County government The
county mayor is the head of the executive branch of Knox County Government. The current county mayor is
Republican professional wrestler Glenn Jacobs, better known by his
WWE persona
Kane. According to the county charter, the mayor serves as the chief financial officer of the county, responsible for developing the county’s annual budget, approving contracts, and overseeing county operations. Other duties include maintaining county roads, highways, and bridges, enforcing codes, operating the county health department and public library system, and supervising various executive branch departments. The mayor has the authority to veto resolutions and ordinances passed by the Knox County Commission. A majority-plus-one vote of the commission is required to override a mayoral veto unless the vetoed legislation originally required a two-thirds vote, in which case a two-thirds vote is required to override. Knox County administers the local school and library systems, while Knoxville maintains an independent police department separate from the county sheriff. The property assessor’s office, tax offices, and the Metropolitan Planning Commission are combined between city and county governments. All county elections are conducted on a partisan basis. County commissioners’ districts do not correspond with the city of
Knoxville, which has its own mayor and city council. Residents living within Knoxville city limits vote in both city and county elections, are represented by both mayors, and pay city and county taxes. While some administrative functions may appear duplicated, services are generally separated.
Countywide elected officials State elected offices Knox County is represented in the
Tennessee General Assembly by mainly
Republicans. In the
Tennessee Senate, the county is entirely represented by 3 Republican senators. In the
Tennessee House of Representatives, 7 districts include portions of Knox County, with 5 Republicans and 2
Democrats serving as state representatives.
Legislative branch The Knox County Board of Commissioners is the legislative body of Knox County and consists of 11 members: 9 elected at the district level and 2 elected countywide to serve at-large. Commissioners meet multiple times each month, with their primary business meetings being a monthly work session and a monthly voting meeting. During the work session, commissioners generally debate items on the monthly agenda and take a non-binding vote on each item in advance of the more formal voting meeting, which is generally held the following week. The Board of Commissioners approves resolutions, ordinances, honorariums, road names, as well as most county contracts and large expenditures. Resolutions require a single vote for passage, while ordinances require two votes, or "two readings". The County Commission also serves as the appropriating body of the county and must approve an annual budgetpresented by the mayorwhich includes funding for the various county departments, including the
Knox County Schools. The body also sets the property tax rate for the county.
Education governance Public education in Knox County is overseen by the Knox County Board of Education, which governs the Knox County Schools. The board consists of nine members elected from single-member districts, serving four-year terms. These districts use the same boundary lines as the Knox County Commission, representing residents of Knoxville, the Town of Farragut, and all other areas of Knox County. Members represent residents of Knoxville, the Town of Farragut, and other areas of Knox County. The board acts as a single governing body, making decisions that apply to the entire school system. Its responsibilities include setting policies for Knox County Schools, approving the annual school system budget, appointing and supervising the Superintendent of Schools, and selecting a chair and vice chair from among its members each year.
Political history Like most counties in heavily-
Unionist East Tennessee, Knox County has historically been strongly Republican. Although it is conservative for an urban county, it is notably less Republican than most of the rest of East Tennessee. This is largely due to the influence of Knoxville, which in recent years has had a tendency to vote Democratic in statewide races, has elected Democratic mayors, and regularly elects Democrats to the state legislature. However, the suburban and rural areas are among the most Republican areas of Tennessee and the South. Presidentially,
Franklin Roosevelt carried the county in three of his four presidential elections, while several nearby counties are among the only counties in the nation to have never supported a Democratic candidate for president in their entire existence. Nevertheless, Democratic candidates have crossed the 40-percent mark only seven times since Roosevelt's death. In 1964, it was nearly swept up in
Lyndon Johnson's national landslide; Johnson lost the county by only 334 votes.
Jimmy Carter in 1976 and
Bill Clinton in 1992 and 1996 are the only Democrats since then to come reasonably close to carrying the county, losing it by single-digit margins; in Clinton's case with Tennessean
Al Gore on the ticket. Gore lost the county by 17 points in 2000 during his own bid for president, but still managed 40 percent. The Democrats would not cross the 40 percent threshold again until
2020, when
Joe Biden received over 41 percent of the county's vote.
County mayoral elections •
2018 Knox County, Tennessee mayoral election •
2022 Knox County, Tennessee mayoral election •
2026 Tennessee county mayoral elections ==Transportation==