Hubbry Logo
search
logo
1721510

Roy Moore

logo
Community Hub0 Subscribers
Read side by side
from Wikipedia

Roy Stewart Moore (born February 11, 1947) is an American politician, lawyer, and jurist who served as chief justice of the Supreme Court of Alabama from 2001 to 2003 and again from 2013 to 2017, each time being removed from office for judicial misconduct by the Alabama Court of the Judiciary. He was the Republican Party nominee in the 2017 U.S. Senate special election in Alabama to fill the seat vacated by Jeff Sessions, but was accused by several women of sexually assaulting them while they were underage and lost to Democratic candidate Doug Jones.[1][2] Moore ran for the same Senate seat again in 2020 and lost the Republican primary.[3]

Key Information

Moore attended West Point and served as a company commander in the Military Police Corps during the Vietnam War. After graduating from the University of Alabama Law School, he joined the Etowah County district attorney's office, serving as an assistant district attorney from 1977 to 1982. In 1992, he was appointed as a circuit judge by Governor Guy Hunt to fill a vacancy, and was elected to the position at the next term. In 2001, Moore was elected to the position of chief justice of the Supreme Court of Alabama. Moore was removed from his position in November 2003 by the Alabama Court of the Judiciary for refusing a federal court's order to remove a marble monument of the Ten Commandments that he had placed in the rotunda of the Alabama Judicial Building.

Moore sought the Republican nomination for the governorship of Alabama in 2006 and 2010, but lost in the primaries. Moore was elected again as chief justice in 2013, but he was suspended in May 2016, for defying a U.S. Supreme Court decision about same-sex marriage (Obergefell v. Hodges), and resigned in April 2017.[4][5] On September 26, 2017, he won a primary runoff to become the Republican candidate in a special election for a U.S. Senate seat that had been vacated by Jeff Sessions.[6]

In November 2017, during his special election campaign for U.S. Senate, several public allegations of sexual misconduct were made against Moore.[7] Three women stated that he had sexually assaulted them when they were at the respective ages of 14, 16 and 28;[7][8] six other women reported that Moore – then in his 30s – pursued sexual relationships with them while they were as young as 16. Moore acknowledged that he may have approached and dated teenagers while he was in his 30s, but denied sexually assaulting anyone.[9][10] President Donald Trump endorsed Moore a week before the election,[11] after which some Republicans withdrew their opposition to Moore. Democrat Doug Jones won the election, becoming the first Democrat since 1992 to win a U.S. Senate seat in Alabama.[12]

Moore's political views have been characterized as far-right and Christian nationalist.[13] He has attracted national media attention and controversy over his views on race, homosexuality, transgender people, and Islam, his belief that Christianity should dictate public policy,[14][15] and his past ties to neo-Confederate and white-nationalist groups.[16][17][18][19][20] Moore was a leading voice in the "birther" movement, which promoted the false claim that president Barack Obama was not born in the United States.[21][22] He founded the Foundation for Moral Law, a non-profit legal organization from which he collected more than $1 million over five years. On its tax filings, the organization indicated a much lesser amount of pay to Moore.[23]

Early life

[edit]

Education and military service

[edit]

Moore was born in Gadsden, Alabama, the seat of Etowah County, to construction worker Roy Baxter Moore, who died in 1967, and Evelyn Stewart. He is the oldest of five children, and grew up with two brothers and two sisters.[24] In 1954, the family relocated to Houston, Texas, the site of a postwar building boom. After about four years, they returned to Alabama, then moved to Pennsylvania, and then returned permanently to Alabama. His father worked for the Tennessee Valley Authority, first building dams and later the Anniston Army Depot. Moore attended his freshman year of high school at Gallant near Gadsden, and transferred to Etowah County High School for his final three years, graduating in 1965.[24]

Moore was admitted to the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York, on the recommendation of outgoing Democratic U.S. representative Albert Rains, and after confirmation of that nomination by incoming Republican representative James D. Martin of Gadsden.[25] He graduated in 1969 with a Bachelor of Science degree. With the Vietnam War underway, Moore served in several posts as a military police officer, including Fort Benning, Georgia, and Illesheim, West Germany, before being deployed to South Vietnam. Serving as the commander of 188th Military Police Company of the 504th Military Police Battalion,[26] Moore was perceived to be reckless, but very strict. He insisted that his troops salute him on the battlefield, despite official training which discourages such behavior because salutes can identify an officer to enemy targeting.[27] Some of his soldiers gave him the derogatory nickname "Captain America", due to his attitude toward discipline. This role earned him enemies, and in his autobiography he recalls sleeping on sandbags to avoid a grenade or bomb being tossed under his cot, as many of his men had threatened him with fragging.[24]

Moore was discharged from the United States Army as a captain in 1974, and was admitted to the University of Alabama School of Law that same year. A professor and fellow students held him in low regard due to his incapacity for keen analysis.[27] He graduated in 1977 with a Juris Doctor degree[28] and returned to Gadsden.[29]

Elections and travels

[edit]

Moore soon moved to the district attorney's office, working as the first full-time prosecutor in Etowah County. During his tenure there, Moore was investigated by the state bar for "suspect conduct" after convening a grand jury to examine what he perceived to have been funding shortages in the sheriff's office. Several weeks after the state bar investigation was dismissed as unfounded, Moore quit his prosecuting position to run as a Democrat for the county's circuit-court judge seat in 1982. The election was bitter, with Moore alleging that cases were being delayed in exchange for payoffs. The allegations were never substantiated. Moore overwhelmingly lost the Democratic runoff primary to fellow attorney Donald Stewart, whom Moore described as "an honorable man for whom I have much respect, (who) eventually became a close friend".[24] A second bar complaint against Moore followed, which was dismissed as unfounded. Moore left Gadsden shortly thereafter to live for a year in Australia.[30][31]

In Australia, a country Moore said later he had wanted to visit after his service in Vietnam but was unable to at the time, he went to Queensland. From the state capital, Brisbane, he first went to Ayr and helped with the sugar cane harvest, then inland to what is now the Central Highlands Region, where he fulfilled his longtime desire to see the Outback, eventually working at the Telemon ranch near Springsure, a town where many residents are devout Christians. One of them, the Rolfe family, ran Telemon, and spoke highly of Moore to The Guardian in 2017, "I don't think he'd ever done that sort of manual labor in his life," said Isla Turner, daughter of Colin Rolfe, who had taken Moore in, "but he took to it like a duck to water".[32]

Moore married Kayla Kisor in December 1985.[33] In 1986, he ran for Etowah County's district attorney position against fellow Democrat Jimmy Hedgspeth, but was defeated.[34][35] In 1992, Moore switched his affiliation to the Republican Party.[34]

Judicial career

[edit]

Circuit Judge (1992–2000)

[edit]

