Sheryl Crow on ‘keeping it real,’ Rock Hall nomination
Sheryl Crow chats with USA TODAY’s Ralphie Aversa about her Grammy experience and her Rock and Roll Hall of Fame nomination.
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- Sheryl Crow, a Tennessee resident, actively voices her progressive political views, regularly contacting her representatives.
- Crow expresses concern about the influence of money in politics and advocates for increased voter participation.
- She faces backlash for her outspokenness, particularly in her home state, and has even experienced a threatening encounter.
Sheryl Crow is getting candid about politics and her personal life.
In a cover story for Variety’s Power of Women Nashville issue, Crow opened up about voicing her progressive political views in her home state, as well as the challenges that come with being outspoken.
“Tennessee is a hard place for me. I mean, I struggle,” said Crow, who moved to Nashville from Los Angeles in 2007. “I call my representatives (in Congress) every single morning — Andy Ogles and Marsha Blackburn hear from me every day — because we have to stand up and be vocal and fight for the future for our kids.”
Crow wonders if they’re laughing when they hear her daily voicemails.
“But it’s like what Jimmy Carter said: As long as there’s legal bribery, we won’t ever have fair elections,” she said. “So we have to keep raising our voices and showing up to these organized rallies.”
Sheryl Crow isn’t one to shy away from politics
Over the years, Crow hasn’t been one to stay mum about her political leanings.
She criticized the sale of guns at Walmart in the ’90s through song, has been vocal about environmental protections, and has occasionally become the target of conservative backlash from those who don’t agree with her stances.
Naturally, she can’t help speaking out, she said. “I feel like I’m fighting for my kids,” she added. “Also, that’s the way I was raised.”
Sheryl Crow says armed man broke onto her property after selling Tesla
A few months ago, Crow sold her Tesla, posting a video of the car being towed away on social media. “My parents always said… you are who you hang out with. There comes a time when you have to decide who you are willing to align with. So long Tesla,” Crow wrote in her Instagram caption.
“Money donated to @npr, which is under threat by President Musk, in hopes that the truth will continue to find its way to those willing to know the truth.”
After posting the video, Crow said the response she experienced was a little different than other times she has spoken up.
“When I came out against Walmart carrying guns (in a 1996 song), not everybody was armed — and certainly I didn’t live in Tennessee, where everybody is armed,” Crow told Variety.
“So yeah, there was a moment where I actually really felt very afraid. A man got on my property, in my barn, who was armed. It doesn’t feel safe when you’re dealing with people who are so committed.”
The comments were referring to Musk’s entrance into Washington as President Trump’s second term began. Musk has said he wants to reshape the American government by dramatically reducing the size and scope of federal departments and agencies.
Musk, the world’s richest man, serves as the head of Trump’s newly created Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE. Crow has long been critical of Trump, suggesting that he “undermines” America in an interview with The Syndey Morning Herald in 2017.
“How can someone work every single day to make sure the country is divided? It breaks my heart,” she said at the time, adding that “He undermines it (America) with his … I want to say ineptitude but unfortunately it’s deeper than that.”
Sheryl Crow supports Natural Resources Defense Council for Variety Power of Women event
For Variety’s first-ever Power of Women Nashville event, which follows the magazine issue, Crow was honored alongside country singers Mickey Guyton, Reba McEntire and Kelsea Ballerini.
The event, which includes a charitable component, Crow is urging support for the Natural Resources Defense Council, a group that fights for environmental protection through legal avenues.
“I’ve always been so vigilant about climate change,” Crow said.
“My parents said, ‘You need to leave the campground nicer than you found it,’ and we always did … let’s face it, I may not be here to see my kids teach their kids how to leave the campground nicer than they found it,” she continued. “And who knows what the campground’s gonna be like when they get it. That concerns me.”
“Right now, this organism that we live on is being disregarded, particularly by this administration, who not only don’t have it in their consciousness, it’s seen as a nuisance to business,” Crow added.
“So for me, it’s really important that this organization exists to defend our national lands and to protect our water and air.”
Contributing: Jay Stahl
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