Skip to main content

Tennessee Government Employee’s Alleged Racist Message Calling NYC Mayoral Candidate a ‘Dumbass N***** B****’ Sparks Investigation

 
NYC mayoral candidate Dianne Morales during an appearance on The View

NYC mayoral candidate Dianne Morales

An employee of the Tennessee state government is under investigation for allegedly using racist and sexist slurs in a private message sent to a New York City mayoral candidate, the Tennessean reported Monday evening.

The probe stems from a private Facebook message sent to Dianne Morales, a former New York City public school teacher currently running to replace Bill de Blasio as the city’s first Afro-Latina mayor. Morales posted a screenshot of the message on her Twitter account Monday morning. The message was allegedly sent on April 18 by Tennessee Department of Labor and Workforce Development employee John McDaniel,

“I am always struck by those who feel the need to go out of their way to lob threats or insults. While the violence is admittedly jarring, it’s also a reminder or how far we have to go in the fight for equity and justice. I’m not going anywhere,” she wrote along with a screenshot of the alleged message from McDaniel which read, in uncensored form, “Dumbass n***** bitch!”

Screenshots of a since-deleted LinkedIn page that appeared to belong to McDaniel said that he was a Reemployment Services and Eligibility Assessment Grants (RESEA) coordinator with the Department of Labor and Workforce Development. Photos of the LinkedIn page were posted to Twitter by onetime Democratic Tennessee House candidate Edward Nelson.

A department spokesperson on Monday confirmed to the Tennessean that McDaniel currently remains employed and “works with unemployed people to find work” but noted that he “does not make decisions on unemployment claims.”

“Agency leadership is aware of recent allegations involving an employee and they are investigating the matter,” department spokesperson Chris Cannon told the news outlet. “They will take further action based upon confirmed and/or corroborated facts discovered during the investigation.”

Law&Crime reached out to Cannon on Tuesday with additional questions about McDaniel. He said the following:

The State of Tennessee Code of Conduct states that “employees have a responsibility to the citizens of the State of Tennessee to act with integrity and to treat the people we serve, our colleagues, and other parties with dignity and respect. Employees should strive to maintain an ethical and professional environment that will enhance the name, service, and general impression of the State in the eyes of the general public. Employees are expected to use sound judgment in all of their conduct.”

Mr. McDaniel does not work in the Agency’s Unemployment Security Division, nor does he make decisions on unemployment claims. Mr. McDaniel works with unemployment claimants to help them find pathways back to employment through the federal Reemployment Services and Eligibility Assessment program.

A reporter for the Tennessean also reached McDaniel by telephone Monday evening, and McDaniel appeared to suggest he may have been hacked.

When asked if he sent Morales the Facebook message, McDaniel told the paper, “I did not—I’m not going to say anything.”

When asked if his Facebook account had been hacked, he added, “At this point, I don’t know.”

[image via YouTube screengrab]

Have a tip we should know? [email protected]

Filed Under:

Follow Law&Crime:

Jerry Lambe is a journalist at Law&Crime. He is a graduate of Georgetown University and New York Law School and previously worked in financial securities compliance and Civil Rights employment law.