Appointment

[edit]

In 1992, Etowah County circuit judge Julius Swann died in office. Republican governor H. Guy Hunt was charged with making an appointment until the next election. Moore's name was floated by some of his associates, and a background check was initiated with several state and county agencies, including the Etowah County district attorney's office. Moore's former political opponent Jimmy Hedgspeth, who still helmed the D.A.'s office, recommended Moore despite personal reservations, and Moore was installed in the position he had failed to win in 1982.[36] Moore ran as a Republican in the 1994 Etowah County election and was elected to the circuit judge seat (six year term) with 62% of the vote. He was the first county-wide Republican to win since Reconstruction.[citation needed]

Early prayer/Ten Commandments controversy

[edit]

During Moore's tenure as circuit judge, he hung a homemade wooden Ten Commandments plaque on the wall of his courtroom behind his bench.[37] Moore told the Montgomery Advertiser that his intention in hanging the plaque was to fill up the bare space on the courtroom walls and to indicate the importance of the Ten Commandments. He stated that it was not his intention to generate controversy. He told The Atlantic that he understood the potential for controversy existed, but "I wanted to establish the moral foundation of our law."[38]

While Moore presided over a murder case shortly after his appointment, the defendant's attorney objected to the plaque. This attracted the attention of critics who also objected to Moore's practice of opening court sessions with a prayer beseeching divine guidance for jurors in their deliberations. In at least one case, Moore asked a clergyman to lead the court's jury pool in prayer. The local branch of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) sent a letter in June 1993 threatening a lawsuit if such prayers did not cease.[36]

On June 20, 1994, the ACLU sent a representative to Moore's courtroom to observe and record the pre-session prayer. Although the organization did not immediately file suit, Moore decried the action as an "act of intimidation" in a post-trial press conference. The incident drew additional attention to Moore while he was campaigning to hold onto his circuit court seat. In that year's election, Moore won the seat in a landslide victory over attorney Keith Pitts, who had unsuccessfully prosecuted the "Silk and Satin" murder case.[39]

Lawsuit

[edit]

In March 1995, the ACLU filed a lawsuit against Moore, stating that the pre-court session prayers and the Ten Commandments display were both unconstitutional. This original lawsuit was eventually dismissed for technical reasons, but Governor Fob James instructed state attorney general Bill Pryor to file suit in Montgomery County in support of Moore. The case was tried before state circuit judge Charles Price, who in 1996 declared the prayers unconstitutional but initially allowed the Ten Commandments plaque to remain on the courtroom walls.[40]

Immediately after the ruling, Moore held a press conference vowing to defy the ruling against pre-session prayers and affirming a religious intent in displaying the plaque. Critics responded by asking Price to reconsider his previous ruling, and the judge issued a new ruling requiring the Ten Commandments plaque to be removed in ten days. Moore appealed Price's decision and kept the plaque up; ten days later the Supreme Court of Alabama issued a temporary stay against the ruling. The Court never ruled in the case, throwing it out for technical reasons in 1998.[36]

Chief Justice, Alabama Supreme Court (2001–2003 and 2012–2017)

[edit]

Campaign and election

[edit]

In late 1999, the American Family Association began working to draft Moore into the race for chief justice of the Alabama Supreme Court, when incumbent Republican Perry O. Hooper, Sr., of Montgomery announced that he would not seek reelection. Moore said that he was hesitant to make the statewide race because he had "absolutely no funds" and three other candidates, particularly Associate Justice Harold See, were well-financed.[24]

Nevertheless, on December 7, 1999, Moore announced from his Etowah County courtroom that he would enter the race with the hope of returning "God to our public life and restore the moral foundation of our law". His campaign, centered on religious issues, arguing that Christianity's declining influence "corresponded directly with school violence, homosexuality, and crime".[36]

He was the heavy favorite to win the Republican nomination because of his support from the state business community and the party hierarchy, including Chief Justice Hooper. However, as Moore made headway in state polls, See elicited the help of Republican strategist Karl Rove, advisor to Texas governor and future president George W. Bush. Despite Rove's support and significantly more campaign funding, See lost the primary to Moore. Moore also beat two other opponents, criminal appeals judge Pam Baschab, and Jefferson County presiding circuit judge Wayne Thorn, in the Republican Primary – without a runoff – garnering over 50% of the statewide primary vote. Moore then easily defeated Democratic contender Sharon Yates in November's general election with over 60% of the vote.[citation needed]

Moore was sworn in as chief justice on January 15, 2001. Former U.S. representative James D. Martin, who had appointed Moore to West Point years earlier, was among the dignitaries in attendance. On taking the position, Moore said that he had "come to realize the real meaning of the First Amendment and its relationship to the God on whom the oath was based. My mind had been opened to the spiritual war occurring in our state and our nation that was slowly removing the knowledge of that relationship between God and law."

I pledged to support not only the U.S. Constitution, but the Alabama Constitution as well, which provided in its preamble that the state 'established justice' by 'invoking the favor and guidance of Almighty God.' The connection between God and our law could not be more clear ...[24]

Ten Commandments monument controversy

[edit]

Construction and installation

[edit]

A month after his election, Moore began making plans for a large monument to the Ten Commandments, believing that the Heflin-Torbert Judicial Building required something grander than a wooden plaque. His final design involved a 5,280-pound (2,390 kg) granite block, three feet (0.91 m) wide by three feet deep by four feet (1.2 m) tall, covered with quotes from the Declaration of Independence, the national anthem, and several founding fathers.[41] The crowning element would be two large carved tablets inscribed with the Ten Commandments. High-grade granite from Vermont was ordered and shipped, and Moore found benefactors and a sculptor to complete the job.[citation needed] Moore's actions were made without the consent or knowledge of the eight associate justices.[42][43]

The Ten Commandments monument in the rotunda of the Heflin-Torbert Judicial Building, erected in 2001

On the evening of July 31, 2001, Moore had the completed monument transported to the building and installed in the rotunda. Videotapes of this event were sold by Coral Ridge Ministries, an evangelical media outlet in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, which later used proceeds from the sales of the tapes to underwrite Moore's ensuing legal expenses.[44][45]

The next morning, Moore held a press conference in the rotunda to publicly unveil the monument. In a speech following the unveiling, Moore declared, "Today a cry has gone out across our land for the acknowledgment of that God upon whom this nation and our laws were founded ... May this day mark the restoration of the moral foundation of law to our people and the return to the knowledge of God in our land."[46]

Federal lawsuit

[edit]

On October 30, 2001, the ACLU of Alabama, Americans United for Separation of Church and State and the Southern Poverty Law Center were among groups that filed suit in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Alabama, asking that the monument be removed because it "sends a message to all who enter the Heflin-Torbert Judicial Building that the government encourages and endorses the practice of religion in general and Judeo-Christianity in particular".[47]

