On Wednesday, the Jefferson County Republican Party announced their slate of countywide and local candidates. Major party qualifying for the 2024 election cycle ended on Friday.
The Jefferson County Republican Party is running a host of candidates in the 2024 election, including:
John Amari for Probate Judge, Place 1.
For Probate Judge, Place 2 – Joel R. Blankenship
For Assistant Treasurer – Delor Baumann
For Assistant Tax Collector – Johnny Curry
For Board of Education, Place 1 – Phillip Brown
For Board of Education, Place 2 – Robert “Glenn” Durough
For Constable, District 15 – Rod Honeycutt
For Constable, District 15 – Larry Woods
For Constable, District 44 – Stephen A. Moseley
For Constable, District 45 – Tim Anders Sr.
For Constable, District 46 – Keith Hall
For Constable, District 47 – Gilbert F. Douglas III
For Constable, District 48 – Robert De Buys
For Constable, District 51 – Ronnie Dixon
For Constable, District 51 – Joe Williams
For Constable, District 55 – Ken Gray Sr
The Republican primary is on March 5. Since none of these local candidates have primary opponents, they automatically qualify for the November 5 general election. There will be a number of contested races on the Republican primary ticket in Jefferson County, including President of the United States, Chief Justice of the Alabama Supreme Court, Court of Civil Appeals Place 2, Court of Criminal Appeals Place 2, and President of the Public Service Commission, Alabama’s Seventh Congressional District, Alabama’s Sixth Congressional District, and State Board of Education Place 3.
The next Republican Party Executive Committee Meeting is Tuesday, November 21, at the Homewood Library at 6:00 PM.
Chris Brown is the Chairman of the Jefferson County Republican Party.
While Republicans dominate statewide offices across Alabama, both Houses of the Alabama Legislature, and the last time a Democratic presidential candidate carried Alabama was 1976, the Democratic Party has become the dominant political party in Jefferson County. The Democratic Party has won the last two sheriff’s elections and for district attorney. Jefferson County supported Joe Biden in 2020, Clinton in 2016, Obama in 2012, and Obama in 2008. Even though Republicans carried the state as a whole, Brown says a study of where the growth is happening in Jefferson County (Hoover, Gardendale, Trussville, McCalla, etc.) shows that it is occurring in Republican areas while many Democratic precincts are experiencing long term declines in population. The prospect of turning Jefferson County red is increasingly likely long-term. Will that change occur in 2024, however, remains to be seen.
To connect with the author of this story or to comment, email brandonmreporter@gmail.com.
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