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Tennessee Declares June "Nuclear Family Month," Sidelining Millions of Its Own Households
On April 9, 2026, Tennessee Governor Bill Lee signed House Joint Resolution 182, designating June as "Nuclear Family Month" in the state [1]. June has been nationally recognized as Pride Month since President Bill Clinton's 1999 proclamation [2]. The resolution defines the nuclear family as "consisting of one husband, one wife, and any biological, adopted, or fostered children," calling this arrangement "God's design for familial structure" and "God's perfect design for humanity" [3].
The measure passed the Republican-controlled legislature by wide margins — 72-14 in the House and 26-4 in the Senate — and was signed two days after reaching the governor's desk [4]. It carries no force of law and includes no enforcement mechanism [4]. But the symbolic weight of the resolution has set off a fierce debate about which families Tennessee chooses to recognize and which it leaves out.
What the Resolution Says
HJR 182 was sponsored by Republican state Representative Bud Hulsey of Kingsport and backed by 15 GOP co-sponsors [1]. Hulsey described the resolution's origins: "This legislation was brought to me last year by a young college student in my district, and I'm grateful for her engagement in the government process. God ordained the nuclear family, and House Joint Resolution 182 ensures Tennessee recognizes it as the foundation of our state and the key to a strong and free people" [5].
The resolution's preamble makes a series of statistical claims about fatherless households. It states that "fatherless families are four times more likely to live in poverty than married couple families," that "children without fathers are ten times more likely to abuse chemical substances," that "sixty percent of youth suicides are from fatherless homes," and that "seventy-one percent of high school dropouts are from fatherless homes" [3]. It further cites a 2016 study by Peter Langman on the psychology of school shooters, claiming that "eighty-two percent of the shooters were raised in an unstable family environment or without both biological parents together" [3].
The resolution was initially introduced to designate June 2025, but was amended to June 2026 before final passage. The House first voted 72-18 in April 2025; after the amendment, the Senate voted 26-4 in March 2026, and the House concurred 72-14 [4].
Who Gets Left Out: Tennessee's Family Demographics
The resolution's definition — one husband, one wife, and their children — excludes a substantial share of Tennessee's own households. According to 2023 American Community Survey data from the U.S. Census Bureau, approximately 35.2% of Tennessee households with children are headed by single parents, compared to 32.8% nationally [6]. An additional 5.1% of Tennessee households with children are headed by grandparents, above the national rate of 4.3% [6]. Same-sex couples raising children, unmarried cohabiting partners, and other non-nuclear configurations make up much of the remainder.
In raw numbers, Tennessee has approximately 2.82 million households [7]. Among households with children, more than half do not fit the resolution's definition when single-parent, grandparent-headed, and other non-nuclear configurations are combined. In some Tennessee counties, single-parent household rates far exceed the state average: Shelby County (Memphis) has a single-parent household rate of 48.9%, and Haywood County reaches 52.4% [8].
The Legal Weight of a Joint Resolution
Under Tennessee law, joint resolutions occupy a distinct legal category. Unlike bills, resolutions "do not become the law of the state when acted upon by the Legislature, but serve merely to express the will of the majority of the body by which they are adopted" [9]. Joint resolutions carry more weight than simple resolutions and must be submitted to the governor for signature under Article III, Section 18 of the Tennessee Constitution, but they do not create enforceable mandates [9].
This means HJR 182 cannot directly be used to justify funding decisions, alter regulatory guidance, or change school curriculum. However, symbolic resolutions can influence political and cultural discourse. Prior Tennessee resolutions on topics ranging from official state songs to commemorative months have occasionally been cited in public debates, even if they lack statutory teeth. The question is whether "Nuclear Family Month" becomes a rhetorical tool in future policy fights — over adoption rules, school health curricula, or social services funding — or remains a purely ceremonial gesture.
The Debate Over Family Structure Research
Supporters of the resolution point to a body of social science research showing that children in two-parent married households tend to have better outcomes on average across education, income, and health measures. A widely cited body of work from researchers including Sara McLanahan at Princeton has documented that children in single-parent households face higher rates of poverty, lower academic achievement, and increased behavioral problems [10]. The resolution's preamble draws on this general finding, though it presents correlational data as if it were causal.
Researchers who have contributed to this literature, however, are often among the first to caution against the interpretation the resolution implies. McLanahan's own work emphasizes that economic resources — not family structure per se — drive much of the observed gap [10]. A 2020 study published in Child Development found that once factors such as household income and stability were accounted for, the independent effects of single parenthood on cognitive development were "significantly smaller" [11].
