broken down within these comparisons by age groups or other factors. 

Here is some information I found insightful:

Income by County: It varies greatly, and that is not a great surprise but interesting. 

  • Williamson County, with a median household income of $131,202 is the county with the highest median household income in the state.
  • Lake County, with a median household income of $30,500 is the county with the lowest.
  • Davidson County's median household income is $75,664.
  • Shelby County's median household income is $62,337
  • Knox County's median household income is $71,662
  • Hamilton County's is $72,568
Education:

  • Williamson County is the most educated county in the state, with 61.8% of the people over the age of 25 having at least a bachelor's degree.
  • In Hancock County, only 8.6% of the people over the age of 25 have a bachelor's degree. 
Homeownership rates: Having spent most of my career working in the field of promoting homeownership, I was surprised to find the rate of homeownership as high as it is. Also, this is one area that surprised me. There is not as much variation county to county of this measure as in other measures. Also, there is no noticeable correlation with education or income. 

  • Van Buren County has the highest rate of  household homeownership at 84.7%
  • Lake County has the lowest rate of homeownership at 45.3%
  • Davidson County has a household homeownership rate of 53.4%
  • Shelby County has a household homeownership rate of 54.6%





 

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Where Have the 'Don't Tread on Me' Republicans Gone?

 Many conservatives are embracing big government, from police-state immigration tactics to socialist economic policies.

by Steven Greenhut, Reason, 1.23.2026 - ... There's no hope for anyone cheering, but "responsible" conservatives have a rationale for defending these actions: It's better than having Democrats in charge. Had, say, Kamala Harris won the presidency, she would have imposed socialistic policies, they say. That's probably true, but have you noticed the latest policy plans from Donald Trump? His economic proposals echo the Democratic platform. ... 

First, he plans to cap interest rates on credit cards at 10%. ... 

Second, he said he's "immediately taking steps to ban large institutional investors from buying more single-family homes…People live in homes, not corporations." ... 

Third, he's embraced various policies that let the federal government interfere with the governance of private companies. He has proposed a cap on compensation for CEOs of defense contractors. He has called for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which are government-sponsored enterprises, to buy $200 billion in mortgage bonds from the private market to potentially lower mortgage rates. He has muscled private companies such as Intel to sell portions of their companies to the government. This gives the president and the feds power to dictate corporate policy—a longstanding goal of democratic socialists.

Fourth, the president is expanding handouts to individual Americans. He's proposed $2,000 tariff-dividend checks, which is reminiscent of Joe Biden's ... 

These are the types of easy-button leftist solutions that always make matters worse because they interfere with the workings of the free market. (read it all)

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Wednesday, January 21, 2026

Manufacturing Employment Continues to Fall

by Clark Packard and Alfredo Carrillo Obregon, CATO Institute, Jan. 16, 2026 - The latest Bureau of Labor Statistics jobs report offers a stark reminder that US manufacturing continues to struggle. Manufacturing employment fell again in December 2025, marking the third consecutive year with negative net annual job growth. This persistent decline comes despite the Trump administration’s stated goal of revitalizing domestic manufacturing, and data increasingly suggest that the administration’s own policies—particularly, its erratic use of tariffs—are a significant part of the problem.

To be clear, US manufacturing employment did not enter 2025 on a high. After rebounding sharply from the pandemic-induced recession from April 2020 to late 2022, US manufacturing employment entered a period of persistent decline. The sector posted net job losses in six months of 2024, shedding 105,000 workers from the previous year. Following a slight rebound in the first quarter of 2025, the sector then registered net job losses in each of the last eight months of the year (Figure 1). By December 2025, the sector employed nearly 70,000 fewer workers than a year earlier (Figure 2).


Of course, these data alone cannot identify the precise causes of this prolonged contraction in US manufacturing employment. Multiple factors—including higher prices, tighter monetary policy, changes in demand and consumer preferences, and longer-term structural shifts—all likely play a factor. Still, recent industry surveys and manufacturer testimonies suggest that tariff-driven cost increases and uncertainty were meaningful contributors in 2025. Once again, a familiar pattern has emerged: protection for a politically favored industry imposes direct costs on a much larger set of downstream firms that depend on affordable inputs to compete.

