Friday, October 19, 2018

[132] Policymaker shares tales of D.C. with MTSU students as visiting professor



MURFREESBORO, Tenn. —An MTSU alumnus who maintains a thriving career in Washington, D.C., took time recently to share his experience with students at his alma mater.

Jim Free, co-founder of The Smith-Free Group LLC, spent a busy two days talking to about 230 students in political science, recording industry and history classes on Wednesday, Sept. 26, and Thursday, Sept. 27. He is a Distinguished Visiting Professor for the 2018-19 academic year.

In professor Kent Syler’s American Government and Politics class, the former special assistant to the president for congressional affairs under President Jimmy Carter expressed pride about working with members of Congress for passage of the Clean Air Act, the Alaska Lands Act, national energy legislation and intellectual property protection.

While admitting that the atmosphere on Capitol Hill was different than today’s divisive partisanship, Free blames the change on the way computers have been used to gerrymander Congressional districts. He said the way districts have been redrawn has the effect of minimizing the impact of independent and undecided voters.

“Along came computers that could look at election results for a hundred years, and they could draw districts that were all red or all blue,” Free said. “In the general election, you didn’t have to moderate your views to become a more reasonable person.”

Syler, a former congressional chief of staff and current political analyst for WSMV-TV, is pleased his students will be able to hear a wealth of political knowledge directly from Free.

“Jim Free is an incredible resource for our students,” Syler said. “He can really tell stories and give inside information into some of the most recent events in the history of our country.”

When asked about the outlook for the millennial generation amidst the social and political friction of the day, Free expressed a firm belief in the system of checks and balances established by the Founding Fathers.

“There are a lot of folks that think we’re in a really bad place right now,” Free said. “This is nothing compared to where we were in 1932. This is nothing compared to where the country was as the Industrial Revolution began.”

Free served as MTSU student body president in 1968 and earned his bachelor’s degree in political science in 1969 and his master’s degree in public administration in 1972, both from MTSU. 

A former administrative assistant to Tennessee House of Representatives Speaker Ned McWherter, Free ascended to chief clerk of the House and became president of the American Society of House Chief Clerks and Senate Secretaries.

Before co-founding The Smith-Free Group in 1995, Free served as vice chairman of Walker-Free Associates. With both groups he had represented major global companies in the arenas of health care, financial services, transportation, energy and entertainment over a span of three decades.

For more information, contact Syler at 615-898-5625 or kent.syler@mtsu.edu.

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