Tennessee city to repeal anti-drag ordinance and pay LGBTQ group $500,000 in settlement

The Tennessee Equality Project in 2023 filed a federal lawsuit after Murfreesboro, Tennessee, leaders announced they would no longer be approving any event permit requests submitted by the organization. The two reached a settlement in the case this month. (Wikimedia Commons)

A Tennessee city must pay $500,000 as part of a settlement with the American Civil Liberties Union and other groups over an ordinance designed to ban drag performances from taking place on public property, attorneys announced Wednesday.

Last year, the Tennessee Equality Project — a nonprofit that advocates for LGBTQ+ rights — filed a federal lawsuit after Murfreesboro leaders announced they would no longer be approving any event permit requests submitted by the organization. At the time, the city alleged that the drag performances that took place during TEP’s 2022 Pride event resulted in the “illegal sexualization of kids.”

TEP denied the shows were inappropriate, countering that the performers were fully clothed. However, the city not only vowed to deny TEP permits but also decided later to update its “community decency standards” intended to “assist in the determination of conduct, materials, and events that may be judged as obscene or harmful to minors.”