Today’s runoff election in the Alabama GOP gubernatorial
primary features a stealth
Democrat backed by the state’s powerful teachers union:
Top Alabama Republicans are scrambling to rally around
gubernatorial candidate Bradley Byrne, concluding that
remaining on the sidelines in Tuesday’s primary runoff would
aid and abet Democratic prospects in the fall - and potentially
beyond.
Over the past four days, Gov. Bob Riley and two of the state’s
congressmen publicly signaled their support for Byrne, while
Sen. Jeff Sessions sent a letter to the state party chairman,
complaining about “negative campaign ads that unfairly distort
the record” of Byrne, former chancellor of the state’s two-year
college system.
This last-ditch, election eve effort for Byrne is in direct
response to fears that state Rep. Robert Bentley, a physician,
is too closely aligned with the Alabama Education Association,
which is headed by two vice chairmen of the state Democratic
Party.
Sessions has gone so far as to accuse top AEA official and
Democratic power broker Paul Hubbert of infiltrating the GOP
primary by pouring millions of dollars into ads attacking
Byrne.
Meanwhile, in Alabama’s 2nd Congressional District,
Montgomery City Commissioner Martha Roby faces businessman Rick
Barber in the GOP runoff for the chance to take on Democratic
Rep. Bobby Bright in November. Although Roby is heavily favored
— she got 48 percent of the vote in last month’s four-candidate
primary — Barber has gained national attention with provocative
TV ads.
One of Barber’s ads was
denounced by Washington Post columnist Ruth Marcus
as “[e]mblematic of the dangerous take-back-our-country rhetoric
that is spread on the conservative airwaves and fueling the Tea
Partyers.” Barber
responded Saturday with an op-ed column in the Post:
I take Barack Obama at his word that he wants to fundamentally
transform America. His actions, words and policy suggest that
he doesn’t much care for the free market or our American
heritage. I am one who doesn’t believe that America needs
fundamental transformation… .
Whenever the government grows, individual liberty withers. And
there seems to be no area of commerce or industry where the
Obama administration is not asserting new government control.
Polls in Alabama close at 7 p.m. Central (8 p.m. Eastern).
Dixie Pixie| 7.13.10 @ 3:58PM
As of 2:00 central standard time the local poll workers have reported the turnout to be light. The poll workers expect to final turnout to be at best, around 50% of a general election.