As primary-season attack ads fade from Alabama airwaves, voters are left with a deeper question: Why did debates over “wokeness” dominate campaigns while economic concerns topped voter priorities?
MONTGOMERY, Ala. | The final wave of Alabama's primary campaign advertisements is coming to an end, bringing relief to voters who have spent months navigating a barrage of political messaging centered on cultural flashpoints, ideological labels, and personality-driven attacks.
The commercials are disappearing, but the questions they leave behind are not.
Throughout the campaign season, candidates devoted significant airtime to familiar political themes: election security, transgender participation in sports, immigration, “woke” ideology, and partisan identity. The messages were often emotionally charged, carefully crafted for social media, and designed to energize core supporters.
Less common were detailed discussions of the issues that consistently rank among voters' most pressing concerns: inflation, healthcare access, housing affordability, energy costs, education quality, and the overall cost of living.

