Alabama
GOP congressional hopeful takes sides in a political drama over Alabama Democratic delegates
A potential Democratic National Convention fracas involving dueling slates of delegates from Alabama has drawn the interest of the Republican candidate running in Alabama’s 2nd congressional district, and she’s taking sides.
Caroleene Dobson, who is battling Democratic nominee Shomari Figures in a rare contested General Election race for an Alabama congressional seat, said in a news release Thursday that she is siding with state Democratic Party Chair Randy Kelley in his spat with the Democratic National Committee over who is allowed to show up to Chicago next week as part of the state party’s delegates.
“Let me be clear, I agree with Chairman Kelley that overturning the Alabama Democrats’ slate of delegates prevents African-Americans from holding the seats they were already awarded, which is a shameful and unfair practice from any angle you view it,” Dobson said in a news release sent out earlier this month.
Figures, in a rebuttal, emailed AL.com Thursday and said that if Dobson is worried about Democratic Party matters, then “she should just join” the party.
“And I promise, once she goes Democrat, she won’t go back,” Figures said.
Supporting Kelley
Alabama Congressional District 2 raceAL.com
Dobson called out Figures to take sides in the continuing dispute between Kelley and the DNC over the party delegates and who should be allowed to show up to vote on the floor of the DNC next week at the United Center in Chicago.
Kelley remains upset that 36 of the state party’s delegates were rejected by the DNC late last month, and Dobson said they were “unilaterally rejected and replaced” by the Biden/Harris campaign and the “prominent Democrats” supporting Figures’ campaign.
“Chairman Kelley is 100% correct when he says that Alabama delegates should be selected by Alabamians, not be a secret group of Washington, D.C. elites supporting Shomari Figures and his campaign,” Dobson said.
Dobson said Figures should either support Kelley “and the Black delegates he is fighting to protect” or take sides with what she said were the “unelected delegates that are being forced down the throats of Alabama Democrats” by the national party.
Two-thirds of the delegates going to Chicago are Black people, including state Rep. Barbara Drummond, D-Mobile.
“The goal of all Democrats is not fighting over delegates, but to make sure both Shomari Figures and Kamala Harris and Tim Walz get elected,” Drummond said. “That’s the sole goal. This is not about a power struggle, but to make sure those running for the Democratic seats get elected.”
Dobson, though, said Figures should comment on a controversy within his own political party, adding that “only a coward tries to hide behind silence on important issues like delegate controversy.”
Name calling
Shomari Figures, a Democratic candidate for Alabama’s 2nd congressional district, speaks during a forum featuring 10 candidates (eight Democrats, and two Republicans) on Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2024, at the Sunlight District Auditorium in Prichard, Ala.John Sharp/jsharp@al.com
Figures, in his statement emailed to AL.com, shot back by calling Dobson “Alabama’s Marjorie Taylor Greene,” in reference to fiery right-wing congresswoman from neighboring Georgia.
“A privileged billionaire calling a Black man in Alabama a coward – for the second time – because he won’t do what she says?” Figures said. “Is that what leadership looks like?”
He added, “The name calling is pathetic, and honestly, just sad. As my 4-year-old son would say, ‘that’s not nice.” It’s the type of rhetoric people across this District are just tired of. I’ll pray for her.”
Figures said if Dobson “cares so much about Black people,” she should consider the following:
- Not support the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025, massive document that outlines suggestions on a host of issues for consideration if a Republican is elected president. The document includes considerations to restrict Medicaid and Medicare access and mail-order abortion pills, has drawn scrutiny in recent weeks and was denounced by former President Donald Trump. Dobson has said she is “wholly unfamiliar” with the project, but the Figures campaign said her policies align the controversial document.
- Tell the State of Alabama to expand Medicaid, which he said would grant more healthcare access to thousands of Black people.
- Stop supporting efforts to “defund public schools.”
- Explain why she hasn’t led efforts to integrate her high school – Monroe Academy, which she graduated from in 2005. Accounts have surfaced in recent days that Dobson attended a so-called “segregation academy” that was formed as private school formed to sidestep Brown v. Board of Education ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1954 that ruled school segregation unconstitutional.
