



Primary Election
Party selects its nominee.
Current roleMusician (pedal steel guitarist, guitarist)
PartyDemocratic
Political ideologyProgressive Democrat
LocationTennessee
BackgroundMusician (pedal steel guitarist, guitarist)
EducationPolitical Science degree (institution not publicly specified)
Notable personal detailsAdam “Ditch” Kurtz is a Nashville-based pedal steel guitarist and working musician who is running as a Democrat for Governor of Tennessee in the 2026 election cycle. He has said he holds a political science degree and has framed his campaign around community-first governance and affordability-focused issues such as healthcare, education, and housing. His campaign presents itself as grassroots and outside the political establishment.
Supports policies to lower costs for working Tennesseans through expanded public spending (free or affordable healthcare, free pre-K and child care, raising the minimum wage) and seeks to eliminate the grocery tax while opposing corporate influence in policy such as unchecked tax incentives for large corporations. Advocates directing new revenue (e.g., marijuana tax revenue) toward public schools and emphasizes small-donor, no-corporate-money campaigning.
Supports universal, affordable (including free) healthcare and frames healthcare as a basic human right; calls for expanding access and addressing rising premiums and loss of coverage in Tennessee.
Adam “Ditch” Kurtz’s campaign materials express support for immigrants and say he wants to respect immigrant neighbors, but they do not provide specific immigration or border policies such as asylum, enforcement, or legalization pathways. Public interviews and local coverage note he discusses immigration as part of his platform, but concrete policy proposals are not detailed in the available sources.
Adam Kurtz is showing up in election-related coverage tied to Tennessee’s 2026 primary, with key dates approaching for voter registration, absentee requests, and early voting ahead of the May 5 contest. Broader 2026 election dynamics are also in focus as the U.S. Supreme Court considers a Voting Rights Act decision that could affect redistricting and the partisan balance of House seats, potentially shaping the environment for candidates.




Aggregation source: FiftyPlusOne
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