Tami Sawyer (born April 27, 1982) is an American politician and civil rights activist.[1][2] She was elected in August 2018 as Shelby County Commissioner for District 7 and resides in Memphis, Tennessee.[3] She is a member of the Democratic Party. She serves as chair of the Education and Legislative committees.[4] She is chair of the Shelby County Commission Black Caucus.[5] As of 2024, Sawyer is running for election as the Shelby County General Sessions Court Clerk.[6]
From 2008 to 2014, Sawyer was a human capital analyst supporting diversity initiatives at NAVSEA PEO IWS, a program office of the United States Navy.[13] During that time, she competed on the Food Network'sCupcake Wars and owned a small cupcake business, Tami Cakes.[14]
Sawyer organized a vigil in December 2015 after a Cleveland prosecutor declined charging the police officers who shot and killed Tamir Rice. The vigil was held in Health Sciences Park in front of the statue of Confederate General and Ku Klux KlanGrand Wizard, Nathan Bedford Forrest.[10] Two years later, the City of Memphis removed both the Forrest statue and a statue of Jefferson Davis, president of the Confederacy, after responding to pressure from the #TakeEmDown901 movement which Sawyer formed and led.[11]
After being elected to office in 2018, Sawyer continued her activism. She was a participant and organizer in the 2020 George Floyd protests in Memphis.[9] In 2021, Sawyer was arrested outside of the White House with several other activists while protesting for an end to the filibuster and protection of voting rights.[9]
Sawyer was an unsuccessful challenger to incumbent Jim Strickland. She finished 3rd of 11 candidates and garnered 6.9% of the vote.
Sawyer's term as Commissioner ends on August 31, 2022.[3] She announced that she will not run for re-election but plans to begin a Ph.D. program in public policy.[16]
Controversy
In 2019, Sawyer was at the center of controversy when old tweets from the politician surfaced in which she communicated racist, anti-police, anti-disability, and anti-LGBTQ sentiments.[17] In response community members created online petitions calling for Sawyer to be removed from the 2019 mayoral ballot. WMC Political Analyst Mike Nelson was quoted as saying “These are devastating revelations about someone who is a self-avowed progressive. These are the farthest things from progressive sentiments”.[18]
Sawyer later apologized for several of the tweets stating “There are tweets that show a woman who, at that point, still hadn’t come to terms with her homophobia, who still wasn’t standing up and being a voice for all, regardless of ability. I am, not just deeply ashamed, but deeply sorry for those tweets, the harm they caused at the time, and the harm that seeing them now will still bring up, especially for members of those communities, and for all of us. … It is clear that I have not always been the person that I am today. I have said things in public platforms that are hurtful, offensive, and just wrong. As someone who works every day in the fight for justice, I am sorry I ever thought these things, said these things, and amplified these things. I am embarrassed by my past self and I am grateful to have had the space, the teachers, and the desire to grow beyond that version of me. To those my words and actions from my past hurt: I am sorry”.[19]