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In Nashville's Sprint Of A Mayor's Race, Only Those With A Head Start Have Much Shot

David Briley, sworn in Tuesday night as Nashville's mayor, would be the early frontrunner for this August's special election.
Tony Gonzalez
/
WPLN
David Briley, sworn in Tuesday night as Nashville's mayor, would be the early frontrunner for this August's special election.

Hear the radio version of this story.

Mayor David Briley, who was sworn in last night to succeed Megan Barry, has not yet said whether he'll try to hold onto the office.

But with a short sprint scheduled to the August special election, there aren't many people who could mount a challenge.

The fallout from Barry's surprise resignation, which came as part of a plea deal with the District Attorney's office, is only beginning to settle. But it set in motion what is certain to make busier a summer already energized by races for the state legislature, Congress and the governor's office.

It's a completely different environment from the most recent mayor's race three years ago, when a long time to plan and a comparatively empty political calendar made for a wide field filled with unexpected faces.

John Tighe, the finance director for one of those candidates, Linda Eskind Rebrovick, says it won't be that way again this summer.

"It's people we know. It's people who have money," he said. "You have to have money. You can't run for an August election and not have the money already."

One of the few people who does have the money is businessman Bill Freeman. He was another candidate who lost to Barry, and even before news of her extramarital affair broke, he'd hinted at running again.

Another possibility is Davidson County Sheriff Daron Hall. He's been in office for 16 years and already has a formidable campaign apparatus.

Still, Briley himself might be the leading contender. He'll have five months to establish himself as the city's leader. If he were to announce he won't run, it could open the door for a few more candidates.

But the need to self-finance a countywide campaign or to have a countywide office from which to run from will limit the number of viable contenders. That makes it less likely that people such as Rebrovick or David Fox, the runner-up in the 2015 mayoral race, will run again.

So far no one has announced, not even Briley. But one person who says he's not interested is Howard Gentry, another former vice mayor. He says he's focused on seeking re-election as criminal court clerk.

"My prayers and support goes to David Briley as he leads us, and I'm sure we'll be able to move forward as a city with David as our leader," Gentry said.

Copyright 2018 WPLN News

Chas joined WPLN in 2015 after eight years with The Tennessean, including more than five years as the newspaper's statehouse reporter.Chas has also covered communities, politics and business in Massachusetts and Washington, D.C. Chas grew up in South Carolina and attended Columbia University in New York, where he studied economics and journalism. Outside of work, he's a dedicated distance runner, having completed a dozen marathons