- by foxnews
- 07 Apr 2026
FIRST ON FOX: The Democratic Party's candidate seeking to win a House seat in Tennessee's upcoming special election has a lengthy record of anti-police rhetoric, which she espoused repeatedly on a now-deleted social media account and in interviews prior to becoming a state legislator in 2023.
"Where's the proposal that dissolves @MNPDNashville?" Behn asked on an old social media account, which has since been deleted, in response to a separate social media post from a Nashville City Council member indicating local officials had submitted a "substitute budget proposal" aiming to strip Nashville police of $2.6 million in funding.
"If it's been difficult for all of you to imagine a world without police … we can do it and there is a world," Behn subsequently said during an interview with a local Nashville advocacy group.
"Looks like Aftyn is getting a visit from the Ghost of Wokeness Past," quipped Republican strategist Matt Gorman. "Democrats over and over have been haunted by their past positions they thought they could hide from. Ask Kamala Harris about her advocacy of taxpayer-funded sex change surgeries for illegal immigrant convicts on how that goes."
Behn did not respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment. However, Democrat strategist Eric Koch argued that attacks on Behn have been surging because "Republicans are getting worried in a district that Trump won by over 20 points," adding that Democrats making this race competitive shows they are in good shape to take back the House in the midterms next year. The special election is scheduled for Dec. 2.
"If it's been difficult for all of you to imagine a world without police, please tune in to, maybe not this episode, but the next one. Because I'll talk about things I'm learning and growing as an organizer. Because I think, especially for those of us that are young, and talking to our parents about what police abolition looks like, that we can do it and there is a world."
Behn made her comments as she worked with the left-wing nonprofit Indivisible, which also has a record of pushing to defund the police, calling the effort "critical … to keep everyone safe," in a Facebook post in 2020. The same year, the group called on people to phone their local, state and federal lawmakers to demand policies and budgets that steer money away from police departments and toward "Black communities."
Amid the chaos spurred by the death of Floyd that resulted in billions of dollars in damage and multiple lives lost, Behn was also co-hosting a podcast at the time. During one of the episodes, "Black Lives Matter," Behn argued it "is not for us to decide as privileged White people how marginalized communities express their suffering and their pain and their grieving."
She was referring to the looting and rioting taking place, calling it "a trope" for White people to say the looting was bad.
"I would really challenge all of you when you see these stories of looting, and you revert to this law and order type of response, I really challenge you to step back from that and think about what's driving that," Behn added of the rioting. "You should not condemn it because you don't know the first thing about being where they come from and what their generational trauma that has been inflicted upon them by the police, by institutional racism."
During the same podcast episode, Behn suggested police don't actually serve to guard and protect Americans.
In addition to Behn's remarks in interviews and on podcasts, the Democratic House hopeful also repeatedly espoused defund the police rhetoric on a now-deleted X account, which was Twitter at the time.
For example, Behn responded to a post, claiming "the Los Angeles teachers union" was demanding a commitment to "defund the police" before it would commit to returning to in-person learning for students, with a response that called on teachers in her state to do the same. The post Behn was responding to also called for more similar demands across the country.
In only the third such discovery in 30 years, according to archaeologists, construction workers in Kingston upon Hull unearthed a rare 300-year-old cast-iron cannon.
read more