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Marsha Blackburn is the Senior Senator from Tennessee and arguably the Senate's most aggressive regulator of Big Tech. As the Chair of the Subcommittee on Consumer Protection, Product Safety, and Data Security, she is the lead Republican sponsor of the Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA), a landmark bill aiming to force social media companies to design their platforms with child safety in mind.

She secured a decisive re-election in 2024, defeating Democrat Gloria Johnson by nearly 30 points. Her victory solidified Tennessee's status as a deep-red fortress and affirmed her brand of combative, populist conservatism.

Blackburn has positioned herself as the "Guardian of Music Row." Representing Nashville, she has become the Senate's leading voice on the intersection of Artificial Intelligence and Copyright. In the 119th Congress, she introduced the COPIED Act and the NO FAKES Act, legislation designed to protect songwriters and artists from unauthorized AI deepfakes and voice cloning.

A fierce Border Hawk, she serves as the Chair of the Judiciary Subcommittee on Border Security and Immigration in the new Republican majority. She uses this gavel to lead high-profile hearings on cartel activity and human trafficking, often livestreaming her trips to the southern border to her massive social media following.

Before politics, Blackburn was a trailblazing businesswoman. She worked for the Southwestern Company (selling books door-to-door) and later founded her own marketing firm. She was the first woman elected to Congress from Tennessee who did not succeed her husband, a distinction she frequently cites when discussing conservative feminism.

"She regulates Silicon Valley to protect the children and regulates AI to protect the country stars. Marsha Blackburn is the grandmother who knows more about the internet than the tech CEOs."

Marsha Blackburn: The Retail Warrior

Marsha Blackburn often calls herself a "hard-core, card-carrying Tennessee conservative," but her political style is pure salesmanship. Before she was a politician, she was a sales manager for the Southwestern Company, training college students to sell educational books door-to-door. She learned early that to make the sale, you have to be persistent, personable, and unflappable. She brings that same "retail politics" energy to the Senate, famously hosting "Tennessee Tuesday" breakfasts every week where any constituent visiting D.C. can meet her for donuts and coffee.

Her rise to power began in the Tennessee State Senate, where she led the revolt against a proposed state income tax in the early 2000s—a legendary political battle where protesters stormed the state capitol. That victory catapulted her to the U.S. House in 2002 and eventually the Senate in 2018.

In Washington, Blackburn has carved out a unique niche: she is a cultural warrior who does the homework on technology. While many Senators struggle to understand the internet, Blackburn has made herself the primary antagonist of Silicon Valley. Her signature legislation, the Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA), co-authored with Democrat Richard Blumenthal, represents the most significant bipartisan attempt to regulate social media algorithms in decades. She argues that platforms like TikTok and Instagram are "addictive by design" and that Big Tech has lost the privilege of self-regulation.

Her focus on Artificial Intelligence is driven by her constituents in Nashville. As AI voice cloning threatens the livelihoods of country music stars and session musicians, Blackburn has introduced the ELVIS Act (at the state level) and the COPIED Act (federally) to establish a property right in one's own voice and likeness. She views this as a property rights issue: "Your voice is your property, and Big Tech can't steal it to train their models."

Despite her focus on tech, she remains a staunch partisan on social issues. She is a fie...