The trial, titled Glassroth v. Moore, began on October 15, 2002. Evidence for the plaintiffs included testimony that lawyers of different religious beliefs had changed their work practices, including routinely avoiding visiting the court building to avoid passing by the monument, and testimony that the monument created a religious atmosphere, with many people using the area for prayer.[48]

Moore argued that he would not remove the monument, as doing so would violate his oath of office:

[The monument] serves to remind the Appellate Courts and judges of the Circuit and District Court of this State and members of the bar who appear before them, as well as the people of Alabama who visit the [Heflin-Torbet Judicial Building], of the truth stated in the Preamble to the Alabama Constitution that in order to establish justice we must invoke 'the favor and guidance of almighty God'.[41]

On this note, Moore said that the Ten Commandments are the "moral foundation" of U.S. law, stating that in order to restore this foundation, "we must first recognize the source from which all morality springs ... [by] recogniz[ing] the sovereignty of God." He added that the addition of the monument to the state judiciary building marked "the beginning of the restoration of the moral foundation of law to our people" and "a return to the knowledge of God in our land".[41]

Additionally, Moore acknowledged an explicit theistic intent in placing the monument, agreeing that the monument "reflects the sovereignty of God over the affairs of men" and "acknowledge[s] God's overruling power over the affairs of men".[49] However, in Moore's view this did not violate the doctrine of separation of church and state; as the presiding judge later summarized it, Moore argued "the Judeo-Christian God reigned over both the church and the state in this country, and that both owed allegiance to that God," although they must keep their affairs separate.[41]

Judgment and appeal

[edit]

On November 18, 2002, federal U.S. district judge Myron Herbert Thompson issued his ruling declaring that the monument violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution and was thus unconstitutional:

If all Chief Justice Moore had done were to emphasize the Ten Commandments' historical and educational importance ... or their importance as a model code for good citizenship ... this court would have a much different case before it. But the Chief Justice did not limit himself to this; he went far, far beyond. He installed a two-and-a-half ton monument in the most prominent place in a government building, managed with dollars from all state taxpayers, with the specific purpose and effect of establishing a permanent recognition of the 'sovereignty of God,' the Judeo-Christian God, over all citizens in this country, regardless of each taxpaying citizen's individual personal beliefs or lack thereof. To this, the Establishment Clause says no.[41]

Judge Thompson's decision mandated that Moore remove the monument from the state judicial building by January 3, 2003, but stayed this order on December 23, 2002, after Moore appealed the decision to the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit. This appeal was argued on June 4, 2003, before a three-judge panel in Atlanta, Georgia. On July 1, 2003, the panel issued a ruling upholding the lower court's decision, agreeing that "the monument fails two of Lemon's three prongs. It violates the Establishment Clause." Additionally, the court noted that different religious traditions assign different wordings of the Ten Commandments, meaning that "choosing which version of the Ten Commandments to display can have religious endorsement implications".[49]

In response to the appeals court's decision, Judge Thompson lifted his stay on August 5, 2003, requiring Moore to have the monument removed from public areas of the state judicial building by August 20.[50]

Protests and monument removal

[edit]
Rally before the Alabama State Capitol, August 16, 2003

On August 14, Moore announced his intention to defy Judge Thompson's order to have the monument removed. Two days later, large rallies in support of Moore and the Ten Commandments monument formed in front of the judicial building, featuring speakers such as Alan Keyes, the Reverend Jerry Falwell, and Moore himself. The crowd peaked at an estimated count of 4,000 that day,[51] and anywhere from several hundred to over a thousand protesters remained through the end of August.

The time limit for removal expired on August 20, with the monument still in place in the building's rotunda. As specified in Judge Thompson's order, the state of Alabama faced fines of $5,000 a day until the monument was removed. In response, the eight other members of the Alabama Supreme Court intervened on August 21, unanimously overruled Moore, and ordered the removal of the monument.[52][53]

Moore said that Thompson, "fearing that I would not obey his order, decided to threaten other state officials and force them to remove the monument if I did not do so. A threat of heavy fines was his way of coercing obedience to that order," an action that Moore saw as a violation of the Eleventh Amendment to the United States Constitution.[24]

On August 27, the monument was moved to a non-public side room in the judicial building.[54] The monument was not immediately removed from the building for several reasons – pending legal hearings, the monument's weight, worries that the monument could break through the floor if it was taken outside intact, and a desire to avoid confrontation with protesters massed outside the structure. The monument was not actually removed from the state judicial building until July 19, 2004.[55]

Removal from office

[edit]

On August 22, 2003, two days after the deadline for the Ten Commandments monument's removal had passed, the Alabama Judicial Inquiry Commission (JIC) filed a complaint with the Alabama Court of the Judiciary (COJ), a panel of judges, lawyers and others appointed variously by judges, legal leaders, the governor and the lieutenant governor. The complaint effectively suspended Moore from the chief justice position pending a hearing by the COJ.[56]

The COJ ethics hearing was held on November 12, 2003. Moore repeated his earlier sentiment that "to acknowledge God cannot be a violation of the Canons of Ethics. Without God there can be no ethics." He also acknowledged that he would repeat his defiance of the court order if given another opportunity to do so, and that if he returned to office, "I certainly wouldn't leave [the monument] in a closet, shrouded from the public." In closing arguments, the assistant attorney general said Moore's defiance, left unchecked, "undercuts the entire workings of the judicial system ... What message does that send to the public, to other litigants? The message it sends is: If you don't like a court order, you don't have to follow it."[57]

The next day, the COJ issued a unanimous opinion ruling that "Chief Justice Moore has violated the Alabama Canons of Judicial Ethics as alleged by the JIC in its complaint." The COJ had several disciplinary options, including censure or suspension without pay, but because Moore's responses had indicated he would defy any similar court orders in the future, the COJ concluded that "under these circumstances, there is no penalty short of removal from office that would resolve this issue."[58]

Moore appealed the COJ's ruling to the Supreme Court of Alabama on December 10, 2003. A special panel of retired judges and justices was randomly selected to hear the case. Moore argued that the COJ did not consider the underlying legality of the federal courts' order that the monument be removed from the courthouse. The Alabama Supreme Court rejected this argument, saying that the COJ did not have the authority to overrule the federal courts, only to determine whether Moore violated the Canons of Judicial Ethics. Therefore, the Court reasoned, it was enough to show that a procedurally-valid order was in place against Moore. Moore also argued that the COJ had imposed a religious test on him to hold his office, and that the COJ's actions had violated his own rights under the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment.[59]

The Supreme Court of Alabama rejected each of these arguments as well, and ruled on April 30, 2004, that the COJ had acted properly. The court also upheld the sanction of removal as appropriate.[59]

Return to the bench

[edit]

