An unusual provision allows Alabama voters to participate in a Republican primary runoff regardless of whether they voted in the first primary election, or how.
Polls show that education is by far the most important issue to Alabama voters.
Alabama voters will get the chance to eliminate the only remaining provision next year.
Once it is gone, Alabama voters must find a way to remove Mr. Moore.
While Riley's Amendment One was soundly rejected by Alabama voters, it did gain him national recognition.
Since 1980, Alabama voters have increasingly voted for Republican candidates at the Federal level, especially in Presidential elections.
However, most of the district's voters, like most Alabama voters turned against the Democrats due to the national party's increasingly strong stand on civil rights.
One message Alabama voters needed to hear more clearly was that rejecting higher taxes costs more in the long run.
Hill predicted that Alabama voters would bury the Republicans "under an avalanche."
They were in a majority of 72 percent of the white Alabama voters that year.