Black worked as a
registered nurse until she ran for the
Tennessee House of Representatives in 1998. Later, she served as an educator at
Volunteer State Community College in
Gallatin, Tennessee.
Tennessee legislature Before becoming a
state Senator in 2004, she had previously served as a
state Representative for six years from 1998. Prior to her election as a Republican state representative, Black had voted in two
Democratic primaries in 1996. Black was the Assistant Floor Leader of the Senate Republican Caucus, a member of the Senate Government Operations Committee, and the Vice-Chairwoman of the Senate General Welfare, Health, and Human Resources Committee. She was elected the Tennessee Senate Republican
Caucus Chairwoman in 2006. In May 2009, Black's legislative aide forwarded an e-mail depicting a collage of United States Presidents. President
Barack Obama's section of the collage was represented by a black square with two eyeballs. Black's reprimand of her aide was criticized as too lenient by two political blogs and Tennessee Democratic Party Chairman
Chip Forrester. Black said the e-mail did not represent her views, and that the reprimand of her aide was in keeping with the legislator's human resource policy for e-mail guideline violations.
U.S. House of Representatives As of 2013, Black was one of three female U.S. Representatives who preferred the title "congressman"; the others were Republican
Marsha Blackburn, also of Tennessee, and Republican
Cynthia Lummis of
Wyoming. Black and Blackburn departed the House at the end of the
115th Congress and Lummis left the House at the end of the
114th Congress, with Blackburn and Lummis becoming Senators of their respective states.
2010 election In December, 2009, she became a candidate for
Tennessee's 6th congressional district to succeed
Bart Gordon, who did not run for re-election. Her biggest competition in the Republican primary came from former
Rutherford County GOP chairwoman
Lou Ann Zelenik and State Senator
Jim Tracy. On August 5, 2010, Black won the Republican primary with 31% of the vote, over Zelenik and Tracy, who earned 30% each.
Brett Carter won the
Democratic nomination after most well-known Democratic elected officials in the district declined to run. With most Democratic observers writing off the seat as a Republican pick-up,
CQ Politics rated this race as "Safe Republican". In the November election, Black won with 67 percent of the vote.
2012 to 2019 In the 2012 general election, Black was a surrogate for Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney. Black made appearances for Romney in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and in various cable news interviews. Black has been a member of the following committees:
Committee on the Budget,
Committee on Ways and Means,
Subcommittee on Human Resources,
Tea Party Caucus,
Republican Study Committee, and the
United States Congressional International Conservation Caucus. In October 2013, Black introduced the
Student and Family Tax Simplification Act (H.R. 3393; 113th Congress), a bill that would amend the
Internal Revenue Code to consolidate several different education tax incentives into an expanded
American Opportunity Tax Credit. The American Opportunity Tax Credit, under this legislation, would provide a maximum credit of $2,500. Black has received endorsements from Governor
Sarah Palin, The
National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB), Governor
Mitt Romney, Congresswoman
Michele Bachmann, former Congressman
Allen West, and The U.S. Chamber of Commerce. ,
Marjorie Dannenfelser, Diane Black, and
Penny Nance with
Donald Trump, after Trump signed H.J. Res. 43, a
Title X-related policy, into law. In October 2015, Black was named to serve on the
Select Investigative Panel on Planned Parenthood. Black was a member of the
U.S.-Japan Caucus.
2018 gubernatorial campaign On August 2, 2017, Black announced her intention to run for
Governor of Tennessee in the 2018 election. In March 2018, the
Tennessean reported that Black had missed over 50 votes in the U.S. House, the most out of any member of the Tennessee delegation. The newspaper noted that it is typical for members of Congress running for a higher office to miss votes, but that some votes were on major pieces of legislation, including re-opening the government following the
2018 shutdown and funding the U.S. military. Black lost to
Bill Lee in the Republican primary on August 2, 2018. ==Political positions==