Survey evidence reinforces this conclusion. For instance, the December 2025 ISM Manufacturing Purchasing Manager’s Index, a widely watched measure of the US factory activity based on a monthly survey of supply chain executives, fell to 47.9—the lowest reading of the year and the sector’s tenth consecutive month of contraction. (Above 50 indicates expansion; below 50 indicates contraction.) In fact, the reading was the lowest of 2025. The PMI’s sub-indices tracking orders and prices, as well as testimonies offered by the surveyed executives, repeatedly point to higher input costs and trade policy uncertainty driven by the administration’s tariff regime as key headwinds.

This is hardly surprising. US manufacturing is deeply integrated into global supply chains, with imported intermediate inputs and capital equipment accounting for over half of US imports. Broad-based tariffs, therefore, function as a tax on domestic production. This is especially true for steel, aluminum, and copper, which are crucial inputs for a wide range of manufactured products. Unsurprisingly, US prices for these metals increased relative to foreign prices in 2025. As Figure 3 illustrates, the steel tariffs in particular have exacerbated a long-standing gap between US and international steel prices.

The employment data reveal who benefits and who pays. Manufacturing subsectors tied to primary metal production were among the few to add jobs in 2025. In contrast, far larger downstream sectors that rely on these metals—including machinery, computers, and transportation equipment—experienced some of the steepest job losses.[1] (See Figure 1). This asymmetry underscores a central flaw of protectionist policy: it delivers concentrated benefits to a narrow set of producers while imposing diffuse but far higher costs on the broader manufacturing sector.

As we documented in a recent paper, this is not a new phenomenon. Indeed, it’s entirely consistent with the six-decade history of US steel protectionism.

Furthermore, trade policy uncertainty impairs companies’ ability to confidently plan ahead. With 2025 registering the highest measured levels of trade policy uncertainty on record (Figure 5), it’s unsurprising that both the ISM and the Association for Supply Chain Management (ASCM) report continued hesitancy among manufacturing firms to invest and hire. 

Beyond higher input costs and uncertainty, the growing complexity of the US tariff system is also harming US manufacturers. As the ASCM’s Abe Eshkenzai recently noted, navigating this complexity has become an “administrative burden” that siphons resources away from actual production. Time (and money) spent validating tariff codes and tracking rule changes—not to mention paying import-related customs fees—is time not spent selling more products or investing in additional capacity. But with firms facing thousands of dollars in fines for non-compliance, they have little choice but to navigate the labyrinth of import regulations.

US manufacturing remains a vital and competitive sector, but tariffs are an impediment to industrial success. The steel industry’s experience is instructive. As documented in our comprehensive Cato analysis, more than 60 years of steel protectionism have failed to revive the industry while harming downstream manufacturers. The 2025 data are just the latest chapter in this dismal record.

For the sake of American manufacturing, policymakers should finally learn the lesson and remove the tariffs. But given the administration’s recent rhetoric, longstanding judicial deference to certain presidential tariff authorities, and the political economy that keeps steel protection entrenched, we won’t hold our breath.

[1] Notably, employment in the fabricated metal products industry also increased. This is, perhaps in large part, due to non-trade economic factors (i.e., falling interest rates and demand from other industries), but it should also be noted that the Trump administration’s Section 232 tariffs now cover a significant number of steel, aluminum, and copper derivatives.

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Councilmember Joy Styles Announces Mayoral Run

Joy Styles
by Hannah Herner, Nashville Scene, Jan. 21, 2026 - District 32 Metro Councilmember Joy Styles has announced her intention to run for Nashville mayor in 2027. 

Styles, who has served the Antioch area as a councilmember since 2019, is the second candidate to officially challenge first-term Mayor Freddie O’Connell, should he choose to run for reelection. As reported by the Nashville Banner, the only other candidate to have officially entered the race is Lou Wilbanks, a West Nashville development skeptic.

