Alabama
Opinion | America knows Katie Britt. Now she can focus on Alabama
On Monday, Alabama Senator Katie Britt got a rare second opportunity to introduce herself on the national stage. Offered the chance to make a primetime address at the Republican National Convention, she once again had the nation’s eyes on her.
Even though there’s only a hundred senators, very few people know many from outside their state. For that matter, far too few people know the senators from their state.
Do you know who the senators from Virginia are? I do—Tim Kaine and Mark Warner—but that’s only because I was born in that particular commonwealth.
When a senator gets the chance to introduce themselves to the nation, it can be a make-or-break moment. For Britt, it unfortunately looked like it might have been a break.
Even before Britt delivered the rebuttal to Biden’s State of the Union, her comms team was already telling conservatives to compare her to Reagan.
Then she actually went on live TV. Suddenly, everyone in America knew who Katie Britt was. Superstar Scarlett Johansson played the senator in that week’s SNL cold open, an experience Britt now jokingly calls her “gold star.”
Luckily for her, Britt’s speech Monday gave her another chance to talk to the American people, without the dubious fear-mongering and in a more measured voice.
She stuck to party lines in ways I still find distasteful, calling Donald Trump “the change we need” and attacking President Biden, but she also talked about important issues facing American families. Whether or not her comparison of Trump’s economy and Biden’s was totally accurate (it wasn’t), American families have undeniably been struggling with inflation recently.
This second, more successful debut gives Britt a great opportunity. An opportunity to learn from her political mentor and be the senator Alabama needs, if not the senator Alabama wants.
Alabamians want a conservative, fire-eating senator. They have one. They also need a dealmaker who can bring home the bacon.
When Senator Richard Shelby retired, a profile in the New York Times called him “one of the last of the big-time pork barrel legends.” From his seat on the Senate Appropriations Committee, he “funded roads and bridges and hospitals and public libraries and drinking water systems” in Alabama.
As a University of Alabama alum, I know just how successful he was firsthand. The over-200,000-square-foot Shelby Hall, a $50 million engineering center, makes an impression.
Before Britt gave Mo Brooks a drumming and entered the Senate, she had worked for Shelby off and on again for years. I hope it’s not too optimistic of me to say that I hope some of Shelby’s attitude might have rubbed off.
During her interview with Axios on Monday, Britt said she wants to support bipartisan bills. And she showed she knows Alabama needs federal money when she told the reporter that “about a third of our state does not have access to maternal care.”
According to the Lugar Center’s Bipartisan Index, though, she was the least bipartisan senator in 2023. (Her staff members have disputed the metric’s accuracy.)
Meanwhile, her fellow senator from Alabama, Tommy Tuberville, is hardly better. Tuberville seems to think bipartisan is some kind of fancy Washington cuss word.
Tuberville voted against the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, which was easily approved by a bipartisan supermajority. He voted against the CHIPS Act, which 17 Senate Republicans thought was a fine piece of legislation.
If you take a look at the list of Republican senators, Tuberville isn’t exactly the first guy Democrats will approach when they’re looking to pass a nonpartisan bill.
Attacking the troops for being too woke, spreading conspiracy theories about American foreign policy, and holding up military promotions are hardly the way to burnish one’s bipartisan credentials. According to some, his antics actually cost Alabama the opportunity to host the nation’s SPACECOM headquarters.
If Alabama needs federal money, and it does, Tuberville is not the senator to look to for help. Britt on the other hand studied under the best. Hopefully she took notes.
Per The Hill’s latest projections, Republicans are set to hold only 52 seats in the Senate. Folks who paid attention to the Biden White House’s negotiations with West Virginia Senator Joe Manchin know just how impactful one senator can be with such a narrow majority.
If Britt is willing to play power broker, I see no reason to believe she couldn’t build more bridges, both between the parties and here in Alabama. She might not have been the logrolling moderate Alabama needs last year, but she’s got four more years in her first term to make friends and make deals.
