Republican Lashes Out At Journalist Pressing Him Over Israel | HuffPost Latest News
A Tennessee GOP senator’s “I’d bust your face” outburst is getting attention, but the bigger story is a state bill trying to force official language about the occupied West Bank.
Mar 25, 2026
Sources
Summary
Tennessee state Sen. Paul Rose told journalist Justin Kanew, “If I was at home I’d bust your face right now,” during a confrontation about a bill affecting how Tennessee agencies describe the West Bank. The coverage centers the heated exchange and social-media backlash more than the bill’s text and its legislative status, and it repeats broad claims about Israel “pushing us to war” without substantiation. The public-interest core is how state governments use symbolic legislation to take sides in foreign-policy disputes—and how intimidation can chill routine accountability journalism.
Reality Check
The central verifiable facts are straightforward: Rose made a conditional violent statement toward a journalist while being questioned about SB 1663 / HB 1446, and the bill seeks to standardize Tennessee’s official terminology away from “West Bank” and toward “Judea and Samaria.” The more consequential policy question is what legal or operational effect this language mandate would have inside Tennessee government—and whether it is an attempt to use state power to enforce a contested geopolitical narrative. Claims that Israel “pushed us into a war” are rhetorical and not supported with specific evidence in the reported exchange; they should be treated as the questioner’s allegation, not as an established fact.
Media
Detail
The exchange occurred Tuesday, March 24, 2026, at the Tennessee State Capitol, with Tennessee Holler founder Justin Kanew questioning Sen. Paul Rose (R).
Kanew pressed Rose about SB 1663 / HB 1446, titled the “Recognizing Judea and Samaria Act,” and repeatedly asked who provided the bill.
Rose responded: “If I was at home I’d bust your face right now,” and later said he was not threatening Kanew (per the article’s account).
HB 1446 / SB 1663 would require Tennessee state government entities to use “Judea and Samaria” (and related terms) in specified official contexts rather than “West Bank,” framing the change as “historically” and “legally” accurate in the bill’s findings.
The bill’s text contains extensive ideological and religious-historical assertions to justify the terminology change, signaling the measure is primarily symbolic messaging rather than a functional state policy need.
The story references international-law framing (UN treatment of the territory as occupied; ICJ opinions on the occupation/settlements) but does not explain what, specifically, Tennessee agencies would have to change in practice (forms, textbooks, procurement language, maps, etc.).
The article notes Rose did not respond to HuffPost for further comment; it largely relies on the recorded exchange and social-media reactions for context.