Figures blasted Dobson saying she likely didn’t attend a school with a Black person until “she left Alabama and went to Harvard in 2005. Now she has the answers on Black representation issues? I think not.”
The Alabama Democratic Party has not weighed in on Dobson’s statements. A party spokesperson did not return requests for comment.
Former Democratic U.S. Senator Doug Jones, in a statement to AL.com, said Dobson’s opinion on a Democratic Party matter is “laughable.”
“The nominee of a political party with such a rich history of minority voter suppression, including their efforts today, has no credibility opinion on something they have no clue about,” Jones said. “But the statement is pretty typical for Republicans these days where facts simply do not matter and these guys clearly do not know the facts.”
Delegate controversy
The delegate controversy arose anew this week after Kelley threatened legal action and accused those denying the certification of the 36 delegates as having racist motivations.
Those comments followed a July 25 news release in which Kelley claims the Alabama Democratic Party “is the only bona fide group that can do business in Alabama for Democrats,” and is the “only group that can make rules for how Democrats are elected.” The statement also alleges that an “illegal, self-serving group” was usurping the role of the state party by appointing the delegates to the DNC.
Democratic National Committee Chairman Jaime Harrison (AP Photo/Meg Kinnard, File)AP
Democratic National Committee Chair Jaime Harrison weighed in earlier this month by writing to Kelley that the state party missed deadlines to make delegate selections or challenge selections. Harrison also stated that all delegates were selected according to the state’s own regulations.
Alabama’s delegate selection plan, like those of other states, allows presidential candidates rights of review for each delegate candidate pledged to them.
“Refrain from any further miscommunication or misinformation to convention participants,” Harrison wrote to Kelley.
The delegate drama in Alabama is likely to have no impact on the pending nomination of Harris as the Democratic presidential nominee. The DNC confirmed earlier this month that Harris had garnered enough delegates to secure the nomination.
Jess Brown, a retired political science professor and a longtime observer of state politics in Alabama, said the national Democratic Party has the final say on who gets to participate as a delegate during the convention.
The U.S. Supreme Court has also ruled on the matter. In 1981, in Democratic Party v. Wisconsin, the court ruled in a 6-3 vote that state election law cannot preempt the delegate selection mechanisms of a national political party for that party’s national convention.
“Basically, we’ve had both conservative and liberal justices on the high court rule that basically a national party rules prevail in terms of this meeting of a private association,” Brown said. My guess is this disgruntled faction in the Alabama Democratic Party might make noise. If national party officials want to appease them in some way, they might do so. But as far as going to the convention and finding a way other than appeasement to get a vote, they will just be at the mercy of the national party.”
Strategic approach
Brown, though, said he can see the strategy utilized by Dobson to attract Black voters who are the majority in the redrawn 2nd congressional district. The district, currently represented by Republican U.S. Rep. Barry Moore of Enterprise, was drawn to benefit a Democratic politician after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled last year that Alabama’s congressional map violated the Voting Rights Act of 1965. As a result, the newly redrawn map includes the 2nd district that gives Black voters a better opportunity to electing a candidate of their choosing.
The seat takes in all or part of 13 counties from Montgomery to Mobile and from the Georgia line to the Mississippi line.
“The effort by her suggest she is trying to get a sliver of the African American vote, particularly the Joe Reed faction in Montgomery, a faction that wasn’t happy with the Democratic primary (in the 2nd district) anyway,” said Brown.
Reed, an ally to Kelly and a longtime political powerbroker in Montgomery, requested in March that Figures and his Democratic primary runoff opponent Anthony Daniels – the state representative from Huntsville – be kicked off the ballot amid questions he raised over the possibilities of Republicans providing financial support to both candidates.
Joe Reed
Reed, who heads up the Alabama Democratic Conference, endorsed state Rep. Napoleon Bracy of Saraland during the Democratic primary.
