Prominent Knoxville attorney Gordon Ball today formally announced his campaign for U.S. Senate. Ball will face Terry Adams in the August Democratic primary, and the winner will go on to face incumbent Republican Lamar Alexander in the November general election.
Gordon Ball's formal announcement is after the break...

March 12,2014

Gordon Ball, candidate
for U.S. Senate
HARTFORD, TN - Gordon Ball, a class action lawyer and former federal prosecutor known nationally for standing up to polluters, price-fIxers, insurance companies, and other big corporations to fIght for landowners and ordinary people, today announced he is running for the United States Senate from Tennessee, beginning his day on the banks of the Pigeon River in front of his childhood home in the small community of Hartford. It was there, Ball said, that he committed to help his neighbors fIght the paper mill that had been polluting the once-pristine river since the early 1900's.
"My reason for running is straightforward," Ball said. "Poor and middle class Tennessee families have been victimized far too long by professional politicians and Washington insiders." A fundamental problem, Ball believes, is that once elected to Congress, many politicians conveniently forget pledges and promises made to their constituents. For instance, he says, "the current incumbent promised to serve no more than two terms, a total of 12 years, but now he's running for a third term, which would give him 18 years in the Senate."
That's why Ball supports term limits for Congress. "We have real and important problems that must be addressed by Congress. But the ideas coming from Democrats and Republicans alike are nothing more than recycled policies that have never worked in the past, are not working today, and are unlikely to work in the future. If we want fresh ideas in Congress, we're going to have to send new people to Washington, Ball said."
"Washington is rigged by professional politicians," Ball says. "While a big company, like GE or State Farm, pays nothing in taxes, Washington forces college students to borrow more and more to get an education. And Washington tells seniors they may need to learn to live on less. It isn't right, and it's one of the main reasons I'm running."
Ball describes his family as living well beneath "the ragged edge of the middle class" when he was growing up. He was the first in his family to graduate college and became a federal prosecutor, criminal defense attorney, then a class action lawyer. After law school, Ball served as an assistant U.S. Attorney, prosecuted and defended murder cases, and in the early 1990's, followed up on his promise to help landowners on the Pigeon River get relief from the owners of the upstream paper mill, garnering millions of dollars in compensation for them over the years. That quest evolved into a regular role playing David against Goliath, taking on big corporations representing Tennessee and American consumers in large, complex class action cases.
Ball is widely credited for the original thinking, political courage, and relentless persistence that led to court decisions in Tennessee and elsewhere giving ordinary people the right to sue price-fixers and monopolists. Ball's law firm website (www.gordonball.com) chronicles many of the cases he has participated in, as well as the billions of dollars in benefits reaped by ordinary people - and many local, state, and national charities and educational institutions - through them.
Gordon and his wife, Happy, married in December 2013, have five adult children between them.
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Gene Patterson says by way of
Gene Patterson says by way of Twitter that Gordon Ball will appear on Tennessee This Week on Sunday. Noon on WATE.
Just heard his radio ad. He
Just heard his radio ad. He describes himself as a common sense conservative and promises term limits.
Yep. Looks like another case
(in reply to Knoxoasis)
Yep. Looks like another case of running a Republican-lite campaign against a Republican.
And you say that as if
(in reply to Knoxoasis)
And you say that as if "common sense" and term limits are bad things. I wasn't in favor of terms limits until recently. Polling by Politico suggests 75% of voters favor term limits, 65% of Democrats. I've read enough about it to know that term limits have bipartisan support - unless you're talking about Congressional support. Exactly how long has Lamar been on the public . . . uh, payroll? Conservative might be a bad word to some, but for practical purposes, saying you're a progressive Democrat in Tennessee might get you some plaudits from the left, but it'll not translate into an electoral win. Ned McWherter and Phil Bredesen were both conservative Democrats and I'd prefer either to Haslam, wouldn't you?
Sorry if you thought the
(in reply to knoxrebel)
Sorry if you thought the comment was editorial. It wasn't. I was just reporting the content of his ad. I don't think term limits are necessarily partisan or right or left. They're more us against them.
CONFUSED
(in reply to Knoxoasis)
This is what I was trying to find because I knew I heard his ad earlier today on talk radio. I thought he was a conservative. wth?
Hard for me to get excited
Hard for me to get excited about this guy because I remember this:
(link...)
Both Balls appealed, with
(in reply to Bbeanster)
Okay...
happy Ball?
Happy Ball?
Hmmmmm
He's running against Adams, Krim and Maurer, not just Adams.
I found nothing on his website regarding equal rights for all citizens. Since he styles himself as "conservative" I'd say he's opposed to equality.
How do you figure that?
(in reply to Kosh III)
How do you figure that? Conservatism is all about equality of opportunity. Oh wait .. you meant equality under the law? No, wait. They stand for that also. How about equality in education? Damn, that too. Hmmmmm is right.