The resolution's specific statistical claims are also difficult to verify. Many of the figures in the preamble — such as the 85% incarceration claim — circulate widely in advocacy materials but trace back to decades-old data or sources that did not control for confounding variables like poverty, race, and neighborhood effects [10]. The claim about school shooters references a single study with a sample of 56 individuals, too small to support sweeping generalizations about family structure [3].
In short, the peer-reviewed literature supports the observation that two-parent households correlate with better child outcomes on average, but the strongest versions of the causal claim — that family structure alone determines these outcomes — are not supported by the weight of the evidence.
Reactions: Critics and Defenders
GLAAD issued a statement calling the resolution exclusionary: "The strongest families are grounded by love. Lawmakers trying to exclude and intentionally harm some families should be recognized as actively harming all" [4]. A separate GLAAD spokesperson said that "resolutions like this do more to reveal the cluelessness of elected officials whose own families and those of their constituents have various family dynamics and structures" [2].
LGBTQ Nation characterized the resolution as "part of a war on LGBTQ+ visibility," noting the deliberate choice to overlay the designation on Pride Month [12]. The Advocate reported that critics see the resolution as not just promoting one family type, but actively excluding others — LGBTQ+ families, single-parent households, and nontraditional family structures [2].
Supporters argue that the resolution does not attack anyone. Hulsey and his co-sponsors frame it as an affirmative statement about the importance of married two-parent households, not a condemnation of alternative family arrangements [5]. Conservative media outlets in Tennessee have described the measure as a natural expression of the state's values, noting that Tennessee has long been among the more socially conservative states in the country [5].
No major single-parent advocacy organizations or child welfare groups have issued formal policy demands in direct response to the resolution as of mid-April 2026. However, the Tennessee Commission on Children and Youth — a state body — had previously reported that 20% of Tennessee children under five live in poverty, a figure that underscores the economic challenges facing many of the state's non-nuclear households [13].
Tennessee's Family Outcomes in Context
The state's track record on family-related policy outcomes provides context for the resolution's claims. Tennessee exceeds national averages on several indicators of family distress.
Tennessee's child poverty rate stands at 19.1%, above the national average of 16.9% [13][14]. The state has the seventh-highest teen birth rate in the country at 23.3 per 1,000, compared to 13.2 nationally [15]. Tennessee's divorce rate of approximately 2.9 per 1,000 residents exceeds the national average of 2.3 [16]. The state also ranks in the top 10-15 nationally for divorce, partly because it has the seventh-highest marriage rate in the country — more marriages produce more divorces in absolute terms [16].
These figures complicate the resolution's framing. If the nuclear family is the "foundation" that produces strong outcomes, Tennessee — which already has a married-couple household rate (47.5%) roughly in line with the national average (48.2%) [6] — should in theory perform at or near the national average on child welfare metrics. It does not. The state's above-average rates of child poverty, teen births, and divorce suggest that the factors driving family distress are more complex than household structure alone.
The Sycamore Institute, a nonpartisan Tennessee policy research center, has noted that marriage and divorce rates in Tennessee "vary little from one county to the next — including between those with high and low child poverty," suggesting that poverty is driven more by economic conditions than by family formation patterns [17].
Is Tennessee Alone?
No other state has passed a comparable "Nuclear Family Month" resolution designating June specifically, making Tennessee's move unprecedented in its direct overlap with Pride Month [2]. Various states have passed family-related proclamations over the years — "Family Week" or "Marriage Week" designations exist in scattered state records — but none have used the term "nuclear family" in official legislative language in this way, and none have directly mapped the designation onto June [2][12].
At the federal level, November has been designated as National Family Caregivers Month, and previous presidents have issued proclamations for Military Family Month [18]. These federal designations use broad definitions of family that do not specify gender or marital status. The Tennessee resolution's narrow definition — "one husband, one wife" — diverges from federal practice, which in tax and welfare policy recognizes a range of household configurations for purposes of filing status, benefits eligibility, and dependent claims.
What Happens Next
The resolution designates June 2026 as Nuclear Family Month. Because it is a joint resolution rather than a statute, it would need to be re-passed to apply to future years. Whether lawmakers pursue an annual designation, or whether the resolution becomes a one-time symbolic act, depends on the political appetite in the 114th General Assembly.
