Tennessee State Senate In 1992, Leatherwood challenged popular Republican Senator
Leonard Dunavant for the Tennessee Senate in District 32. According to the Nashville News, "Leatherwood said he ran against Dunavant simply because Dunavant sponsored a bill to impose a state income tax during former Gov.
Ned McWherter’s administration." Leatherwood was the victor in the election and attributes much of the success due to his opposing of the income tax in the state. Though he ran on defeating the state income tax, people closely involved with the movement were very skeptical of his real motives.
Steve Gill, a leader in the anti-tax movement was quoted as saying, "I don't know him. Don't know that I have ever met him. And if he was fighting AGAINST the state income tax during the Sundquist years it is news to me. He was apparently one of those guys hiding in back rooms meeting with the advocates of an income tax trying to find a "middle ground" as I recall. Those were the Republicans that were secretly BACKING the tax, not opposing it. If he can't be honest about that little piece of history, I have a hard time believing anything else he is saying. When he appeared on the show a while back he actually attacked the tax protesters who really did stop the income tax as being "out of control" and essentially unnecessary to the process. If the protesters had not been there, Tennessee would have a state income tax...thanks to guys like Tom Leatherwood." In 2014, Tennessee passed a Constitutional Amendment banning the state income tax. The amendment was sponsored by Senator
Brian Kelsey (Republican - District 31) and Representative
Glen Casada (Republican - District 63).
Shelby County Register of Deeds After leaving the Tennessee Senate in 2000, Leatherwood set his sights on the Shelby County Assessor's Office. He narrowly lost to Democrat Rita Clark in a four-way race. Soon after his defeat, Leatherwood decided to run in a special election for the Shelby County Register of Deeds. Longtime Register of Deeds, Guy Bates, died while in office. This created a special election in November 2000.
Archiving problems at Register's Office In 2005, Leatherwood approached the State Legislature and lobbied to have the law on archiving records changed. The House conformed to SB1753 and it was assigned Public Chapter Number 144 by the Secretary of State. In 2019, newly elected Register of Deeds, Shelandra Ford, In the same letter, Ford stated that the problem was one of "critical issue of the storage, maintenance and records retention." Soon, she came before the Shelby County Commission and asked to hire new employees to alleviate the backlog of archiving. Initially, the Commission rejected her request. However, during the meeting she told those present that the Register's Office had a nearly 15-year backlog and that Leatherwood had not properly overseen the archiving. She was quoted as saying, "it would take one employee 246 years to scan the backlog of materials from 2005 through 2018. It would take five people 49 years, 10 people 25 years, 20 people 13 years and 50 people five years." Ford said that the backlog of archiving was a "catastrophe" and that fixing the problem, "would take years and not be cheap." In July 2021, the Shelby County Commission was presented with a proposal to fix the archiving problem left by Leatherwood. According the proposal, there were nearly 80 million documents that were left unarchived. Those documents were divided into "high priority" and "low priority". The number of documents was evenly divided with approximately 38 million in each category. Two options to fix the archiving problem were listed in the proposal. One option was to outsource the archiving to a private company. The proposal stated that archiving just the high priority items would cost approximately $15 million and take approximately five years. == Congressional campaigns ==