Moore sought to return to the bench, and in the March 2012 Republican primary for chief justice of Alabama, Moore won the Republican nomination, defeating the sitting Chief Justice Chuck Malone (who had been appointed by Governor Bentley the previous year) and Mobile County circuit judge Charles Graddick.[60][61]

In the November 2012 general election, Moore defeated the Democratic nominee, Jefferson County circuit judge Bob Vance, and returned to the bench.[62] Moore received 913,021 votes, to Vance's 850,816 votes.[63]

Views on same-sex marriage

[edit]

On January 28, 2015, the Southern Poverty Law Center filed a judicial ethics complaint against Moore, stating that he had publicly commented on pending same-sex marriage cases and encouraged state officials and judges to ignore federal court rulings overturning bans on same-sex marriage.[64][65]

Moore issued an order to probate judges and their employees on February 8, the day before a federal court ruling legalizing same-sex marriage in Alabama was set to take effect, ordering them to disregard the ruling and enforce the state's ban under threat of legal action by the governor.[66] On February 9, after the United States Supreme Court allowed the federal court ruling to take effect, probate judges in Birmingham, Montgomery, and Huntsville disobeyed Moore and issued marriage licenses to same-sex couples.[67]

On January 6, 2016, after the U.S. Supreme Court issued its opinion in Obergefell v. Hodges the previous June, Moore issued an administrative order to lower court judges stating, "until further decision by the Alabama Supreme Court, the existing orders of the Alabama Supreme Court that Alabama probate judges have a ministerial duty not to issue any marriage license contrary to the Alabama Sanctity of Marriage Amendment or the Alabama Marriage Protection Act remain in full force and effect."[68]

2016 suspension from the bench and resignation

[edit]

On May 6, 2016, the Alabama Judicial Inquiry Commission (JIC) forwarded a list of six charges of ethical violations by Moore to the Alabama Court of the Judiciary.[69] Moore was suspended from the Alabama Supreme Court pending trial and ruling. Moore faced removal from office over the charges, which were more serious than those which removed him from office in 2003.[70][71] The JIC's complaint charged Moore with violating the Alabama Canon of Judicial Ethics by:[69]

  1. disregarding a federal injunction.
  2. demonstrated unwillingness to follow clear law.
  3. abuse of administrative authority.
  4. substituting his judgment for the judgment of the entire Alabama Supreme Court, including failure to abstain from public comment about a pending proceeding in his own court.
  5. interference with legal process and remedies in the United States District Court and/or Alabama Supreme Court related to proceedings in which Alabama probate judges were involved.
  6. failure to recuse himself from pending proceedings in the Alabama Supreme Court after making public comment and placing his impartiality into question.

On May 27, Moore filed a federal lawsuit against the JIC (Moore v. Judicial Inquiry Commission), alleging that his automatic suspension was unconstitutional.[72][73] On August 4, the federal district court dismissed Moore's suit, ruling that under the abstention doctrine, federal courts generally do not interfere with ongoing state court proceedings.[74][75]

Suspension by the Court of the Judiciary

[edit]

In June 2016, Moore filed a motion to dismiss the JIC proceedings, arguing, among other things, that the JIC and Alabama Court of the Judiciary lacked jurisdiction to review administrative orders that he issued and that the orders of the Alabama Supreme Court were still in effect from the Alabama Policy Institute proceedings prohibiting the issuance of same-sex marriage licenses by probate judges in Alabama, despite the rulings in Obergefell v. Hodges issued by the U.S. Supreme Court, Searcy v. Strange, Strawser v. Strange, and the decision of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, which held that the orders were abrogated by Obergefell.[69][76][77][78][79] The Court of the Judiciary set a hearing date for the motion to dismiss and ruled that it would be treated as a motion for summary judgment pertaining to the charges filed by the JIC.[80][81]

The Human Rights Campaign, an LGBT rights group, responded: "It is clear that Roy Moore not only believes he is above the law, he believes he is above judicial ethics ... Moore was tasked with upholding the law of the land when marriage equality was affirmed by the Supreme Court of the United States, and he defied that task, in the process harming loving, committed same-sex couples across Alabama for his own personal, discriminatory reasons."[82]

In July 2016, the JIC filed a cross-motion for summary judgment, asking the Court of the Judiciary to issue summary judgment removing Moore from the bench. Attorneys for the JIC wrote: "Because the chief justice has proven – and promised – that he will not change his behavior, he has left this Court with no choice but to remove him from office to preserve the integrity, independence, impartiality of Alabama's judiciary and the citizens who depend on it for justice."[83][84][85] In their reply, Moore (through his attorneys at Liberty Counsel) denied that Moore had directed Alabama's probate judges to disobey an injunction issued by the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Alabama, asserting that the orders of the Alabama Supreme Court, which required Alabama's probate judges to deny marriage licenses to same-sex couples, were still in effect. Moore argued that his January 6 administrative order was mischaracterized by the JIC, despite the fact that the January 6 order stated "Until further decision by the Alabama Supreme Court, the existing orders of the Alabama Supreme Court that Alabama probate judges have a ministerial duty not to issue any marriage license contrary to the Alabama Sanctity of Marriage Amendment or the Alabama Marriage Protection Act remain in full force and effect."[86][87][88][89]

At an August 2016 hearing before the Alabama Court of the Judiciary on the motions to dismiss and for summary judgment, Moore's attorneys continued to assert that Moore did not order probate judges to disobey the injunction issued by the U.S. District Court or the U.S. Supreme Court ruling on same-sex marriage. The attorney for the JIC responded that Moore's argument "defies common sense" and said that Moore was defying a federal court order, just as he did in 2003, and should be immediately removed from office.[90][91] The Alabama Court of the Judiciary subsequently denied both Moore's motion and the JIC motion and set a trial date.[92]

On September 30, 2016, Moore was found guilty of all six charges and suspended for the remainder of his term, slated to end in 2019.[93] In its 50-page order, the Court of the Judiciary stated it did not find credible Moore's claim that the purpose for the January 6 order was "merely to provide a 'status update' to the state's probate judges".[93] The ruling meant that Moore would not receive a salary paid for the remainder of his term. Moore also was ordered to pay court costs. The ruling effectively ended Moore's Supreme Court career, as he would not be eligible for reelection in 2018 because he would be above the maximum age of 69 years for a candidate.[94][95]

Appeal to the Alabama Supreme Court and resignation

[edit]

In October 2016, Moore filed a notice of appeal with the Court of the Judiciary appealing his suspension and the final judgment to the Alabama Supreme Court. Among other claims, Moore contended that neither the JIC nor the COJ had jurisdiction to investigate and punish him for his issuance of the Administrative Order of January 6, 2016; that the six charges against him had not been proven by clear and convincing evidence, and that by "suspending him" without pay for the remainder of his term, the COJ had effectively removed him from office without unanimous agreement of the COJ, as required under Alabama law.[96][97][98][99] Pending the appeal, Moore refused to clean out his office.[100]