For the more than half of Tennessee households with children that do not fit the resolution's definition, the practical effect is zero — no benefits are created or withdrawn, no policies change. But symbolism carries weight. The resolution tells a particular story about which families Tennessee values. Whether that story matches the demographic and economic reality of the state is a separate question — one the data does not resolve in the resolution's favor.
Sources (18)
- [1]Tennessee governor signs resolution designating June as 'Nuclear Family Month'wsmv.com
Gov. Bill Lee signed House Joint Resolution 182 on April 9, designating June as Nuclear Family Month in Tennessee, defining family as one husband, one wife, and children.
- [2]Tennessee declares Nuclear Family Month during Prideadvocate.com
Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee signed a resolution defining family as 'a man, a woman, and their children,' drawing criticism from LGBTQ+ advocates for excluding diverse family structures.
- [3]HJR182 - Tennessee 2025-2026 - A Resolution to designate June as Nuclear Family Monthtrackbill.com
Full text of HJR 182 defines nuclear family as 'one husband, one wife, and any biological, adopted, or fostered children' and describes it as 'God's design for familial structure.'
- [4]June is Pride Month. Tennessee Republicans say it's 'Nuclear Family Month'yahoo.com
The House voted 72-14 and the Senate 26-4 to pass HJR 182. The resolution carries no force of law. GLAAD called the measure exclusionary.
- [5]HJR 182, Proposed Tennessee Legislation To Designate June As Nuclear Family Monthtennesseeconservativenews.com
Rep. Bud Hulsey stated the legislation was brought to him by a college student. He described the nuclear family as 'the foundation of our state and the key to a strong and free people.'
- [6]S1101: Households and Families - Census Bureau Tabledata.census.gov
2023 American Community Survey data on household composition including married-couple, single-parent, and grandparent-headed households by state.
- [7]Tennessee - U.S. Census Bureau QuickFactscensus.gov
Tennessee has approximately 2.82 million households. Census QuickFacts provides demographic, economic, and housing data from the American Community Survey.
- [8]Single-parent Households with Children as a Percentage of Households with Children: Tennesseefred.stlouisfed.org
County-level data shows single-parent household rates ranging from 15% to over 52% across Tennessee's 95 counties, with Shelby County at 48.9% and Haywood County at 52.4%.
- [9]Lawmaking in Tennessee - Types of Legislationcapitol.tn.gov
Resolutions do not become the law of the state but serve to express the will of the majority. Joint resolutions must be submitted to the governor for signature.
- [10]Family Structure and Child Well-Being: Integrating Family Complexitypmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Children in two-parent married households tend to have better outcomes on average, but economic resources and household stability drive much of the observed gap.
- [11]The Rise in Single-Mother Families and Children's Cognitive Developmentwiley.com
A 2020 study in Child Development found that once income and household stability are controlled for, the independent effects of single parenthood on cognitive development are significantly smaller.
- [12]Tennessee designates June 'Nuclear Family Month' as part of war on LGBTQ+ visibilitylgbtqnation.com
LGBTQ Nation reports the resolution is unprecedented in its direct overlap with Pride Month and part of broader efforts to limit LGBTQ+ visibility in Tennessee.
- [13]Report: 20% of TN Children Under Five Live in Povertypublicnewsservice.org
The Tennessee Commission on Children and Youth reported that 20% of Tennessee children under five live in poverty, with the state's child poverty rate at 19.1%.
- [14]Poverty Rate by State - ACS 2023data.census.gov
2023 ACS 1-Year poverty rate data: national state average 12.7%, with significant variation from 7.2% (New Hampshire) to 39.6% (Puerto Rico).
- [15]Teen Births in Tennessee - America's Health Rankingsamericashealthrankings.org
Tennessee has the seventh-highest teen pregnancy rate at 23.3 per 1,000, compared to the national rate of 13.2 per 1,000.
- [16]Divorce Rates Statistics and Trends for 2024 - Tennesseememphisdivorce.com
Tennessee's divorce rate of approximately 2.9 per 1,000 residents exceeds the national average of 2.3. The state ranks in the top 10-15 nationally.
- [17]Child and Family Poverty in Tennessee - The Sycamore Institutesycamoretn.org
Marriage and divorce rates vary little from one county to the next in Tennessee, including between those with high and low child poverty.
- [18]Presidential Proclamation - Military Family Month, 2014obamawhitehouse.archives.gov
Federal family-related proclamations like Military Family Month use broad definitions of family without specifying gender or marital status.