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Tuesday Primary Explainer
Voters across Mobile and Baldwin Counties head to the polls today for Alabama’s primary runoff elections, with several closely watched local races helping decide who advances to November’s general election ballot. Polls statewide open at 7 a.m. and close at 7 p.m., and election officials are reminding residents that anyone still in line at closing time will be allowed to cast a ballot.
Turnout in runoff elections is traditionally much lower than in regular primaries, but local officials say today's races will have a major impact on county government, courts, and local leadership across south Alabama. Campaigns have spent the last several weeks making a final push to voters through advertising, mailers, text messages, and community events ahead of Election Day.
There is also an unusual twist involving several congressional races appearing on ballots today. Four U.S. House district primaries are technically being voted on, but those results ultimately will not count because of ongoing federal court battles over Alabama’s congressional maps. The situation stems from the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent ruling in the Louisiana v. Callais redistricting case, followed by the high court vacating an earlier decision that forced Alabama to use congressional maps drawn by a court-appointed special master.
As a result, Alabama is reverting to congressional district lines passed by the Legislature back in 2023, and state officials have already scheduled a separate special primary election for August 11 using those maps. However, the legal fight is still not over. A federal court is expected to decide Friday whether Alabama can continue using the Legislature’s map or whether the state could once again be ordered to redraw district boundaries before the 2026 elections move forward.
Despite that uncertainty, local and county races on Tuesday’s ballot remain fully valid, and election officials are encouraging voters not to let the congressional map confusion keep them from participating in the runoff election.
Under Alabama law, voters must present a valid photo ID before receiving a ballot. Acceptable forms of identification include an Alabama driver’s license, non-driver ID card, U.S. passport, military ID, or several other government-issued photo IDs. Voters who do not have an acceptable ID can obtain a free voter photo identification card through the state.
Local probate offices say voters should double-check their polling locations before leaving home, since some precinct locations may have changed since previous elections. Officials also encourage voters to review sample ballots ahead of time to avoid confusion at the polls and help move lines more quickly throughout the day.
Results are expected to begin coming in shortly after polls close, although complete unofficial totals may take several hours depending on turnout and the number of precincts reporting. Voters can find polling locations and sample ballots through the Alabama Secretary of State’s office and local probate court websites before heading to the polls.
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Baykeeper's coal ash suit revived
A federal court has overturned a decision that threw out a legal challenge to Alabama Power's plan to bury 21 million tons of coal ash along the Mobile-Tensaw River.
Read More : Baykeeper's coal ash suit revived | Alabama | lagniappemobile.com
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Trump Says Planned Iran Attack On Hold After Gulf Leaders’ Request
WASHINGTON—President Trump said he would hold off on a planned U.S. attack on Iran at the request of Gulf leaders to make room for negotiations with Tehran over a prospective deal to end the war.
In a social-media post on Monday, Trump said he had directed Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and other U.S. military officials not to proceed with the attack, which he said was scheduled to take place on Tuesday. But he warned that he had “further instructed them to be prepared to go forward with a full, large-scale assault of Iran, on a moment’s notice, in the event that an acceptable Deal is not reached.”
The president said the leaders of Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates asked him to hold off on the attack because “serious negotiations are now taking place.” A day earlier, he warned that the “clock is ticking” and that if Iran didn’t move on peace negotiations “there won’t be anything left of them.”
Talking to reporters at an event on Monday, Trump said the prospect of a diplomatic breakthrough was “a very positive development, but we’ll see whether it amounts to anything.”
The White House didn’t provide additional details about the planned attack. Several Gulf officials from some of the countries Trump mentioned said they were not aware of the imminent plan to attack Iran he described.
Trump, who was scheduled to meet with national security advisers on Tuesday, had been leaning toward ordering an attack, according to a U.S. official. In recent weeks, he was advised by aides and outside allies that authorizing a limited strike could pressure Iran into a deal, the official said.
Trump’s post comes after weeks of stalled efforts to reach a deal to end the war since a fragile cease-fire was announced in April. Tehran has so far refused to meet U.S. demands that it dismantle key parts of its nuclear program and fully reopen the Strait of Hormuz, a critical waterway for the global oil trade. Iranian leaders responded to the latest U.S. proposal, delivered through Pakistani mediators, by offering a gradual reopening of the strait while leaving critical nuclear issues unsolved.
“This Deal will include, importantly, NO NUCLEAR WEAPONS FOR IRAN!” Trump wrote on Monday.
As Trump has wavered between threatening to resume a full-scale military assault on Iran and leaving open the prospect of a diplomatic settlement, the standoff has kept oil markets on edge, with Brent crude trading around $110 a barrel.
In Beijing last week, Trump sought Chinese President Xi Jinping’s help to get Iran to the table, according to a U.S. official. After the summit, the White House emphasized that both sides shared an interest in keeping the Strait of Hormuz open and preventing Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon. Secretary of State Marco Rubio later played down the outreach, saying that Trump “didn’t ask him for anything.”
Officials and analysts in the region say that despite the U.S. severely battering Iran’s leadership structure and defenses, the country still wields significant leverage over trade through the Strait of Hormuz, and its remaining stock of missiles and attack drones will make it difficult to return to a prewar status quo.
The roughly 11-week conflict is increasingly drawing in Gulf states, as Iran seeks to raise the costs for U.S. allies. Saudi Arabia and the U.A.E. have both carried out secret strikes on Iranian targets after attacks on their infrastructure and energy facilities, in an effort to restore military deterrence against Tehran. A drone sparked a fire near a nuclear power plant in the U.A.E. on Sunday. Saudi Arabia and Kuwait have also attacked Iran-backed militias in Iraq multiple times.
Trump has argued that the U.S. blockade of Iranian ports, and the broader economic pressure campaign officials have called “Operation Economic Fury,” will leave Tehran with few options. “It’s just a question of time, we don’t have to rush anything,” he said last week. “We have a blockade, which gives them no money, allows them no money.”
Since the naval blockade began on April 13, the U.S. military has diverted at least 85 ships and disabled four others, according to U.S. Central Command.
Read More : Trump Says Planned Iran Attack On Hold After Gulf Leaders’ Request - WSJ
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