Alabama politicians are seething over the Biden administration’s reversal of former President Donald Trump’s decision to move the U.S. Space Command headquarters from Colorado to Alabama.
On Monday, the Pentagon announced:
Today, following a thorough and deliberate evaluation process, and after consultation with [Defense] Secretary [Lloyd] Austin and weighing the input of senior military leaders, President Biden notified the Department of Defense that he has selected Colorado Springs as the permanent location of the U.S. Space Command Headquarters.
The Pentagon said keeping the headquarters in Colorado will ensure “peak readiness” and allow the agency to most effectively carry out its mission.
In 2019, Trump revived the agency after a 17-year hiatus. During the final days of Trump’s presidency in early 2021, Air Force officials notified Alabama Gov. Kim Ivey that a review by the Trump administration had determined that Huntsville would become the new home of the U.S. Space Command (which is different from the newly created U.S. Space Force).
Trump has publicly boasted that he “single–handedly” made the decision to move the headquarters to Alabama. Last year, a Government Accountability Office review of the decision found that it was plagued with “significant shortfalls in its transparency and credibility.”
The Biden administration continued to review the decision. In March, the Air Force secretary said the agency was “doing some additional analysis” before announcing whether Trump’s decision would be upheld by Biden.
We now have a clear answer: It won’t.
And Alabama officials — Democrats and Republicans alike — aren’t taking it well.
Ivey, the state’s Republican governor, sent some shots at the Biden administration (and CNN).
The White House choosing to not locate Space Command Headquarters in Alabama – the rightful selection – is very simply the wrong decision for national security. The fact that a CNN reporter is who first delivered the news to Alabama should say all.
— Governor Kay Ivey (@GovernorKayIvey) July 31, 2023
Rep. Terri Sewell, D-Ala., claimed the decision to move the base to Alabama was “based on the merits” and said she “expected more from the Biden Administration.”
The Administration’s decision to keep Space Command in Colorado bows to the whims of politics over merit.
— Rep. Terri A. Sewell (@RepTerriSewell) July 31, 2023
Huntsville won this selection process fair and square.
Read my full statement below ⬇️ pic.twitter.com/wVFmQw2mC3
Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., claimed the decision isn’t final: “This is absolutely not over.” And he wrote that Biden has set a precedent that “military bases are to be used as rewards for political support rather than for national security.”