The Alabama Supreme Court randomly selected seven retired judges to review the appeal of Moore's suspension,[101][102][103] Governor Robert Bentley issued an executive order formally appointing the special Supreme Court of these seven retired justices to hear Moore's appeal from the decision of the COJ that suspended him from the bench for the remainder of his term.[104]

In December 2016, Moore – represented by the group Liberty Counsel – filed his appeal brief with the special Alabama Supreme Court.[105][106][107][108][109] Eight current and retired Alabama judges filed an amicus brief in support of Moore, asserting in their filings that Moore's suspension was, in fact, a removal from office and contrary to Alabama law since it required unanimous agreement of the COJ, despite the fact the COJ did unanimously agree in their final judgment to suspend Moore for the remainder of his term.[110][111]

At Moore's request,[112] oral argument was canceled to speed up the proceedings, and the special Supreme Court agreed to rule on the case based on the written submissions of the parties.[113][114][115]

On April 20, the special Supreme Court upheld Moore's suspension.[116] In its opinion, the special Supreme Court ruled that all of the JIC's charges against Moore were supported by clear and convincing evidence. The Court also ruled that it did not have authority to rescind the sanctions imposed on Moore because the charges were amply supported by clear and convincing evidence, and that the JIC was unanimous in their decision to suspend Moore for the remainder of his term.[117]

Six days following the court's ruling, Moore resigned from the Alabama Supreme Court.[118]

He then announced he would be running for the United States Senate.[4][5] About Moore's candidacy, Richard Shelby, Alabama's senior U.S. senator, harbored concerns about him long before sexual misconduct allegations surfaced, including his willingness as a judge to disobey judicial orders, saying, "I disagree with a lot of court decisions ... but still it's the law."[119]

In 2022, his defamation lawsuit between him and a woman who accused him of sexual misconduct ended with neither party getting a judgment in its favor.[120]

Foundation for Moral Law

[edit]

Moore founded the nonprofit Christian legal organization Foundation for Moral Law in 2002.[121] Moore's wife, Kayla, is the president of the Foundation for Moral Law.[122]

In 2005, Moore's Foundation for Moral Law accepted a $1,000 contribution from a neo-Nazi organization founded by Willis Carto, a prominent Holocaust denier. The donation attracted attention during Moore's 2017 campaign for a Senate seat.[123][124][125]

Undisclosed salary payment controversy

[edit]

Moore stated that he did not draw a "regular salary" from the organization. In October 2017, however, The Washington Post reported that Moore had arranged an annual salary of $180,000 for himself from the foundation.[23] From 2007 to 2012, he collected more than $1 million, an amount far surpassing the nonprofit's declarations in its public tax filings, because of what the Post called "errors and gaps in the group's federal tax filings".[23] The Washington Post reported that Moore arranged the salary and that, in 2012 when the charity could not pay his full salary, Moore received a note promising that he would get the salary in back pay or a stake in the assets of the foundation.[23] The foundation paid for Moore's health-care benefits, travel expenses, and bodyguard, and the foundation's website has regularly promoted Moore's speaking arrangements and book.[23] It employed at least two of Moore's children and Moore's wife. She was paid $65,000 annually after he again took his seat on the Alabama Supreme Court.[23] The Washington Post also said that there was considerable overlap between the charity and Moore's political activities, with previous top officials of the charity leading Moore's 2017 Senate campaign and with the charity using the same fundraising firm as Moore's campaigns.[23]

The foundation's former chair, Alabama circuit court judge John Bentley, denied that the board did anything wrong intentionally, but was unable to explain shortcomings in tax filings and audits. He admitted that the board failed to provide sufficient oversight and that he personally had been less involved than his position required. He acknowledged the foundation was effectively run entirely by Moore and his family.[23]

The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) warned the foundation about discrepancies in its tax filings in 2013, saying that the issues "could jeopardize your exempt status".[23] Multiple charity and tax law experts have said that the foundation's activities "raised questions about compliance with IRS rules, including prohibitions on the use of a charity for the private benefit or enrichment of an individual".[23] Additional reporting by The Washington Post that October found the $498,000 Moore was guaranteed in back pay was not declared to the IRS; tax experts say that it should have been and that Moore would have had to pay more than $100,000 in federal tax.[126]

Election issues and campaigns

[edit]

2004

[edit]

Moore considered running for the nomination of the Republican Party and the Constitution Party in the 2004 presidential election.[127] Despite encouragement from several corners, Moore did not pursue the nomination.[128]

In 2004, along with Herb Titus, Moore was an original drafter of the Constitution Restoration Act,[129] which sought to remove federal courts' jurisdiction over a government official or entity's "acknowledgment of God as the sovereign source of law, liberty, or government", and provided for the impeachment of judges who failed to do so. The bill was introduced in both houses of Congress in 2004 and then reintroduced in 2005, but languished in committee both times.

2006

[edit]

In October 2005, Moore announced that he would run against Governor Bob Riley in the 2006 Republican gubernatorial primary.[130] Moore's campaign relied largely on his popularity among Christian right voters.[130][131] However, Moore consistently performed poorly in polling and in fundraising.[131]

In the June 2006 primary, Riley won the primary, 306,665 (66.6 percent) to 153,354 (33.34 percent).[132] Following such a major defeat, Moore accused Alabama Republican Party chair Twinkle Andress Cavanaugh of bias towards Riley and called on her to resign; he also criticized President Bush for praising Riley's administration. His criticism of the state Republican Party was so harsh that he eventually had to call a press conference to quell rumors that he would run as an independent if he lost the Republican primary.[133] In his concession speech, Moore told supporters that "God's will has been done." Moore did not call Riley to concede and refused to support Riley in the general election because of Riley's acceptance of campaign contributions from political action committees.[133]

2010

[edit]
Roy Moore campaign sign, 2010

In 2009, Moore launched another campaign for governor of Alabama in 2010 election.[134] In the first round of the June 2010 Republican primary election, Moore came in fourth place with 19.3% of the vote, behind Bradley Byrne (27.9%), Robert J. Bentley (25.2%), and Tim James (25.1%).[135]

2012

[edit]
Roy Moore received 52% of the vote in his successful campaign for Chief Justice of the Alabama Supreme Court.

