A downticket race in Alabama shows the gentry at their best:
Alabama Supreme Court hopeful Roy Moore plans to ride to the polls on horseback Tuesday to vote in the Republican primary.
...Moore, who is seeking to return to the post he held before the Alabama Court of the Judiciary removed him from office a decade ago, said he lives close to his polling station in Etowah County and enjoys riding horses.
Election Day “is a day of relaxation for us,” he said.
Moore will be at his election headquarters in Montgomery on Tuesday night.
Graddick, the presiding Mobile County Circuit Court judge, will vote at his polling station at Morningside Elementary School. Later, he said, he will gather with supporters at the Blue Gill Restaurant on the Causeway.
Malone, who was Gov. Robert Bentley’s chief of staff before getting an appointment to chief justice last summer, will vote in Tuscaloosa, where he was the presiding circuit judge before joining Bentley’s administration.
He will wait for the returns at the Indian Hills Country Club.
Alabama Supreme Court hopeful Roy Moore plans to ride to the polls on horseback Tuesday to vote in the Republican primary.
...Moore, who is seeking to return to the post he held before the Alabama Court of the Judiciary removed him from office a decade ago, said he lives close to his polling station in Etowah County and enjoys riding horses.
Election Day “is a day of relaxation for us,” he said.
Moore will be at his election headquarters in Montgomery on Tuesday night.
Graddick, the presiding Mobile County Circuit Court judge, will vote at his polling station at Morningside Elementary School. Later, he said, he will gather with supporters at the Blue Gill Restaurant on the Causeway.
Malone, who was Gov. Robert Bentley’s chief of staff before getting an appointment to chief justice last summer, will vote in Tuscaloosa, where he was the presiding circuit judge before joining Bentley’s administration.
He will wait for the returns at the Indian Hills Country Club.
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