-
Alabama Legislature Nears End of Special Session on Redistricting Bills
The Alabama Legislature is wrapping up a special session called by Governor Kay Ivey — and it could be done as soon as today. At issue: two companion bills that would trigger special primary elections if federal courts lift injunctions blocking previously drawn congressional and state senate maps. Both bills cleared committee Thursday on party-line votes and are headed to final floor votes Friday.
The session was called after the U.S. Supreme Court's 6-3 ruling in Louisiana v. Callais, which held that race-based redistricting is unconstitutional. Alabama moved quickly after that ruling, asking courts to lift injunctions on maps drawn by state lawmakers in 2023. Those maps had already been blocked once — a three-judge panel found the 2023 congressional map likely violated the Voting Rights Act. A court-appointed special master drew the map currently in use.
If the injunctions are lifted, the legislation would require special elections using the older maps. The practical effect: Alabama would likely send six Republicans to Congress instead of five — and Mobile's Shomari Figures, the Democrat who flipped the Second Congressional District in 2024, could lose his seat.
Figures testified before the Senate committee Thursday, pushing back on the legislation. "This isn't about my seat," he said. "This is about what's right for the state of Alabama — and there's no group of people in this nation, in this state that have paid a greater debt to building this state than Black people."
Thursday's House committee hearing drew a loud and contentious crowd. Protesters chanted "no justice, no peace" at one point, briefly halting the meeting. State Rep. Joe Lovvorn (R-Auburn) paused proceedings to address the disruption — and was met with a wave of shouting and chanting in response. Opponents accused lawmakers of trying to suppress Black voters. State Sen. Linda Coleman-Madison (D-Birmingham) called the legislation the start of a "new Jim Crow" era.
Supporters of the bill, including Mobile Republican Chris Pringle, argued the legislation is more limited than critics claim. "If they agree with our legal arguments, then we will have a special election in those two districts," Pringle said. "If they don't agree with our arguments — nothing. There's no election. There's no cost."
The bills now await full floor votes. If both pass Friday, the legislature is expected to adjourn and send the measures to Governor Ivey's desk
-
U.S. Strikes Iranian Forces in Strait of Hormuz as CIA Warns Iran Could Last 120 Days
American forces struck Iranian military targets Thursday after Iran launched missiles, drones, and small boats at three U.S. Navy destroyers transiting the Strait of Hormuz — and President Trump is calling it a "love tap."
U.S. Central Command confirmed that the USS Truxtun, USS Rafael Peralta, and USS Mason came under fire as they passed through the international waterway into the Gulf of Oman. No American assets were hit. CENTCOM said it eliminated the incoming threats and targeted Iranian missile and drone launch sites, command-and-control facilities, and surveillance nodes responsible for the attacks. "CENTCOM does not seek escalation," the command said, "but remains positioned and ready to protect American forces."
Trump, in a phone call with ABC News correspondent Rachel Scott, downplayed the severity of the exchange. When Scott asked whether the strikes signaled the end of the ceasefire that has been in place since April 7th, Trump replied: "No, no, the ceasefire is going. It's in effect." In a later Truth Social post, Trump claimed the Iranian attackers were "completely destroyed" and warned that if Iran doesn't sign a deal "FAST," the U.S. would respond "a lot harder, and a lot more violently" in the future.
Iran pushed back sharply, accusing the United States of violating the ceasefire. Iranian state media reported that the U.S. struck an Iranian oil tanker near the Strait of Hormuz and attacked civilian areas along the coasts of Bandar Khamir, Sirik, and Qeshm Island. The U.S. has not confirmed those claims.
Meanwhile, a classified CIA assessment obtained by The Washington Post is raising serious questions about the administration's broader strategy. The intelligence report, delivered to senior policymakers this week, concluded that Iran can likely withstand the U.S. naval blockade for roughly 120 days before facing severe economic collapse — directly contradicting Trump's public claim Wednesday that Iran's missile arsenal had been "mostly decimated."
According to officials familiar with the report, Iran still retains approximately 70 percent of its pre-war missile stockpile and around 75 percent of its mobile launchers. Tehran has also managed to reopen underground storage facilities and repair damaged weapons systems. One U.S. official warned the CIA assessment may even underestimate Iran's resilience, saying the country's leadership has grown "more radical, determined, and increasingly confident they can outlast U.S. political will."
The White House defended the blockade, saying Iran is losing $500 million per day and that the pressure campaign is accelerating economic collapse. But analysts caution that Iran has adapted — storing oil on tankers, reducing production to preserve infrastructure, and exploring overland export routes through Central Asia.
Perhaps most concerning for global markets: analysts warn Iran's drone capabilities remain a serious threat to commercial shipping in the strait. Former Israeli intelligence official Danny Citrinowicz told the Post that even limited drone attacks could freeze global oil traffic, because insurers would refuse to cover tankers in the region. Citrinowicz also cautioned that despite battlefield gains, the war could ultimately strengthen the Iranian regime — leaving Tehran with significant missile capability and continued uranium enrichment capacity when the fighting is done.
-
Aniah Blanchard's Killer Sentenced to Life in Prison
A judge has sentenced the man convicted of killing 19-year-old Aniah Blanchard to life in prison — and her family says justice has been served.
