UPDATE (Dec. 2, 2025, 10:15 p.m. ET): On Tuesday night, Republican Matt Van Epps beat Democrat Aftyn Behn in the expensive and surprisingly competitive special election to represent Tennessee’s 7th Congressional District.
In November 2024, Donald Trump won Tennessee’s 7th congressional district by 22 percentage points, as Republicans romped to victory in what has become one of the reddest states in the country.
A year later, there is a very different story emerging in Tennessee’s 7th. Both parties are pouring millions of dollars into the district for a special election Tuesday to replace former Republican Rep. Mark Green, who retired in July. And Democrats have a puncher’s chance of scoring an upset.
The sudden competitiveness of a special House election in a heavily gerrymandered Republican district is a good summation of Trump and the GOP’s current political freefall — and the rising political fortunes of Democrats.
Nothing says more about the toxicity of Trump and the GOP brand than a Republican candidate in an R+22 seat running away from the president and his party.
By all accounts, Republican Matt Van Epps, the former Tennessee General Services commissioner, is leading his opponent, Democrat Aftyn Behn, a member of the Tennessee House of Representatives, in the polls. (Though last week a stunning poll from Emerson College/The Hill showed Van Epps ahead by only two points, with a roughly four-point margin of error.)
But with Democrats overperforming in special elections in 2025 by around 13 points — as well as a couple of unexpected double-digit victories in gubernatorial races in New Jersey and Virginia, plus winning two statewide races in Georgia by nearly 25 points — seemingly even an R+22 seat could be up for grabs.
You don’t have to believe me. Instead, just follow the money. A pro-Trump super PAC, two other outside conservative PACs and the National Republican Congressional Committee have already spent more than $2 million in support of Van Epps. That wouldn’t be happening if Republicans felt comfortable that they had this race in the bag.
Meanwhile, national Democrats, who initially seemed content to sit this race out, are also spending big. The House Majority PAC, which supports Democratic candidates, announced last month it was spending $1 million on ads to boost Behn.
Can Democrats pull off the upset? Vanderbilt University political scientist John G. Geer is skeptical. “It is a steep climb for Behn to win,” he told me. “Even making it a single-digit race is an accomplishment.” Still, says Geer, “it is clear that the GOP is worried.”
Jeff Yarbro, who is one of six Democratic members of the Tennessee state Senate (out of 33 total), has a slightly rosier view of the race. “Energy and attention [are] all going her way,” he told me. Van Epps doesn’t have “any real history with voters and is not generating any excitement.” He is, says Yarbro, “almost the perfect stand-in for ‘generic Republican.’”
Behn, like successful Democrats in New Jersey and Virginia, has focused her campaign message on the latest buzzword in American politics: “affordability.” Her ads talk about rising health care costs and grocery bills, while painting her opponent as a tool of special interests and billionaire fat cats.
Not surprisingly, Epps’ allies have portrayed Behn as a “Marxist” and a “lunatic” and have tried to tie her to New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani and New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Depicting a Democrat in a red state as a wild-eyed liberal is hardly a first, but with Behn, it’s a bit easier. She has a background as a liberal activist and has received backing from the Democratic Socialists of America, or DSA. In recent days, anti-police comments she made after the murder of George Floyd have also surfaced.








