By Jim Ellis — Monday, June 15, 2026
Another round of voting occurs tomorrow as Alabama and Georgia hold runoff elections, while Oklahoma voters begin selecting their 2026 nominees. Today’s focus is on the runoffs; an Oklahoma primary preview follows tomorrow.
Alabama
The Alabama Republican US Senate nomination will be decided tomorrow, and it is clear that retired Navy SEAL and anti-human trafficking advocate Jared Hudson has generated late campaign momentum. Emphasizing his outsider message and Christian faith, Hudson has steadily gained support and may be peaking at the right moment.
In the May 19 primary, Hudson surged to edge Attorney General Steve Marshall, the early frontrunner. Rep. Barry Moore (R Enterprise) led the initial vote with 39.2 percent, while Hudson secured the second runoff slot over Marshall with a 25.6 to 24.5 percent margin – a difference of exactly 5,300 votes.
Rep. Moore carries former President Trump’s endorsement, which has proven decisive in nearly every primary this cycle with one exception (Rep. Randy Feenstra’s loss in the Iowa gubernatorial primary). House members running in competitive primaries, however, have struggled overall. Across nine states, House incumbents seeking another office this year – or even renomination against strong challengers – have won just two of 16 contests, though three, including Moore, advanced to runoffs.
Two June polls brandish split conclusions. A Strategy Management survey (May 29-June 4; 1,300 likely GOP runoff voters; online) found Hudson ahead 42-37 percent. A co/efficient poll conducted within the same time period (June 3-4; 600 likely GOP runoff voters) showed Moore leading 46-37 percent. With turnout expected to drop when compared with the primary, the race remains highly competitive.
On the Democratic side, businessman Dakarai Larriett and attorney Everett Wess compete for the nomination. Regardless of the Democratic outcome the Republican nominee will become the prohibitive favorite.
Only one US House runoff appears on the Alabama ballot: the Democratic contest in the 5th District. The winner will be a heavy underdog against two term Rep. Dale Strong (R Huntsville).
Because the new redistricting map significantly altered several districts, primaries for the 1st, 2nd, 6th, and 7th Congressional Districts will be held on Aug. 11. These will be plurality primaries with no runoffs.
Georgia
Two major statewide Republican runoffs will be decided tomorrow.
In the Governor’s race, recent polling suggests businessman Rick Jackson is pulling away from Lt. Gov. Burt Jones and is now favored to clinch the nomination. Democratic nominee Keisha Lance Bottoms, the former Atlanta mayor who secured her party’s nomination outright on May 19, awaits. With Gov. Brian Kemp (R) term limited, the open general election is expected to be competitive in a Georgia that is now widely regarded as a swing state.
The Republican Senate runoff may be closer. The contest features Rep. Mike Collins (R Jackson) against former University of Tennessee head football coach Derek Dooley, who surged late to edge Rep. Buddy Carter (R Pooler/Savannah) for the second runoff position. Early post primary polling suggested Collins held a clear advantage, but Dooley has gained momentum, setting up an intriguing finish.
The winner will challenge first term Sen. Jon Ossoff (D), who has raised more money than any other candidate in the country. Ossoff begins the general election as the favorite, though the race is expected to tighten.
In the US House, Democratic runoffs will occur in the open 1st and 7th Districts. In the 1st, the Democratic nominee will face insurance broker Jim Kingston – son of former 11-term Rep. Jack Kingston – who won the GOP nomination outright on May 19 and enters November as a heavy favorite. In the 7th CD, the Democratic winner will challenge two term Rep. Rich McCormick (R Suwanee), who is also strongly favored to hold his seat.