It’s Time to Move the Alabama State Capital to Birmingham

alabama capitol building 1 - It's Time to Move the Alabama State Capital to Birmingham

The Big Picture – 
By Glynn Wilson

The ghosts of Jefferson Davis and George Wallace must live in the old capitol building in Montgomery.

How else to explain why the fundamentalist Christian Republicans who somehow control all three branches of the state government still in the most retrograde state in the Union managed to pass a law banning abortion that is so offensive it was even opposed by televangelist Pat Robertson and inspired Donald Trump’s 2020 campaign manager to go on television to declare that even Trump opposes an abortion law that does not include an exception for rape and incest?

During an appearance on MSNBC on Saturday, Trump’s campaign manager Kayleigh McEnany said she disagreed with Alabama’s decision not to allow exceptions for pregnancies caused by rape and incest. The law will permit abortions only if the mother’s life is at risk.

“You know, I personally am for the exceptions,” McEnany said. “The president has been clear since the last campaign he’s for exceptions for rape and incest and life of the mother.”

When asked if the president would openly criticize the law, McEnany said she didn’t know, but reiterated that “he’s said repeatedly he’s for those three exceptions.”

Though the issue dominated headlines this week, Trump remained uncharacteristically silent, according to the Washington Post. But other antiabortion conservatives have spoken out that the Alabama law goes too far. Those include televangelist Pat Robertson, who called it “extreme,” and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, who said it “goes further” than what he believes.

Is it time to move Alabama’s state capital to Birmingham and build a new capitol building for the 21st century?

What is it about Montgomery that inspires a focus on the past, not the future?

A few years back when I was in town to cover another dangerous, retrograde move by the legislature, I came away thinking that Montgomery was designed in the horse and buggy days, when you could ride your horse right up to the capitol and tie up to a ring on a pole and carry your gun right into the chamber. Those rings on poles are still there.

Senate Committee Considers Open Carry Gun Law

Of course even the most ardent supporters of the open carry gun bill would not be for that now. You have to go through a metal detector to get in the newer State House across the street from the old capitol and you can’t even get in with a small pocket knife.

ala statehouse1b 1024x576 - It's Time to Move the Alabama State Capital to Birmingham

Oh the hypocrisy of governing. If these white men who seem obsessed with the past want people to be able to carry guns in stores, parks, work places and even schools, why not the halls of the State House? If more guns make us more safe, why does that not apply to where they work?

A few years ago when I made the foray to Montgomery to try to bring some sense and courage to the press corps in the place when the Republicans were on the verge of denying funding for Medicaid, I walked through the old capitol building to the governor’s office to make sure then Governor Robert Bentley was aware of our opposition to this attack on the program for the poor, old, young and sick. I wanted to make sure his staff printed a copy of this op-ed and placed it on his desk where he couldn’t miss it.

Open Letter to Alabama Governor Robert Bentley – Please Fully Fund Medicaid

The tactic worked. Bentley changed his tune and got onboard the campaign to save Medicaid funding, calling a special session and urging the legislature to find the money. They did, even though it took the misuse of BP oil spill lawsuit settlement money to save it.

Alabama Legislature Bends: Finds Last Minute Compromise to Save Medicaid

While I was walking through the historic building, now listed on the National Register of Historic Places as the First Confederate Capitol, I stopped to talk to a few tourists to find out why they traveled all the way to Montgomery to see the place.

I ran into a couple from Germany, and when I asked them why they came, the man said something about how important the place was for standing up for the white race and preserving slavery.

Somehow I don’t think people go to Berlin because it was the capital of the Nazi’s Third Reich, but hey, I could be wrong.

The capital was established in Montgomery in the 1840s after Alabama became a state in 1819, probably because it was a convenient location for the cotton plantation owners in the Black Belt.

Well, it’s not convenient anymore.

And the most economically viable city in the state is now Birmingham, even though the money and power in Birmingham is in the white flight suburbs, not downtown.

Is it possible that even the rich folks in Mountain Brook, Vestavia, Homewood and maybe even Hoover and Trussville could be unified in a campaign to move the capital to Birmingham?

Such a grand economic development project could save the city and the state from the backwardness of Montgomery, and free legislators from the debilitating influence of the ghosts of Jefferson Davis and George Wallace.

At the very least it seems worthy of public debate. What do you all think?

We hope you enjoyed this article.

Before you continue, I’d like to ask if you could support our independent journalism as we head into one of the most critical news periods of our time in 2024.

The New American Journal is deeply dedicated to uncovering the escalating threats to our democracy and holding those in power accountable. With a turbulent presidential race and the possibility of an even more extreme Trump presidency on the horizon, the need for independent, credible journalism that emphasizes the importance of the upcoming election for our nation and planet has never been greater.

However, a small group of billionaire owners control a significant portion of the information that reaches the public. We are different. We don’t have a billionaire owner or shareholders. Our journalism is created to serve the public interest, not to generate profit. Unlike much of the U.S. media, which often falls into the trap of false equivalence in the name of neutrality, we strive to highlight the lies of powerful individuals and institutions, showing how misinformation and demagoguery can harm democracy.

Our journalists provide context, investigate, and bring to light the critical stories of our time, from election integrity threats to the worsening climate crisis and complex international conflicts. As a news organization with a strong voice, we offer a unique, outsider perspective that is often missing in American media.

Thanks to our unique reader-supported model, you can access the New American journal without encountering a paywall. This is possible because of readers like you. Your support keeps us independent, free from external influences, and accessible to everyone, regardless of their ability to pay for news.

Please help if you can.

American journalists need your help more than ever as forces amass against the free press and democracy itself. We must not let the crypto-fascists and the AI bots take over.

See the latest GoFundMe campaign here or click on this image.

watchdog medium1a - It's Time to Move the Alabama State Capital to Birmingham

Don't forget to listen to the new song and video.

Just because we are not featured on cable TV news talk shows, or TikTok videos, does not mean we are not getting out there in search engines and social media sites. We consistently get over a million hits a month.

Click to Advertise Here

NAJ 2024 traffic Sept - It's Time to Move the Alabama State Capital to Birmingham

0 0 votes
Article Rating
6 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Steve Norris
Steve Norris
5 years ago

No thank you. Keep the scum in Montgomery! Birmingham’s name is dirty enough as it is!

Nicole
Nicole
5 years ago

Nope. Nope, nope, nope. Birmingham is a progressive city, whether outsiders wish to believe so or not, and the mere presence of those podunks would send us back to where we started. However, I would not be opposed to Birmingham (and maybe Huntsville too) breaking away and establishing their own state.

s zar
s zar
5 years ago

Move it to the west side of town and restore a once vital part of town. Lovely homes to be restored. Cute little “downtowns” to be brought back to life. Do something positive for a change for towns like Wylam, Ensley and Fairfield. Such a shame to just let it deteriorate and die like it has. Build a beautiful capital mall where US Steel once stood.

James Rhodes
James Rhodes
5 years ago

Make one of our gulf islands a penal colony and move it there-if it were legislated a tax haven, they would voluntarily move. ALL, no exceptions, legislators should have two terms-one in office and the other in prison.

S. D. Yana Davis
S. D. Yana Davis
5 years ago

I think it’s a good idea to move the capital here. Reinvigorating the west side of town with the new capital another good idea. Montgomery’s main claim to fame is as the cradle of the Confederacy, the massive traitorous conspiracy formed to preserve slavery at any cost. Birmingham, as the “holy ground” (as Nina Turner put it today) of the civil rights movement, is much more appropriate.

LAMAR
LAMAR
5 years ago

I love Alabama, why we want to be Detriot or Californica?