“I'm running because Nashville needs a fighter, someone who is going to fight for you and your neighborhood,” Styles told reporters during a Tuesday press conference.   ... Styles has pushed back on additional affordable housing in Antioch,... Styles herself — along with Metro Human Relations Commission executive director Davie Tucker — was the subject of an ethics investigation in 2024. The two were found to have behaved improperly toward two Metro Arts employees. ... worked to create the Nashville Office of Entertainment ... “Councilmember Joy Styles is at war with the mayor’s office. The outspoken second-term councilmember has made no secret of her disdain for Mayor Freddie O’Connell’s approach to — well, pretty much everything.” ...  calls O’Connell’s focus on public safety “smoke and mirrors.” ... (read it all)

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Tennessee Attorney General Secures Settlement with Metropolis Parking to Stop Deceptive Practices and Provide Free Parking Program

Office of the Attorney General, State of Tennessee, Jan. 12, 2026-  Today, Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti announced a settlement with Metropolis Technologies, Inc. (Metropolis), ending a years-long investigation by the Attorney General’s Office into the private parking company. Metropolis will pay $8.75 million to cover consumer refunds, litigation costs, and a free parking program. Metropolis will also be required to implement numerous changes to its business practices to promote transparency and protect consumers.

Two years ago, the Attorney General’s Office launched its investigation into Metropolis following more than one hundred consumer complaints about unclear pricing and inadequate signage at Metropolis parking lots, as well as misleading communications about parking fees and violation notices. The investigation revealed that Metropolis misled consumers about its prices with inaccurate signs, charged surprise fees due to technology glitches, made obtaining refunds nearly impossible, and created confusion with notices that looked like government bills. To date, the Office has received over 300 complaints related to Metropolis.

“Tennesseans work hard for their money, and when they park they deserve a clear price up front and no shenanigans with bogus charges and stonewalling customer service,” said Attorney General Skrmetti. “My office is here to protect consumers and hold companies accountable, and this is exactly the type of situation where we need to step in. I’m proud of the work of my consumer team and glad that Metropolis has agreed to make things right. If the company does not follow through and do right by Tennessee consumers, we stand ready to take further action.”

In addition to funding consumer refunds, under the settlement, Metropolis will:

  • Create and implement the Tennessee Parking Program, which will provide $2.25 million in credits for free parking sessions for eligible Tennessee consumers;
  • Display clear signage with accurate rates at every lot entrance, showing current active rates and the customer support phone number;
  • Send text messages with rates upon entry to lots that use license plate reader technology;
  • Never charge more than what is posted on the signage;
  • Give consumers a 15-minute grace period to enter and exit with no charge in lots using license plate reader technology;
  • Stop implying affiliation with any local or state agency in electronic or mailed notices;
  • Comply with all state and local booting regulations;
  • Automatically issue refunds where their technology malfunctions and wrongfully charges a consumer; and
  • Evaluate each refund request individually.

Tennessee consumers can be on the lookout for two things:

Tennessee Parking Program: If you have Tennessee plates and park for an individual parking session at participating Metropolis lots in Nashville, Knoxville, or Memphis, you’re eligible for up to $30 in free parking credits. Metropolis will notify eligible parkers via email.

Refunds for past overcharges: If you paid for parking at a Metropolis lot between July 1, 2021, and January 6, 2026, and believe you were overcharged, you may be eligible for a refund.

Attorney General Skrmetti will make an announcement on how to file a claim as soon as details are available.

Read the final order.

Rod's Comment: This is welcome news. I have heard lots of complaints about parking practices in Nashville. It is like weather and traffic; a topic that comes up in casual conversation.  I am not sure Metropolis is the only culprit, but I have heard people complain of parking without knowing how much they were being charged and parking at one rate and billed another rate. I don't know if Metropolis is the company doing this, but I have heard of people parking where they did not see a sign indicating there was a charge for parking and coming back and finding a boot on their car. It is good to see these complaints being addressed. 



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