Ibraheem Yazeed received two concurrent life sentences Thursday in Macon County, with the possibility of parole. A jury convicted him in March of felony murder and murder in the 2019 shooting death of Blanchard, a Southern Union College student from Homewood. The charges were reduced from capital murder, meaning the death penalty was off the table at sentencing. The life sentences are the maximum Yazeed could receive for those convictions.
Blanchard was last seen in the early morning hours of October 24th, 2019, after surveillance footage placed her at a convenience store along South College Street in Auburn — where she encountered Yazeed. Her remains were found a month later in a wooded area in Shorter, Alabama. Her cellphone was never recovered.
Outside the courthouse, Blanchard's mother, Angela Haley Harris, told reporters she had been nervous going in. "I'm happy that justice was served," she said. "My daughter fought a very violent criminal — and she got him off the street so he can never hurt anybody again." Her father, Elijah Blanchard, said simply: "Today, God has spoken."
Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall called the life sentence what the crime demanded. Yazeed's attorneys say they plan to appeal, maintaining their client was made a scapegoat on false evidence.
The case left a lasting mark on Alabama law. Yazeed was out on bond — for an attempted murder charge — when Blanchard was killed. Her death sparked Aniah's Law, approved by Alabama voters in 2022, which expanded the list of offenses for which a defendant can be held without bail. Her mother has since founded a nonprofit, Aniah's Heart, focused on safety education for young people — and says she plans to keep that work going.
This Morning with Gordon Deal
FM Talk 1065
Mobile Mornings with Dan Brennan and Dalton Orwig
FM Talk 1065
The Jeff Poor Show
FM Talk 1065
Midday Mobile
FM Talk 1065
The Paul Finebaum Show
FM Talk 1065
The Michael Berry Show
FM Talk 1065
Sweet Home CannaBama
FM Talk 1065
Tonight in Mobile with Mr. Mobile
FM Talk 1065
The Joe Pags Show
FM Talk 1065
The Dana Show
FM Talk 1065
This Morning with Gordon Deal
FM Talk 1065
Mobile Mornings with Dan Brennan and Dalton Orwig
FM Talk 1065
The Jeff Poor Show
FM Talk 1065
Midday Mobile
FM Talk 1065
The Paul Finebaum Show
FM Talk 1065
The Michael Berry Show
FM Talk 1065
The George Williams Show
FM Talk 1065
Beyond the Blockchain
FM Talk 1065
The Joe Pags Show
FM Talk 1065
The Dana Show
FM Talk 1065
This Morning with Gordon Deal
FM Talk 1065
Mobile Mornings with Dan Brennan and Dalton Orwig
FM Talk 1065
The Jeff Poor Show
FM Talk 1065
Midday Mobile
FM Talk 1065
The Paul Finebaum Show
FM Talk 1065
The Michael Berry Show
FM Talk 1065
Scuttlebutt Radio
FM Talk 1065
The Joe Pags Show
FM Talk 1065
The Dana Show
FM Talk 1065
This Morning with Gordon Deal
FM Talk 1065
Mobile Mornings with Dan Brennan and Dalton Orwig
FM Talk 1065
The Jeff Poor Show
FM Talk 1065
Midday Mobile
FM Talk 1065
The Paul Finebaum Show
FM Talk 1065
The Michael Berry Show
FM Talk 1065
FM Talk 1065 - Best of the Week
FM Talk 1065
The Joe Pags Show
FM Talk 1065
The Dana Show
FM Talk 1065
This Morning with Gordon Deal
FM Talk 1065
Mobile Mornings with Dan Brennan and Dalton Orwig
FM Talk 1065
The Jeff Poor Show
FM Talk 1065
Midday Mobile
FM Talk 1065
The Paul Finebaum Show
FM Talk 1065
The Michael Berry Show
FM Talk 1065
FM Talk 1065 - Best of the Week
FM Talk 1065
The Joe Pags Show
FM Talk 1065
Outdoors Show with Don Dubuc
FM Talk 1065
FMTalk1065 Outdoors
FM Talk 1065
Prep Sports Report
FM Talk 1065
Southern Fairways
FM Talk 1065
FMTalk1065 - Best of the Week
FM Talk 1065
Retire Right Radio
FM Talk 1065
The Jolene Roxbury Variety Hour
FM Talk 1065
The Kim Komando Show
FM Talk 1065
Free Talk Live
FM Talk 1065
FMTalk1065 Outdoors
FM Talk 1065
Free Talk Live
FM Talk 1065
FMTalk1065 Best of the Week (Sunday AM)
FM Talk 1065
FMTalk1065 Outdoors
FM Talk 1065
The Jolene Roxbury Variety Hour
FM Talk 1065
Truitt News Radio
FM Talk 1065
Plain Living with Bill Finch
FM Talk 1065
Sip & Chew with Mike & Stu
FM Talk 1065
Coasting in Retirement with Josh Null
FM Talk 1065
What Would Your Money Say? with Swan Capital
FM Talk 1065
This Weekend with Gordon Deal
FM Talk 1065
Talking Dirty
FM Talk 1065
Relax and Retire Financial Services
FM Talk 1065
FM Talk - Best of the Week
FM Talk 1065
Plain Living with Bill Finch
FM Talk 1065
FMTalk1065 Outdoors
FM Talk 1065
Prep Sports Report (Sunday Replay)
FM Talk 1065
Free Talk Live
FM Talk 1065