On April 18, 2011, Moore announced that he was forming an exploratory committee to run in the Republican presidential primaries in 2012.[136][137] When that campaign failed to gain traction, he began to draw speculation in the media as being a potential Constitution Party presidential contender.[128][138] [unreliable source] In November 2011, Moore withdrew his exploratory committee and ended all speculation of a presidential candidacy when he instead announced that he would in 2012 seek his former post of chief justice of the Alabama Supreme Court.[139] On November 6, 2012, Moore won election back to the office of Alabama chief justice, defeating replacement Democratic candidate Bob Vance.[140]

2017

[edit]
Roy Moore campaign sign, 2017

On April 26, 2017, Moore, who had been suspended from the Alabama Supreme Court since September 2016, stated that he had submitted retirement papers and would resign as chief justice in order to run for the U.S. Senate seat vacated earlier by Jeff Sessions, who left the Senate to become U.S. attorney general. Governor Robert J. Bentley appointed Luther Strange to fill the vacancy, and Strange also sought the Republican nomination in the special election.[141]

Republican U.S. Senate primary

[edit]

On August 15, 2017, Moore and Strange advanced to the primary runoff after Moore finished first with 38.9% of the vote to Strange's 32.8%.[142] President Donald Trump reluctantly supported Moore's opponent Strange during the primary,[143] dispensing with traditional presidential caution in becoming involved with contested primaries,[144][145] and almost the whole national Republican establishment wanted Strange to win.[146][147][148] Trump's efforts on behalf of Strange included a series of tweets, and a rally in Alabama, where he admitted that he "might have made a mistake" in his endorsement of Strange and emphasized repeatedly that he would support Moore if he won, but still urged voters to vote for Strange.[149][144][150]

Moore was outspent in the runoff by a margin of 10-to-1, thanks in part to the efforts of Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell.[146][151] On September 26, 2017, Moore defeated Strange in the Republican primary runoff election to become the Republican nominee.[152] This marked the first time since 2010 that an insurgent defeated an incumbent U.S. Senator having active White House support.[153] The percentages were 54.6% for Moore to 45.4% for Strange.[154]

U.S. Senate special election campaign

[edit]
Roy Moore received 48% of the vote in his unsuccessful campaign in the special election for representing Alabama in the Senate.

Moore faced Democratic nominee Doug Jones, a former United States attorney, and several write-in candidates in a special election on December 12, 2017.[155][156] Moore turned down debate invitations extended by the League of Women Voters[157] and WHNT-TV and AL.com.[158][159] Moore said that he refused to debate Jones because of Jones's "very liberal stance on transgenderism and transgenderism in the military and in bathrooms".[160]

In early November, when sexual misconduct allegations against Moore were reported, many Republicans at the national level called for Moore to drop out of the race or withdrew their endorsements of him.[161][162] At the time of the revelations, it was too close to the election for Moore's name to be removed from the ballot.[163] Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Speaker Paul Ryan said he should step aside,[164][165] as did U.S. Senator John McCain and former U.S. presidential candidate Mitt Romney.[166][161] Other senators withdrew their endorsements of Moore's Senate candidacy.[162][167][168][169] President Donald Trump initially said Moore should step aside if the charges were true, but otherwise expressed support for Moore.[170] Trump later formally endorsed Moore.[171][172] Alabama Republicans largely defended Moore from the accusations;[173][174] an exception was Richard Shelby, the state's U.S. senator since 1987, who said two days before the election the accusations against Moore were "believable" and that "Alabama deserves better." He said he wrote in the name of another Republican on his absentee ballot.[119]

The Republican National Committee (RNC) and the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) temporarily withdrew funding from his campaign.[175]

A week before the election, Trump strongly endorsed Moore.[171] Following Trump's endorsement, the RNC reinstated their support for him,[175] and McConnell said he would "let the people of Alabama decide" whether to elect Moore.[176] Just four days before the election, Trump appeared at a rally in Pensacola, Florida, near the border of Alabama, and again endorsed Moore.[177]

During a campaign speech in Florence, Alabama, in 2017, Moore decried racial divisions plaguing the United States, stating: "Now we have blacks and whites fighting, reds and yellows fighting, Democrats and Republicans fighting, men and women fighting. What's going to unite us? What's going to bring us back together? A president? A Congress? No. It's going to be God." Moore's reference to "reds" and "yellows" was criticized as racially insensitive.[178][179] Moore's campaign responded, stating that his statement was based on the religious song "Jesus Loves the Little Children".[180] In the same speech, when a spectator asked when Moore thought America was last great, Moore responded: "I think it was great at the time when families were united. Even though we had slavery, they cared for one another. ... Our families were strong, our country had a direction."[181]

In the December 12 election, Moore lost to Jones, who received 671,151 votes (49.9%) to Moore's 650,436 votes (48.4%).[182] Moore refused to concede despite Trump, Bannon, and others urging him to do so.[183][184] He told his followers in a YouTube video posted to his campaign account that "it's not over." He added that he wanted to wait for military votes to be counted and the results to be certified.[185] A number of right-leaning websites pushed conspiracy theories about voter fraud providing the margin for Jones.[186]

Alabama secretary of state John Merrill told The Washington Post that the result would be certified on December 28, 2017.[186] If the final margin of victory had been less than 0.5%, then a recount would have been automatically triggered.[187] In cases where the margin is greater than 0.5 percent, either candidate can request a recount at his or her expense. However, Merrill estimated that a recount could cost anywhere from $1 million to $1.5 million, an amount that must be paid in full when the request is made. Moore had only $636,046 on hand by the time the campaign ended.[184] On December 28, Merrill and Alabama governor Kay Ivey certified the results of the senatorial election[188] despite a last-minute lawsuit from the Moore campaign (rejected by a state judge) seeking a new election on the grounds of voter fraud.[189]

Moore became the first Republican to lose a statewide race in Alabama since Republican Twinkle Andress Cavanaugh lost the 2008 president of the Alabama Public Service Commission election to Democratic former lieutenant governor Lucy Baxley. Moore was the first Republican to lose a United States Senate election in Alabama since Richard Sellers in 1992. Jones became the first Democrat to gain a Senate seat since Richard Shelby defeated incumbent Republican Jeremiah Denton in 1986 in a similarly narrow election, though Shelby joined the Republican Party eight years later. Jones also became the first Democrat to represent Alabama in the United States Senate since Howell Heflin's retirement in 1997.[citation needed]

In April 2018, Moore filed a lawsuit in Etowah County alleging "there was a political conspiracy against him in the 2017 special election". The former was filed against sexual misconduct accusers that came to prominence during the election.[190] Most of its claims were dismissed in 2022.[191]

2020

[edit]

Moore announced on June 20, 2019, that he would challenge Doug Jones once again for his Senate seat in the 2020 election.[192] He failed to earn the Republican party nomination, receiving only 7.2%[193] of the vote in the primary election.[194]

Political positions

[edit]

