Jim Tracy | |
Office: | Tennessee State Director of USDA Rural Development |
President: | Donald Trump Joe Biden |
Term Start: | November 13, 2017[1] |
Predecessor: | Harriet Cannon[2] |
Office1: | President pro tempore of the Tennessee Senate |
Term Start1: | January 10, 2017 |
Term End1: | November 6, 2017 |
Predecessor1: | Bo Watson |
Successor1: | Ferrell Haile |
State Senate2: | Tennessee |
State2: | Tennessee |
District2: | 14th |
Term Start2: | January 2013 |
Term End2: | November 6, 2017 |
Predecessor2: | Eric Stewart[3] |
Successor2: | Shane Reeves[4] |
State Senate3: | Tennessee |
State3: | Tennessee |
District3: | 16th |
Term Start3: | January 2005 |
Term End3: | January 2013 |
Predecessor3: | Larry Trail[5] |
Successor3: | Janice Bowling[6] |
Birth Date: | 9 October 1956 |
Party: | Republican |
Jim Tracy (born October 9, 1956) is an American politician and was the Tennessee Director for Rural Development for the first Trump Administration. He is a former member of the Tennessee Senate for the 14th district, which is composed of Bedford County, Moore County, and part of Rutherford County.
Among legislation Tracy sponsored was a bill that would ban smoking in indoor public places, places owned or operated by the state, and enclosed areas of employment. The bill passed the State and Local Government Committee with five senators in favor and two against. It passed in May 2007 and took effect on October 1, 2007.[7]
Tracy was the Assistant Floor Leader of the Senate Republican Caucus, the Chair of the Senate Transportation Committee, and a member of the Senate Education Committee and the Senate State and Local Government Committee.
Before his election to the Senate, Tracy graduated from the University of Tennessee at Martin with a Bachelor of Science degree and worked as an insurance agent.
See main article: United States House of Representatives elections in Tennessee, 2010. In December 2009, after incumbent U.S. Representative Bart Gordon decided to retire, Tracy announced that he would run in the Republican primaries for the state's 6th Congressional district.[8] It was one of the few districts in which John McCain's margin of victory (25 percentage points) in the 2008 presidential election was larger than George W. Bush's in 2004 (20 points).[9] Among the possible candidates mentioned by insiders were state Representatives Henry Fincher and Mike McDonald, both Democrats who declined to run.[10] [11] Tracy's biggest competition in the Republican primary came from state Senator Diane Black and former Rutherford County GOP chairwoman Lou Ann Zelenik. Newt Gingrich endorsed Tracy.[12] He finished third in the primary.
See main article: United States House of Representatives elections in Tennessee, 2014. Tracy announced that he would challenge Representative Scott DesJarlais of Tennessee's 4th congressional district in the 2014 Republican primary.[13] By the end of June 2013, he had raised nearly $750,000.[14] DesJarlais won the Republican primary by a mere 38 votes before going on to win the general election handily.[15]
In 2017, Tracy was appointed Tennessee state director of USDA Rural Development.[16]