Chattanooga Times Free Press

Redrawn Alabama district sparks a competitiv­e race

- BY KIM CHANDLER

TUSKEGEE, Ala. — On opposite sides of the courthouse square in Tuskegee, Alabama — a place steeped in African American history, including the city’s namesake university and World War II airmen — two opposing congressio­nal candidates recently greeted families gathered at a county festival.

Democrat Shomari Figures, who worked in the Obama White House and as a former top aide to U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland, is trying to flip the seat, which was redrawn after a lengthy redistrict­ing battle. Republican Caroleene Dobson, a real estate attorney and political newcomer, is attempting to keep the seat in GOP hands.

Alabama’s 2nd Congressio­nal District was redrawn after the U.S. Supreme Court agreed Alabama had likely illegally diluted the influence of Black voters when drawing congressio­nal lines. A three-judge panel reshaped the district, which now includes places like Tuskegee, to give Black voters an opportunit­y to elect a candidate of their choosing.

The open seat has sparked a heated race for the district — which now leans Democratic, but that Republican­s maintain is winnable — that could help decide control of the U.S. House of Representa­tives. Black residents now make up nearly 49% of the district’s voting-age population, up from about 30% when the district was reliably Republican. The non-partisan Cook Political Report ranks the district as “likely Democrat.”

Still, both Dobson and Figures believe the race is competitiv­e.

The Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee named Figures to its “Red to Blue” program, a slate of priority candidates they believe can flip districts from Republican control. The National Republican Congressio­nal Committee similarly named Dobson to its list of priority candidates called the “Young Guns.”

Both candidates are lawyers under the age of 40 with young children. And both left Alabama for opportunit­ies but have recently returned home.

But they diverge on politics.

Figures, 39, is a native of Mobile and the son of two state legislator­s. His late father was a legislativ­e leader and attorney who sued the Ku Klux Klan over the 1981 murder of a Black teenager. After graduating from the University of Alabama and its law school, Figures worked for the Obama administra­tion as domestic director of presidenti­al personnel and then as liaison to the Department of Justice. He also served as deputy chief of staff and counselor to Garland.

During campaign stops, Figures has discussed the impact of Alabama’s refusal to expand Medicaid, the need to halt hospital closures in the state, support for public education and the need to bring additional resources to a district with profound infrastruc­ture needs.

“We’ve lost three hospitals in this district since I got in this race. We have several others that are hemorrhagi­ng, including one here in Montgomery,” Figures said in a speech.

Dobson, 37, grew up in rural Monroe County and graduated from Harvard University and Baylor Law School. A real estate attorney, she lived and practiced in Texas before moving back to Alabama.

Dobson has emphasized concerns about border security, inflation and crime — issues that she said are worries for families across the political spectrum. In a heated GOP primary runoff, she ran ads describing herself as someone “who stands tall with Donald Trump.”

“The vast majority of Alabamians in this district are very concerned about where our country is headed,” Dobson said after a Montgomery campaign stop. “They have to look at the past three-and-a-half years and who has been in charge when it comes to our open border, when it comes to our economy, inflation, the price of groceries.”

Dobson last week made a trip to the U.S.-Mexico border to highlight border security. “There are impacts on crime, drugs but it’s also the open border policies are just fostering a humanitari­an crisis,” Dobson said.

Figures called the trip a “photo op.” He said while immigratio­n is an important issue that needs bipartisan cooperatio­n, it is not the cause of pressing problems in the district.

“Illegal immigratio­n is not the reason that 12 out of 13 counties in this district lost population last year. Illegal immigratio­n is not the reason our kids here in the state of Alabama read at the sixthworst level of any state,” Figures said.

The new 2nd Congressio­nal District stretches across lower Alabama from the Mississipp­i border to the Georgia border. It includes part of Mobile and the capital Montgomery, and many rural counties.

 ?? AP PHOTOS/ BUTCH DILL ?? Alabama’s new 2nd Congressio­nal District Democratic candidate Shomari Figures greets voters during the Aug. 31 Macon County Day Festival in Tuskegee, Ala.
AP PHOTOS/ BUTCH DILL Alabama’s new 2nd Congressio­nal District Democratic candidate Shomari Figures greets voters during the Aug. 31 Macon County Day Festival in Tuskegee, Ala.
 ?? ?? Alabama”s new 2nd Congressio­nal District Republican candidate Caroleene Dobson talks with voters during the
Aug. 31 Macon County Day Festival in Tuskegee, Ala.
Alabama”s new 2nd Congressio­nal District Republican candidate Caroleene Dobson talks with voters during the Aug. 31 Macon County Day Festival in Tuskegee, Ala.

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