Last week both of Alabama's U.S. senators along with Congressman Dale Strong introduced a resolution calling on President Trump to immediately set a course for U.S. Space Command to place its headquarters in Huntsville. This week, Sen. Tommy Tuberville said he had spoken with the president and that he "feels very good" about HQ's chances of finally permanently landing in Alabama, reports AL.com's John R. Roby. The backstory on this, by the way, is a great snapshot of government and politics in action. Four years ago, in January 2021, the Air Force announced it had made the decision to place the permanent Space Command HQ at Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, choosing the Rocket City out of a short list of possible destinations that also included its temporary location in Colorado Springs. It was purported to have been a decision based on merit and strategy, not a politically motivated one, and made by military officials. Donald Trump, by then the former president, later went on the Rick & Bubba Show and said he had single-handedly made the decision to place it in Alabama. Critics pounced, arguing that Trump was rewarding Alabama for loyalty to him. Elected officials in Colorado from both political parties made their case for Colorado Springs. Last year, President Biden made the decision to move the planned permanent HQ to Colorado. Now here we are, the old president is now the new president, and the debate is back on. Meanwhile, there are two mandated reviews of the Air Force's selection process that are overdue, and there's no indication when we might see those. Space Command could come with 1,600 jobs. |