Of course, no matter what, Senator Britt will support conservative red meat bills I fear will just make people’s lives worse for no good reason.
But I hope she’ll be able to bring some federal money back to Alabama at the same time. God knows the state needs it.
Alabama
Alabama Adds JUCO Defensive Back, Tuscaloosa Native to 2026 Signing Class
Alabama football added another member to its 2026 signing class in cornerback Nick Sherman on Sunday evening.
Sherman is the Crimson Tide’s 24th signee, as this news comes 11 days after early national signing day.
The JUCO product was formerly at Itawamba Community College. The 6-foot-3, 190-pounder is also a Tuscaloosa native, as he went to Northridge High School.
This season at Itawamba CC, Sherman logged 24 tackles and two interceptions in eight games as a sophomore.
Sherman is the fifth defensive back in the Crimson Tide’s 2026 signing class, as he joins cornerbacks Zyan Gibson and Jorden Edmonds, along with safeties Jireh Edwards and Rihyael Kelley.
Coming HOME, COMMITTED 🐘🐘 . pic.twitter.com/6xKIhWIK56
— Nick “ vibez” Sherman ✞ (@nickvibeez) December 15, 2025
Alabama’s 2026 Signing Class
- CB Zyan Gibson, 5-foot-11, 177 lbs. – Gadsden, Alabama (Committed 12/24/2024)
- CB Jorden Edmonds, 6-foot-2, 175 lbs. – Marietta, Georgia (Committed 03/26/2025)
- EDGE Jamarion Matthews, 6-foot-2, 240 lbs. – Gainesville, Georgia (Committed 02/21/2025)
- EDGE Kamhariyan Johnson, 6-foot-4, 260 lbs. – Muscle Shoals, Alabama (Committed 04/12/2025)
- OL Chris Booker, 6-foot-4, 285 lbs. – Atlanta, Georgia (Committed 02/20/2025)
- QB Jett Thomalla, 6-foot-3, 205 lbs. – Omaha, Nebraska (Committed 06/17/2025)
- S Rihyael Kelley, 6-foot-3, 180 lbs. – Cincinnati, Ohio (Committed 06/23/2025)
- SN Eli Deutsch, 6-foot-2, 225 lbs. – Franklin, Wisconsin (Committed 06/24/2025)
- RB Ezavier Crowell, 5-foot-10, 210 lbs. – Jackson, Alabama (Committed 06/26/2025)
- TE Mack Sutter, 6-foot-5, 230 lbs. – Dunlap, Illinois (Committed 06/26/2025)
- LB Zay Hall, 6-foot-2, 222 lbs. – Tuscaloosa, Alabama (Committed 06/27/2025)
- LB Xavier Griffin, 6-foot-3, 200 lbs. – Gainesville, Georgia (Committed 06/29/2025)
- WR Cederian Morgan, 6-foot-4, 220 lbs – Alexander City, Alabama (Committed 07/02/2025)
- DL Nolan Wilson, 6-foot-4, 250 lbs. – Picayune, Mississippi (Committed 07/04/2025)
- S Jireh Edwards, 6-foot-2, 210 lbs. – Baltimore, Maryland (Committed 07/05/2025)
- QB Tayden Kaawa, 6-foot-5, 235 lbs. – Orem, Utah (Committed 07/22/2025)
- OT Bear Fretwell, 6-foot-6, 295 lbs. – Brooklet, Georgia (Committed 07/25/25)
- OT Jared Doughty, 6-foot-5, 300 lbs. – Atlanta, Georgia (Committed 10/05/2025)
- EDGE Corey Howard, 6-foot-6, 245 lbs. – Valdosta, Georgia (Committed 10/19/2025)
- OL Tyrell Miller, 6-foot-5, 305 lbs. – College of San Mateo (Committed 11/29/2025)
- EDGE Malique Franklin, 6-foot-5, 250 lbs. – Daphne, Alabama (Committed 12/02/2025)
- TE Jude Cascone, 6-foot-2, 225 lbs. – Marietta, Georgia (Committed 11/30/2025)
- RB Traeshawn Brown, 5-foot-10, 190 lb. – Huntsville, Texas (Committed 12/04/2025)
- CB Nick Sherman, 6-foot-3, 190 lb, – Tuscaloosa, Alabama (Committed 12/14/25)
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Alabama
Alabama community rallies to save Ringo, an injured dog looking for a home: ‘Full of hope’
Ringo, an abandoned puppy that was dropped off at the Madison Police Department earlier this week, will get the surgery he needs thanks to an outpouring of donations from the city’s residents.
