Elected Officials Serving the Memphis Metro Area

The Memphis metro area spans a multi-county, multi-state region whose elected leadership is distributed across municipal, county, and state governments in Tennessee and Mississippi. Understanding which officials hold authority over which jurisdictions is essential for residents, businesses, and civic organizations navigating public services, policy decisions, and government accountability. This page maps the structure of elected representation across the Memphis Metropolitan Statistical Area and clarifies how different offices interact.

Definition and scope

The Memphis Metropolitan Statistical Area, as defined by the U.S. Office of Management and Budget, encompasses Shelby, Fayette, and Tipton counties in Tennessee, along with Crittenden County in Arkansas and DeSoto, Marshall, Tate, and Tunica counties in Mississippi — a total of 8 counties across 3 states. For a fuller geographic breakdown, see the Memphis Metro Area Overview.

Elected officials serving this region fall into distinct governmental layers:

Because no single regional government exists for the Memphis MSA as a whole, no single elected official holds metro-wide authority. Power is fragmented across more than 30 distinct governmental units. The Memphis Metro Government Structure page details how these layers coordinate on shared policy issues.

How it works

Each county within the MSA operates under the laws of its respective state, which determines the structure of county government. In Tennessee, Shelby County operates under a home-rule charter adopted by voters, placing executive authority in an elected County Mayor and legislative authority in a 13-member County Commission (Shelby County Government). The City of Memphis has a mayor-council form, with a directly elected mayor and a 13-member City Council representing 7 single-member districts and 3 super-districts.

In Mississippi, DeSoto County — the most populous Mississippi county in the MSA with more than 185,000 residents according to U.S. Census Bureau estimates — uses a Board of Supervisors model, with 5 district-elected supervisors holding both legislative and executive functions. In Arkansas, Crittenden County similarly uses a quorum court structure, with a county judge serving as the chief executive and 15 justices of the peace forming the legislative body, as established under Arkansas law (Arkansas Association of Counties).

Federal representation is determined by congressional district boundaries that do not follow MSA lines. Memphis falls primarily within Tennessee's 9th Congressional District. Portions of the Tennessee suburbs fall within the 8th District. Mississippi counties in the MSA are represented in the 1st Congressional District of Mississippi.

Common scenarios

Three situations most commonly require residents or organizations to identify the correct elected official:

  1. Land use and zoning decisions: Unincorporated areas within Shelby County fall under the County Commission's jurisdiction, while incorporated cities such as Germantown and Collierville have independent planning commissions and city councils. A development straddling a municipal boundary may require approvals from 2 separate elected bodies.
  2. Public safety policy: The Shelby County Sheriff holds elected authority over law enforcement in unincorporated Shelby County and operates the county jail, while the Memphis Police Department answers to the city mayor and city council. These are distinct offices with distinct budgets and distinct elected accountability chains. More detail is available at Memphis Metro Public Safety.
  3. School district governance: Elected school boards govern each of the major districts within the MSA independently. Shelby County Schools, the unified district formed after the 2013 merger of Memphis City Schools and the former Shelby County Schools system, is governed by a 7-member elected board. Municipal school districts in Germantown, Collierville, Arlington, Lakeland, Bartlett, and Millington each have separate elected boards. See Memphis Metro School Districts for a full breakdown.

Decision boundaries

A critical distinction exists between elected officials who hold executive authority — the power to administer government operations and direct staff — and those who hold legislative authority — the power to enact ordinances, resolutions, and budgets. In Memphis city government, the mayor proposes the budget but the City Council enacts it. In DeSoto County, the Board of Supervisors holds both functions in a single body.

A second boundary separates partisan from nonpartisan offices. Shelby County Commission races are formally partisan, appearing on party primary ballots. Municipal races in Germantown and several other suburbs are nonpartisan by local ordinance. This distinction affects how candidates qualify and how voters engage with those races.

A third boundary involves overlapping jurisdictions: a resident of unincorporated Shelby County is simultaneously a constituent of the Shelby County Mayor, their county commission district representative, their state house and senate members, and their U.S. representative — but has no city mayor or city council member, because they live outside any incorporated municipality. This layering means that advocacy on a single issue such as road maintenance or public transit may require engagement with elected officials at 3 or more governmental levels simultaneously.

The homepage provides an orientation to the full scope of resources available for understanding how the Memphis metro region's governments function together and separately.

References