I was reading this story in the Seattle Times about Starbucks' new hub in Nashville, and this caught my eye:
Is Texas trying this to help rein in the blue push in the big metro areas?
https://www.seattletimes.com/business/starbucks/whats-nashville-have-that-we-aint-got-in-seattle/
Quote:
Nashville is "a blue dot in the red sea of Tennessee," quips Vanderbilt's Geer.
To be sure, Nashville's blue dot culture and politics have often put it at odds with the state's increasingly conservative Legislature.
In recent years, state lawmakers have repeatedly "preempted" Nashville and other local governments from enacting labor laws, inclusionary zoning or other regulations that don't align with state policy.
Quote:
But, paradoxically, Tennessee's more conservative stance on issues like taxes has helped Nashville's recruitment efforts, since the blue city can bill itself as a low-tax haven.
And, Geer notes, political tensions with the state has also helped keep Nashville from the more progressive shift in many other blue cities.
The ever-present threat of state preemption "does force the city to be a little bit more moderate in some of its efforts, because they don't want to fire up the state Legislature," said Geer, who routinely polls Nashville residents on political and economic issue.
Is Texas trying this to help rein in the blue push in the big metro areas?
https://www.seattletimes.com/business/starbucks/whats-nashville-have-that-we-aint-got-in-seattle/