The ADC did endorse Figures ahead of the primary runoff in April.
“The race (between Figures and Dobson) is expected to be very close and every niche of the electorate matters,” Brown said. “She saw an opportunity to peel off the small subset of African American voters, and the Reed faction with its dispute with the national party, and she seized on that moment.”
Alabama
Marques surges past Carl in Alabama congressional race as former congressman’s comeback bid stalls — 45% still undecided
State Rep. Rhett Marques (R-Enterprise) opened a six-point lead over former U.S. Rep. Jerry Carl (R-Mobile) in the Alabama congressional race for the First District, and Carl’s comeback bid shows no signs of catching up.
The PI Polling survey, conducted May 2 through May 4 for Alabama Daily News, puts Marques at 27% and Carl at 21% among likely Republican primary voters. Joshua McKee trailed at 4%.
The trend line tells the sharper story. Marques climbed steadily across three consecutive PI Polling surveys, rising from 19% in early April to 22% later that month to 27% now. Carl posted 23%, 20%, and 21% across the same stretch. Marques is building. Carl is treading water.
Forty-five percent of likely Republican primary voters remain undecided, meaning the Alabama congressional race will be decided by which campaign breaks through in the final two weeks.
Carl pulls 46% in Mobile County, home turf for the former county commissioner and congressman.
That advantage vanishes everywhere else. Marques leads in Baldwin County, holds a 32-to-6 edge in the Dothan media market, and dominates the district’s rural and exurban counties at 38% to Carl’s 5%.
The Alabama congressional race outside Mobile belongs to Marques.
Marques also leads Carl across every ideological group the survey tracked: very conservative voters at 29% to 21%, somewhat conservative voters at 26% to 21%, and moderates at 26% to 19%.
His favorability climbed from 24% in early April to 32% now, with just 9% unfavorable. Fifty-nine percent of voters still have no opinion of him, leaving significant room to grow as the primary closes.
Alabama requires a majority to win a party primary outright. If no candidate clears 50% on May 19, the top two finishers will advance to a runoff on June 16. With nearly half the electorate still uncommitted, a runoff remains a very real possibility.
The survey was conducted May 2 through May 4, 2026 by PI Polling for Alabama Daily News. It included 531 likely Republican primary election voters and was weighted to match likely 2026 turnout demographics. The margin of error is ±4.3% at a 95% level of confidence.
Sawyer Knowles is a capitol reporter for Yellowhammer News. You may contact him at [email protected].
Alabama
How Kalen DeBoer is building Alabama football quarterback room
Kalen DeBoer explains Austin Mack Alabama football A-Day snap total
Here’s what Kalen DeBoer said about Alabama quarterback Austin Mack’s A-Day performance.
While recruiting, Alabama football coach Kalen DeBoer never promises anything. Ever.
And in the Crimson Tide’s quarterback room, that approach works.
It’s what kept Austin Mack, the fourth-year DeBoer disciple, and former five-star Keelon Russell in the same 2026 quarterback room, along with freshmen Jett Thomalla and Tayden-Evan Kaawa. It’s what convinced five-star Elijah Haven to join a 2027 recruiting class that already had four-star Trent Seaborn committed.
This is Alabama’s development-forward quarterback philosophy, at least for now.
“What you can show them is the past and whatever we’ve done, what it looked like for those quarterbacks,” DeBoer told The Tuscaloosa News. “Their success and production when they were in college, the growth and how that led to them going to the next level. You show them the past and then you show them what we have here at Alabama.”
It’s the story of Alabama’s 2026 room, one where the eventually-named starter — whether it’s Mack or Russell — will have waited his turn, will have watched and learned. That’s the path DeBoer wants, even if it’s not the same path other college football powers take.
In the 12-team 2025 College Football Playoff fold, seven offenses were led by a veteran transfer quarterback, including each one that ended up in the CFP national championship game.
