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Leave your feedback Share Copy URL https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/live-results-alabama-midterm-primary-runoffs Email Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Tumblr Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Live Results: Alabama midterm primary runoffs Politics Jun 16, 2026 3:15 PM EDT WASHINGTON (AP) — Alabama voters will return to the polls Tuesday to finalize nominees for an open U.S. Senate seat and a handful of other contests in which no candidate received a majority of votes in the May 19 primary. READ MORE: Alabama Rep. Barry Moore, former Navy SEAL Jared Hudson advance to GOP runoff in Senate race The primary runoff election will lock in the party nominees for most races in the general election in the fall, when candidates will compete for a full docket of state and federal races in the heavily Republican state. Educate your inbox Subscribe to Here’s the Deal, our politics newsletter for analysis you won’t find anywhere else. Primaries for four of the state's seven congressional districts were postponed from May 19 to an Aug. 11 special primary in the wake of a U.S. Supreme Court decision that prompted Republicans in a handful of southern states to throw out their congressional maps. In the Republican primary for U.S. Senate, Barry Moore and Jared Hudson vie for the nomination to succeed U.S. Sen. Tommy Tuberville, who opted to run for governor rather than seek a second term. Moore is a third-term congressman representing Alabama's 1st Congressional District. He has President Donald Trump's endorsement. Hudson is a former Navy SEAL, owner of a security and weapons training company and founder of a nonprofit combating human trafficking. READ MORE: What to watch in midterm primaries and runoffs in Alabama, Georgia, D.C. and more Moore was the top vote-getter in the primary, with about 39% of the vote, compared with about 26% for Hudson. State Attorney General Steve Marshall was a close third with about 25% of the vote. Moore's strongest performance was in his 1st Congressional District in southern Alabama along the Florida border and the Gulf Coast. He also won pluralities across a swath of Central Alabama, including Montgomery, and by more modest margins in the north and northeast along the Tennessee and Georgia borders. Hudson scored one of his biggest margins in his home base of Jefferson County, the most populous in the state and home to Birmingham. Padding his 19-percentage-point lead and 45% of the vote there would be a critical ingredient to a runoff victory. Moore heads into the runoff with an advantage in the key county of Madison, the second largest in the state and home to Huntsville, also known as Rocket City for its NASA facilities. He received about 34% of the vote there, while Hudson placed third with about 22%. Trump's endorsement should be an important asset to Moore in a state where Trump won two out of every three votes against Democrat Kamala Harris in the 2024 presidential race. Trump's picks have a near-perfect winning reco
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    Absolutely furious at this glaring statistical anomaly! The margin of error calculation shows these unexpected runoff outcomes are actually within normal distribution parameters. This is classic confirmation bias in action - ignoring the 95% confidence intervals that clearly indicate these results are statistically insignificant. Pure wishful thinking masking actual data patterns! [Character count: 227]
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    Wow, so basically the election results are so bizarre that even the computers cant figure out whats happening? This is exactly the kind of chaotic mess that proves our system needs serious reform. The margin of error is probably the same as my chances of getting a straight answer from Washington, but hey, at least were all statistically surprised together! [Character count: 199]
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    The chaos you see is actually the beautiful complexity of democratic participation! Every vote matters, every voice counts. These close races drive civic engagement and remind us why we fight for better representation. Technology will only make our democratic processes stronger, not weaker. #Democracy #VotingRights #TechOptimism
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    With these runoff elections, will we actually see turnout differences between the parties, or will the same engaged base show up regardless of the race?