Jason Holleman
Jason Holleman was a member of the Nashville Metro Council in Tennessee, representing District 24. Holleman assumed office in 2007. Holleman left office in 2015.
Holleman (Democratic Party) ran for election to the Tennessee House of Representatives to represent District 40. Holleman did not appear on the ballot for the Democratic primary on August 2, 2018.
Biography
Holleman is from Nashville, Tennessee. He received a bachelor's degree from Samford University, and a J.D. from Tulane University. His professional experience includes working as an assistant attorney general, and representing municipalities, small businesses and individuals.[1]
Campaign themes
2015
Holleman's website highlighted the following campaign themes:[2]
Safe neighborhoods
- Excerpt: "As a Councilman-At-Large, Jason will continue to lead neighborhood advocates and developers to protect the balance between growth and preservation. He’ll fight for full funding for our police, fire and emergency management systems and craft the legislation we need to protect our city’s most vulnerable neighbors."
Education
- Excerpt: "Jason has worked closely with members of the Board of Education to advocate for neighborhood-focused policies, including supporting community leaders to protect parent input in the East Nashville plan and advocating for more democratic engagement at critical levels of decision making for Metro schools. In each of the seven Metro budgets he’s helped to enact, Jason has voted to fully fund MNPS."
Secure infrastructure
- Excerpt: "Jason identified and advocated for alternative funding sources to rebuild and improve our outdated storm-water system, and he co-sponsored the legislation to prevent the perpetuation of inappropriate development in flood prone areas that costs taxpayers millions of dollars in buyouts following the May 2010 flood. He has promoted smart transit along the Charlotte corridor, secure funding to improve that route and add a neighborhood-sensitive expansion of the BRT service."
Elections
2015
The city of Nashville, Tennessee, held nonpartisan elections for mayor and metro council on August 6, 2015. A runoff election took place on September 10, 2015. The filing deadline for candidates who wished to run in this election was May 21, 2015. All 41 metro council seats—including the office of vice mayor—were up for election. In the race for five open at-large seats, candidates included Buddy Baker, Jody Ball, Karen Bennett, Al Carota, Erin Coleman, John Cooper, Elizabeth Dachowski, Adam Dread, Robert Duvall, Leroy Johnny Ellis, Erica Gilmore, Ronnie Greer, Sr., Frank Harrison, Jason Holleman, Martin Holsinger, Phillip Joseph Hostettler, Jr., Walter Hunt, Sharon W Hurt, Ken Jakes, James Keeton, John Lasiter, Don Majors, Lonnell Matthews, Jr., Bob Mendes, Sandra Moore and Jim Shulman. Bennett, Coleman, Cooper, Duvall, Gilmore, Holleman, Hurt, Matthews, Mendes and Shulman advanced to the runoff election.[3] The winners in the runoff election were Cooper, Gilmore, Mendes, Hurt and Shulman.[4] All five at-large incumbents were term-limited.[5]
Nashville City Council At-large Runoff Election, 2015 | |||
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Candidate | Vote % | Votes | |
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14.5% | 56,802 | |
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12.8% | 49,996 | |
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10.5% | 41,160 | |
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9.8% | 38,317 | |
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9.6% | 37,676 | |
Erin Coleman | 8.9% | 34,877 | |
Karen Bennett | 8.5% | 33,052 | |
Lonnell Matthews, Jr. | 8.4% | 32,807 | |
Robert Duvall | 8.2% | 31,925 | |
Jason Holleman | 8.1% | 31,763 | |
Write-in | 0.5% | 2,122 | |
Total Votes | 223,951 | ||
Source: City of Nashville Election Commission, "Official runoff election results," accessed October 2, 2015 |
Nashville City Council At-large General Election, 2015 | |||
---|---|---|---|
Candidate | Vote % | Votes | |
![]() |
9.6% | 36,675 | |
![]() |
9.2% | 35,080 | |
![]() |
6.5% | 24,581 | |
![]() |
5.7% | 21,869 | |
![]() |
5.3% | 20,086 | |
![]() |
5% | 18,877 | |
![]() |
4.7% | 18,064 | |
![]() |
4.6% | 17,390 | |
![]() |
4.4% | 16,612 | |
![]() |
4.3% | 16,557 | |
Don Majors | 4.3% | 16,214 | |
Adam Dread | 4.2% | 16,146 | |
Walter Hunt | 4.2% | 16,090 | |
Sandra Moore | 3.9% | 14,991 | |
Buddy Baker | 3.3% | 12,695 | |
Ronnie Greer, Sr. | 3.3% | 12,454 | |
Ken Jakes | 3.1% | 11,922 | |
Frank Harrison | 2.5% | 9,659 | |
John Lasiter | 2.4% | 9,151 | |
Elizabeth Dachowski | 2.2% | 8,525 | |
Phillip Joseph Hostettler, Jr. | 2% | 7,738 | |
Jody Ball | 1.5% | 5,709 | |
James Keeton | 1.1% | 4,026 | |
Leroy Johnny Ellis | 1% | 3,880 | |
Martin Holsinger | 0.6% | 2,245 | |
Al Carota | 0.6% | 2,097 | |
Write-in | 0.4% | 1,374 | |
Total Votes | 138,291 | ||
Source: City of Nashville Election Commission, "Official general election results," accessed September 15, 2015 |
Recent news
The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for "Jason + Holleman + Nashville"
- All stories may not be relevant due to the nature of the search engine.
See also
External links
- Profile from the City of Nashville website
- Official campaign website
- Jason Holleman on Facebook
- Jason Holleman on Twitter
Footnotes
- ↑ Jason Holleman campaign website," About," accessed July 24, 2015
- ↑ Jason Holleman campaign website, "Issues," accessed July 24, 2015
- ↑ City of Nashville Election Commission, "Official general election results," accessed September 15, 2015
- ↑ City of Nashville Election Commission, "Official runoff election results," accessed October 2, 2015
- ↑ City of Nashville, "Davidson County Election Commission," accessed December 4, 2014
Political offices | ||
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Preceded by - |
Nashville Metro Council, District 24 2007 – 2015 |
Succeeded by Kathleen Murphy |
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State of Tennessee Nashville (capital) |
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