Mark E. Clayton
Mark E. Clayton | |
---|---|
Born | 1977 (age 46–47) Mobile, Alabama, U.S. |
Residence | Whites Creek, Davidson County Tennessee, U.S. |
Alma mater | Pensacola Christian College |
Occupation | Vice President, Public Advocate of the United States U.S. Senate nominee in Tennessee, 2012 |
Political party | Democratic |
Mark E. Clayton (born 1977) was the Democratic nominee in the 2012 U.S. Senate election in Tennessee. In the August 2 primary election, Clayton received his party's nomination with roughly 30 percent of the vote in a multi-candidate field. There is no runoff election in Tennessee; therefore with less than a third of the votes cast, Clayton became his party's nominee. The day after his nomination, the Tennessee Democratic Party disavowed his candidacy, citing Clayton's conservative and libertarian views. Clayton lost to incumbent Republican Bob Corker in the November 6 general election.
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Background
Clayton was born in Mobile in south Alabama, but he was reared in Alexandria, Virginia. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Gill Clayton, were Goldwater Republicans. His father lobbied Congress on religious liberty issues. Clayton graduated from high school and served in the United States Army Reserve. He studied to be an aircraft electrician before he enrolled at Pensacola Christian College in Pensacola, Florida,[1] from which he graduated in 2002.
In 2003, Clayton moved to Nashville. His father died in 2004 and Clayton purchased a 1920s-era farmhouse on three acres in Whites Creek in suburban Davidson County. Clayton, who has never been married, lives in Whites Creek with his dog, Saint.[2]
Clayton has worked at numerous jobs, including Target, a call center, as a floor installer, and as a salesperson of insurance, siding, and roofs. He is a church youth group leader. He is currently employed with a moving company.[citation needed]
2008 U.S. Senate candidacy
Clayton first ran for U.S. Senate in 2008, when he finished fourth among six candidates in the Democratic primary with 32,309 votes. Bob Tuke won the nomination with 59,000 votes and was then decisively defeated in the general election by the Republican incumbent Lamar Alexander of Maryville, whom Clayton had described as a "neo-conservative",[3]
2012 candidacy for U.S. Senate
After Clayton's primary triumph, the Tennessee Democratic Party disavowed his candidacy[4] and his vice-presidency of the socially conservative interest group, the Public Advocate of the United States, based in Washington, D.C.
The Tennessee Democratic Party issued this statement:
The only time that Clayton has voted in a Democratic primary was when he was voting for himself. Many Democrats in Tennessee knew nothing about any of the candidates in the race; so they voted for the person at the top of the ticket. Unfortunately, none of the other Democratic candidates was able to run the race needed to gain statewide visibility or support. Mark Clayton is associated with a known hate group in Washington, D.C., and the Tennessee Democratic Party disavows his candidacy, will not do anything to promote or support him in any way, and urges Democrats to write-in a candidate of their choice in November.[5]
Clayton won the Democratic nomination with 30% of the vote, despite raising no money and having a website that was four years out of date.[3] The next day Tennessee's Democratic Party disavowed the candidate over his active role in the Public Advocate of the United States, which they described as a "known hate group". They blamed his victory among candidates for whom the TNDP provided little forums to become known on the fact that his name appeared first on the ballot, and said they would do nothing to help his campaign, urging Democrats to vote for "the write-in candidate of their choice" in November.[4] One of the Democratic candidates, Larry Crim, filed a petition seeking to offer the voters a new primary in which to select a Democratic Nominee based on Democratic Chair Chip Forrester permitting Clayton, a nondemocratic candidate, at the top of ballot to benefit a candidate Forrester recruited and improperly endorsed - Overall - who did not win the primary. Forrester then disavowed Clayton he had allowed on the ballot after he received the most votes. The background is that the TNDP placed little emphasis on the U.S. Senate race in 2012 to replace Corker. Treasurer and Financial benefactor of the TNDP Bill Freeman who was under Forrester actually contributed to Republican Bob Corker's campaign and was later removed from office, followed by Forrester's not seeking another term subsequent to the TNDP 2012 fiasco. Crim filed a preliminary motion seeking a temporary restraining order against certification of the results until the merits of the case for a new primary could be decided. Yet, after a judge denied the temporary restraining order Crim withdrew his petition[5] stating at a news conference outside the Federal Courthouse that the costs of proceeding and the costs of a new primary to the Democratic Party, even if Crim won, would be overwhelming especially given the political realities the party leaders conducted and permitted to the detriment of any Democratic Nominee. Mr. Crim was subsequently elected Chair of Democrats United For Tennessee in 2012.
Clayton's nomination has been compared to that of the previously unknown Alvin Greene in the Democratic primary in the 2010 Senate race in South Carolina. Greene was then handily defeated by the Republican Jim DeMint.[6]
Results
Democratic primary results | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
Democratic | Mark Clayton | 48,126 | 30.0 | |
Democratic | Gary Gene Davis | 24,789 | 15.4 | |
Democratic | Park Overall | 24,263 | 15.1 | |
Democratic | Larry Crim | 17,383 | 11.0 | |
Democratic | Benjamin Roberts | 16,369 | 10.2 | |
Democratic | David Hancock | 16,167 | 10.0 | |
Democratic | Thomas Owens | 13,366 | 8.3 | |
Total votes | 160,331 | 100 |
2014 candidacy for Tennessee governor
Clayton attempted to register as a candidate in the Democratic primary for the Tennessee governor in 2014.[7][8] The Democratic Party of Tennessee denied his attempt to run in the primary election, describing him as, "not a bona fide Democrat." Clayton filed a suit in federal court, but lost when the judge found there were no grounds for the suit at the federal level.[9]
Political positions
Clayton opposes abortion and same-sex marriage, and believes that the TSA should be shut down. He opposes national ID Cards.[10]
Public Advocate of the United States
Clayton's work at the Public Advocate of the United States, a conservative group based in Washington, D.C., has come under scrutiny. The group has been designated as an anti-gay hate group by the Alabama-based Southern Poverty Law Center.[11]
In a press release The Public Advocate proclaimed that it "associates with members of both major parties in a non-partisan fashion and promotes traditional values". The organization contends that Clayton has demonstrated that "an American patriot can put his or her name on the ballot and win big as a conservative, even in the Democratic Party."[12] A Clayton spokesman criticized the state Democratic party for disowning the nominee and argued that the state party had violated the law by using its resources to attack one of its own candidates. The Clayton campaign also said that it would file a complaint with the Federal Election Commission.[13]
References
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- ↑ Michael Cass Tenn. Senate candidate is an unconventional Democrat The (Nashville) Tennessean August 12, 2012 The (Nashville) Tennessean (USA Today)
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- ↑ Rachel Rose Hartman, Tennessee Democrats reject U.S. Senate nominee Mark Clayton, August 6, 2012, The Ticket Yahoo! News
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External links
- Pages using infobox person with unknown parameters
- Infobox person using religion
- Articles with hCards
- No local image but image on Wikidata
- Articles with unsourced statements from August 2012
- American Christians
- American libertarians
- Paleoconservatism
- Tennessee politicians
- Tennessee Democrats
- People from Mobile, Alabama
- People from Alexandria, Virginia
- People from Davidson County, Tennessee
- United States Army soldiers
- Pensacola Christian College alumni
- American political candidates
- Year of birth uncertain
- 1977 births
- Living people