Rick Ewing
for Tennessee
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Rick Ewing
for Tennessee
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Rick Ewing knows what it means to fight for families who get overlooked, because his family is one of them.
When his son was diagnosed with a rare genetic disorder, Rick spent twenty years learning what Tennessee doesn't do for its most vulnerable. He built an advocacy organization from scratch, served on boards fighting for people with disabilities, and worked to help bring good jobs to Tennessee. Along the way, he's watched a supermajority legislature ignore the needs of Tennesseans everywhere, underfund critical programs, and leave families like his to figure it out alone. Now, he's running for Tennessee House District 59 to change that.
Rick Ewing knows what it means to fight for families who get overlooked, because his family is one of them.


Thank you!
We're grateful for your support
"I've done the advocacy work. I've served on the boards. But advocacy only gets you so far when the people making decisions won't listen. District 59 is an open seat and I'm not willing to sit on the sidelines while our families and our values continue to be ignored."

About Rick
For Rick Ewing, service isn't optional... it's in his DNA.
A 9th-generation Nashvillian, Rick was raised by a Meharry-trained surgeon and a Metro Schools principal who taught him that if you have the ability to help, you have the responsibility to act. That lesson has guided his life, from the basketball courts of Yale University to his 20-year career as a Director at Oracle, where he has helped bring life-saving drugs to market and managed complex healthcare solutions.
But Rick’s most important title is "Dad." After his son Richard was diagnosed with Tuberous Sclerosis, Rick saw firsthand how quickly families can fall through the cracks of our healthcare and education systems.
Seeing no organization in Middle Tennessee to help families like his, Rick founded one. For two decades, he has been a relentless advocate for the disability community, fighting for better funding, research, and support systems.
Now, Rick is running for House District 59 to take that fight to the state level. Whether it is securing high-tech jobs for our region as a member of the Governor's Workforce Development Board or serving on the boards of FiftyForward, Nashville State Community College, and Meharry Medical School, Rick has spent his life bringing people together to solve problems. He is ready to ensure that our state government works for everyone, especially the families who need it most.