According to Business Insider, Moore has a "history of far-right and conspiracy-aligned positions" on issues such as homosexuality, race, Islam, and terrorism.[195] According to CNN, Moore's "virulent anti-gay, right-wing views made him a national figure".[14] According to The New York Times, Moore "is a staunch evangelical Christian, and his often-inflammatory political beliefs are informed by his strongly held religious views".[196] Moore has been considered a "rising star of the alt-right movement" by The Jerusalem Post and an "alt-right hero" by The Washington Post.[197][198]

Abortion

[edit]

Moore is strongly anti-abortion. In a 2014 Supreme Court ruling, he said that laws should protect life "from the moment of conception".[199] He seeks to defund Planned Parenthood.[200]

American exceptionalism

[edit]

Moore has been skeptical of modern American exceptionalism, saying that "America promotes a lot of bad things." Moore argued that the United States is an "Evil Empire" comparable to the Soviet Union, saying that America is "the focus of evil in the modern world". When asked for a clarification, Moore gave an example of America culturally exporting acceptance of homosexuality around the world.[201][202]

"Birther" movement and other conspiracy theories

[edit]

Moore was a leading proponent of the birther movement, the debunked conspiracy theory postulating that Barack Obama is not a U.S. citizen.[21][203] He repeatedly promoted the conspiracy theory from 2008 and through to at least December 2016. Asked if he still questioned Obama's citizenship in August 2017, the Moore campaign declined to answer questions from the media.[203][204] As chief justice of the Supreme Court of Alabama, he opined that Alabama's secretary of state should "investigate the qualifications of those candidates who appeared on the 2012 general-election ballot".[203] In 2011, Moore appeared twice on the Aroostook Watchmen radio program, a conspiracy-theory show hosted by two Maine men who promote "birther" falsehoods as well as "false flag" conspiracy theories about the September 11 attacks, the Sandy Hook massacre, Boston bombing, and other mass shootings and terrorist attacks.[205]

Moore has also suggested, without providing any evidence, that former president Barack Obama is secretly a Muslim.[22]

Church and state

[edit]

Because of his focus on religion in politics, he has earned the nickname of 'Ayatollah of Alabama' among his critics.[15]

In a January 2014 speech in Mississippi, Moore said that the Framers of the Declaration of Independence and the Founding Fathers attributed our rights to "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" as coming from a specific God, stating "Buddha didn't create us, Mohammed didn't create us, it was the God of the Holy Scriptures."[206] The speech prompted criticism because it appeared to suggest that non-Christians did not enjoy religious protections under the First Amendment. In a subsequent interview, Moore said that the First Amendment protects all faiths: "It applies to the rights God gave us to be free in our modes of thinking, and as far as religious liberty to all people, regardless of what they believe."[207]

Civil rights

[edit]

Moore was a strong opponent of a proposed amendment to the Alabama Constitution in 2004. Known as Amendment 2, the proposed legislation would have removed wording from the state constitution that referred to poll taxes and required separate schools for "white and colored children", a practice already outlawed due to civil rights-era legislation during the Civil Rights Movement. Moore and other opponents of the measure argued that the amendment's wording would have allowed federal judges to force the state to fund public school improvements with increased taxes. Voters in Alabama narrowly defeated the proposed amendment, with a margin of 1,850 votes out of 1.38 million cast. Moore's opposition has been cited as a reason for the failure of the referendum.[208][209]

In 2011, Moore said on Aroostook Watchmen, a right-wing conspiracy radio show that getting rid of all the constitutional amendments after the Tenth Amendment would "eliminate many problems".[205] Amendments adopted after the Tenth Amendment include the Thirteenth Amendment (which abolished slavery); the Fifteenth Amendment (which barred the government from denying persons the right to vote based on the "race, color, or previous condition of servitude"); and the Nineteenth Amendment (which guaranteed women's suffrage).[205] In the same appearance, when asked about the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution (which provides for equal protection of the laws), Moore said that he has "very serious problems with its approval by the states".[205] During his 2017 campaign, when asked about these statements, a spokesman for Moore said that he did not favor repeal of these amendments but was merely expressing concern over "the historical trend since the ratification of the Bill of Rights" of "federal empowerment over state empowerment".[205]

In a November 2017 speech at a revival in Jackson, Roy Moore stated that "they started [to] create new rights in 1965, and today we've got a problem" in an apparent reference to the Voting Rights Act of 1965.[210]

Confederacy

[edit]

Neo-Confederate groups held events at the Foundation for Moral Law, a foundation led by Moore, in 2009 and 2010.[211] The events "promoted a history of the Civil War sympathetic to the Confederate cause, in which the conflict is presented as one fought over the federal government violating the South's sovereignty as opposed to one fought chiefly over the preservation of slavery".[211]

The foundation's then-executive director, Rich Hobson, now [when?] Moore's campaign manager, claimed in 2010 that Moore was unaware of these events and that it was Hobson who approved them.[211]

Education

[edit]

In 2007, Moore opposed preschool, claiming that attendees are "much more likely to learn a liberal social and political philosophy" and that state involvement in early childhood education is characteristic of totalitarianism.[212]

Evolution

[edit]

Moore rejects the theory of evolution, saying "There is no such thing as evolution. That we came from a snake? No, I don't believe that."[196] In 2010, Moore ran attack ads in the Republican gubernatorial primary against his opponent Bradley Byrne, questioning Byrne's faith on the grounds that he had supported the teaching of evolution while on a local school board. (In response, Byrne ran ads claiming to be a creationist.)[213][214]

Free speech

[edit]

In an October 2017 interview with Time, Moore said regarding NFL players who protested police violence by kneeling during the playing of the national anthem: "It's against the law, you know that? It was a [sic] act of Congress that every man stand and put their hand over their heart. That's the law."[215][216][217] This assertion is incorrect assuming Moore was calling for enforcement; for civilians, the United States Flag Code, which outlines proper conduct when the national anthem is played, is an advisory description of proper etiquette, not an enforceable law.[218] The US Flag Code does not reference standing for the national anthem.

