Blanton was born near
Adamsville, Tennessee, in the community of New Hope, the son of Leonard and Ova (Delaney) Blanton. He taught school in
Mooresville, Indiana, from 1951 to 1953, when he returned to Adamsville to work in the family construction business, B&B Construction. He went on to win the general election, and was twice reelected. As a congressman, Blanton had relatively poor attendance, sponsored few bills of significance, and served on just two committees: the
Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee, and the District of Columbia committee. He instead focused on his constituents, namely by trying to acquire funding for projects in Tennessee, including the state's first
Head Start Program. Blanton criticized the
anti-war movement, Tennessee lost a congressional district after the 1970 census, and the legislature merged most of Blanton's territory with the neighboring 8th District of popular fellow Democrat,
Ed Jones. The merged district retained Blanton's district number, but was geographically more Jones' district. Rather than run against Jones in 1972, Blanton decided to run for the
U.S. Senate. He easily won the Democratic primary, and faced the
Republican incumbent,
Howard Baker, in the
general election. Unlike Blanton, Baker had supported the Voting Rights Act and the lowering of the voting age, helping him make inroads among two key constituencies, black voters and young voters. Baker also tied Blanton to the more liberal Democratic presidential candidate,
George McGovern. On election day, Baker won in a landslide, 716,534 votes (62%) to 440,599 (38%). ==Governor of Tennessee==