In a race treated like a national referendum, Matt Van Epps’ win became a blunt answer to a question both parties were afraid to ask: whose message still lands when the cameras leave? Trump’s endorsement, backed by seven-figure MAGA Inc. spending and aggressive GOP organizing, gave skeptical conservatives permission to come home. Van Epps, a war veteran, framed himself as grounded and familiar in a district wary of ideological experiments.
Aftyn Behn entered as the embodiment of national progressive hopes, flanked by high-profile Democrats and a flood of outside money. But her total alignment with Kamala Harris, vague responses on policing, and resurfaced jabs at Nashville clashed with local instincts. Voters weighed the noise, then answered quietly at the ballot box. Republicans walked away with proof that Trump still moves votes. Democrats were left with a harsher lesson: authenticity can’t be outsourced, and no amount of star power can fix the wrong candidate in the wrong race.