DeBoer has had transfers. Oregon State transfer Marcus McMaryion was his quarterback at Fresno State in 2017 and 2018. Washington transfer Jake Haener was DeBoer’s quarterback at Fresno State in 2020 and 2021. Michael Penix Jr. followed DeBoer to Washington in 2022 from Indiana. And Mack followed DeBoer to Tuscaloosa.
But in terms of proven entities, in terms of rentals for one last run at a national championship, that doesn’t seem to be DeBoer’s style.
“To me, what you’d love to have is a guy who can come in and he can feel comfortable when his time comes,” DeBoer said. “Sooner than later is what they are hoping for, but (to be) so comfortable with the offense, the people around him and what it looks like leadership wise.”
This is the story of Ty Simpson, who had the respect of his teammates after seasons of work in the shadows. DeBoer knew exactly who Simpson was as a person. DeBoer understood Simpson’s strengths enough to put him in a position to succeed.
“The more knowledge they have of the offense, the easier it is to make checks and execute in the biggest moments that they are going to be in here,” DeBoer said.
That’s a part of Alabama’s recruiting pitch at quarterback, something DeBoer and company made clear to Haven. And it’s a philosophy that may not remain stagnant.
“Just because Alabama hasn’t necessarily dipped into the transfer portal a whole lot over the last, whatever, five, six years that that’s really become such a big thing, that doesn’t mean that can’t change because, certainly, you got to win and you got to win now,” The Dunham School football coach Neil Weiner said. “Sometimes those older, veteran guys are the ones that do it. I think Elijah understands that. I don’t think he’s worried about who will come in in the future.”
No promises were made in Alabama’s quarterback room. But the pitch remains clear and consistent, one players continue to buy into.
“I think it’s just making it very clear and then what happens is guys who really want to be pushed to be the best,” DeBoer said. “And (if) it’s actually who they are, they end up being attracted to that, and they want to be a part of it.”
Colin Gay covers Alabama football for The Tuscaloosa News, part of the USA TODAY Network. Reach him at cgay@gannett.com or follow him @_ColinGay on X, formerly known as Twitter.
Alabama
Alabama AG files emergency request to reinstate congressional map before May 19 primary
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (WBMA) — Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall is asking a federal court to allow the state to use its own congressional district map ahead of the May 19 primary, arguing that the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision has changed the legal landscape for voting rights redistricting challenges.
Marshall filed an emergency motion with the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Alabama seeking to lift injunctions that have blocked Alabama from using the congressional map enacted by the Legislature. The request follows what Marshall described as a landmark Supreme Court ruling last week that “significantly changed the legal standards governing voting rights redistricting claims.”
In that ruling, the Supreme Court held that states have authority to draw district lines based on political and traditional geographic considerations, and that challengers must show race — not partisan politics — drove a state’s decisions. The court also held that pointing to racially polarized voting patterns alone is not enough to prove a violation without also showing the voting patterns could not be explained by party affiliation.
“The Supreme Court has confirmed that the claims that led to the injunctions against Alabama’s map are no longer viable,” Marshall said. “We are asking the court to lift those injunctions so that Alabama can conduct its congressional elections using the map its legislature lawfully enacted.”
The filing is the latest in a series of actions Marshall has taken since the Supreme Court’s ruling in Louisiana v. Callais. On April 30, Marshall filed emergency motions with the U.S. Supreme Court asking it to vacate the congressional map injunctions and remand the cases. On May 4, he filed a separate emergency motion with the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals seeking to lift injunctions involving a different set of maps — Alabama’s state Senate districts.
The motion filed today asks the original district court that issued the congressional map injunctions to stay its own orders while appeals continue.
Gov. Kay Ivey has called the Alabama Legislature into a special session this week to prepare for the possibility that elections may proceed under the state’s map. Marshall asked the court to rule no later than 3 p.m. tomorrow, May 6, saying the state needs time to make preparations before the primary.
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“Alabama deserves the same opportunity as every other state to conduct its elections in an orderly manner using a map drawn by its own legislature,” Marshall said. “I will continue to do everything in my power to make that a reality. We are confident the court will recognize that last week’s Supreme Court decision requires a fresh look at these injunctions.”
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