On Dec. 9, the Madison Police Department said in a Facebook post it was trying to raise $2,000 so Ringo could get an injured leg amputated.
“Citizens of Madison, we need your help. Recently, an abandoned and abused puppy was brought to us—sweet, loving, and still full of hope despite what he’s been through,” the post said.
“To give him the chance at a healthy, happy life, he needs a surgery to amputate an injured leg. Once he recovers, he’ll be ready for adoption and would make an incredible addition to a loving Madison family—just in time for Christmas.”
Just three days later, the department said in an update that they’d raised the money they needed, and Ringo would get his surgery in the middle of January.
During a vet visit, the pup was given a clean bill of health and all his required shots.
“We completely met the goal and could not have done it without the help of all our citizens here so we greatly appreciate everything you guys donated for him,” an update video said.
Now the police department is asking for the community to step up again and help get Ringo adopted before his surgery.
“Our next thing we can do is have him adopted. He is ready to go into somebody’s home so he can get acclimated and ready to go before his surgery,” the post said.
Anyone interested in adopting Ringo is asked to call Madison’s Animal Control at 256-772-5694.
Alabama
BamaCentral Courtside From Arizona’s 96-75 Win Over Alabama
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — No. 12 Alabama fell to No. 1 Arizona in Legacy Arena in the fifth annual C.M. Newton Classic. The Crimson Tide held a 2-point halftime lead, but got decimated in the second half, opening the first six minutes of the second frame with just two field goals made.
The top-ranked Wildcats went on to claim a 96-75 victory and dropped the Crimson Tide’s record in the event to 2-3.
“They’re obviously a really good team,” Nate Oats said. “There’s a reason they’re number one in the country. I thought the first half we played pretty well. We were down five on the glass and needed to clean it up a little bit, and then the second half we had this issue where we just haven’t had very good starts to the second half. We came out and didn’t have a very good start, and it got progressively worse. I think they scored, shoot 39 the entire first half. They had 39 in less than 12 minutes to start the second half.
“Start of the second half was bad. Obviously, they came out of halftime ready to play; we didn’t. The toughness factor was a problem. It’s impossible – I shouldn’t say impossible. It’s nearly impossible to win a game when your opponent gets 28 more field goal attempts than you. If you look, we outshot them from the field and from the free throw line, both percentage-wise. Free throws, they made one more free throw than we did and they got 28 more field goal attempts. You can’t win games giving your opponent 28 more field goal attempts. Offensive glass we had three the whole game, they had 22. We lost the rebounds by 20 again. This has been a recurring issue for us.”
Alabama History in C.M. Newton Classic
- 2021 – Davidson 79, Alabama 78
- 2022 – Gonzaga 100, Alabama 90
- 2023 – Alabama 101, Liberty 56
- 2024 – Alabama 100, Illinois 87
- 2025 – Arizona 96, Alabama 75
Watch the above video as BamaCentral writers Katie Windham, Hunter De Siver, and Will Miller, provide thoughts and takeaways from the Alabama men’s basketball team’s 96-75 loss against the Arizona Wildcats on Saturday. The trio discusses the performance of the No. 12 Crimson Tide and the rebounding issues that continue to plague the program.
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