Trade

[edit]

When asked whether he approved of free trade, Moore stated that he supported protectionism.[219] Moore has suggested pulling out of various free trade agreements, saying that he would rescind "unfair free trade agreements which have severely damaged our economy".[220]

Immigration

[edit]

In July 2017, Moore stated that he was unfamiliar with what the Dreamer program was.[196] Later, in September 2017, Moore criticized Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), which grants temporary stay to unauthorized immigrants brought to the United States as children.[196]

Views on LGBT people

[edit]

Moore has been described as holding "virulently anti-gay" beliefs.[195][14] Moore is supportive of laws to make homosexuality illegal, and has argued that same-sex parents are unfit to raise children, that openly gay individuals should not be allowed to serve in government, and that the legitimization of various forms of "sodomy" may cause suffering in the United States.[195][14][221] He believes that homosexuality goes against "the laws of nature" and stated it is comparable to bestiality.[222]

In 1996, while presiding over a divorce case, Moore ruled that a mother who had had a lesbian affair would lose custody of her children to the father and that she could not be allowed to see her children unless she was supervised.[223] Moore wrote in his ruling, "The court strongly feels that the minor children will be detrimentally affected by the present lifestyle of [Mrs. Borden] who has engaged in a homosexual relationship during her marriage, forbidden both by the laws of the State of Alabama and the Laws of Nature."[223] The Court of Civil Appeals removed Moore from the case, a decision that was later affirmed by the Alabama Supreme Court.[223]

In February 2002, as Alabama Chief Justice, Moore issued a controversial opinion that expressed his belief that the state should use its powers to punish "homosexual behavior". The case, D.H. v. H.H., was a custody dispute where a lesbian was petitioning for custody of her children, alleging abuse by her ex-husband. A circuit court in Alabama had ruled in favor of the father, but the Alabama Court of Civil Appeals overturned that verdict 4–1, saying that substantial evidence existed of abusive behavior by the father.[224] In a concurring opinion in the case, Moore stated that a parent's homosexuality should be a deciding factor in determining which parent gets custody over children: "Homosexual behavior is a ground for divorce, an act of sexual misconduct punishable as a crime in Alabama, a crime against nature, an inherent evil, and an act so heinous that it defies one's ability to describe it. That is enough under the law to allow a court to consider such activity harmful to a child."[225]

In 2016, Moore was suspended from the Alabama Supreme Court for instructing state probate judges to deny marriage licenses to same-sex couples, in contravention of Obergefell v. Hodges, in which the U.S. Supreme Court determined that same-sex couples have a constitutional right to marry.[226]

In 2017, Moore called for impeaching judges who have issued rulings supportive of homosexuality and same-sex marriage.[222] In November 2016, Moore argued that the Obergefell ruling was worse than the 1857 Dred Scott v. Sandford ruling (which declared that African-Americans, whether enslaved or free, were property and could not be American citizens).[227] The Dred Scott ruling is widely considered as the worst Supreme Court ruling.[228][229]

In November 2017, Moore said that transgender people "don't have rights".[160]

Divine retribution

[edit]

In August 2017, Moore suggested that the September 11 attacks were a punishment by God for Americans' declining religiosity.[230][195] Moore has also suggested that the Sandy Hook shooting, which killed 28 people (including 20 children), was "because we've forgotten the law of God".[231] Moore has also said that suffering in the United States may be because "we legitimize sodomy" and "legitimize abortion".[195] The Washington Post commented that "among the prices [Moore] says this country has paid for denying God's supremacy: the high murder rate in Chicago, crime on the streets of Washington, child abuse, rape and sodomy."[222]

Opposition to Islam

[edit]

Moore has called for banning Muslims from serving in Congress, described Islam as a "false religion" and made unsubstantiated claims about Sharia law in the United States.[195][14] When asked by a reporter where in the United States that Sharia law was being practiced, Moore said "Well, there's Sharia law, as I understand it, in Illinois, Indiana – up there. I don't know."[232][233] Asked if it was not an amazing claim for a Senate candidate to make, Moore said "Well, let me just put it this way – if they are, they are; if they're not, they're not."[232]

In 2006, Moore wrote that Keith Ellison of Minnesota, the first Muslim to have been elected to the United States House of Representatives, should be barred from sitting in Congress because in his view, a Muslim could not honestly take the oath of office. Moore said that the Quran did not allow for religions other than Islam to exist, and added, "common sense alone dictates that in the midst of a war with Islamic terrorists we should not place someone in a position of great power who shares their doctrine."[234]

Vladimir Putin and Russia interference

[edit]

Moore has praised Russian president Vladimir Putin, stating that he is maybe "more akin to me than I know". When asked whether he believed that Russia interfered in the 2016 United States elections, Moore stated, "Everybody else thinks it's the Russians. I think it was the providential hand of God."[201][202]

Sexual misconduct allegations

[edit]

In November 2017, during Moore's U.S. Senate campaign, nine women accused him of inappropriate sexual or social conduct.[235] Three of the women said they had been sexually assaulted by Moore when they were aged 14, 16, and 28.[8][clarification needed] The other six described him pursuing a romantic relationship with them while he was in his 30s and they were as young as 16, but said there had not been any inappropriate sexual contact.[7] Moore denied the sexual assault allegations,[8] but did not dispute that he had approached or dated teenagers over the age of 16 (the age of consent in Alabama).[10][236][237] Independent witnesses confirmed that Moore had a reputation for approaching teenage girls, often at a local mall, and asking them out.[7][237][238]

Moore has offered contradictory responses on whether he knew his accusers. He had said on November 10 that he did "recognize" the maiden names of Debbie Wesson Gibson and Gloria Thacker Deason (both Gibson and Deason had alleged that Moore had dated them when they were 17–18) and remembered each "as a good girl". Regarding if he had dated Gibson, Moore said "I can't recall the specific dates because that's been 40 years."[239] On November 27 and 29, Moore took a different stance, repeatedly stating "I do not know any of these women" while also saying that "pictures of young children – whose names are not mentioned and I do not know – appear conveniently on the opposition's ads ... These allegations are completely false."[240][241]

Following the allegations, Moore appeared as a guest on Sacha Baron Cohen's 2018 comedy series Who Is America? in which Baron Cohen, disguised as Israeli anti-terrorism expert Erran Morad, demonstrates new "technology", supposedly developed by the Israeli Army to identify pedophiles. Moore walked out of the interview after the device repeatedly indicated he was a pedophile.[242] In September 2018, Moore filed a lawsuit against Baron Cohen, Showtime, and CBS Corporation seeking $95 million in damages for alleged fraud, defamation, and emotional distress. The lawsuit was filed in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia and argued that the consent agreement signed by Moore was "obtained through fraud" and was therefore "void and inoperative."[243] In October 2018, Showtime moved for a change of venue to the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York.[244] Despite the consent agreement specifying that any disputes be dealt with in a New York court, Moore's legal team opposed the change in venue, describing the move as "purely tactical, as they clearly perceive New York to a more favorable forum, where they will more than likely find a favorable left-leaning, pro-entertainment industry judge."[245] Moore's legal team also contended that he had been "fraudulently induced" to appear on the show by two primary misrepresentations: Firstly, that Moore was under the impression that he was being flown to Washington D.C. to receive an award for his support of Israel; and, secondly, that he was told that the segment was being produced by an Israeli production company named Yerushalayim TV.[245] In July 2021, Moore's lawsuit was dismissed by Southern District of New York Judge John Cronan, who wrote that "Moore's claims are barred by the unambiguous contractual language, which precludes the very causes of action he now brings."[246] This decision was upheld in July 2022, with the appeals court writing in its unsigned summary order that "Baron Cohen may have implied (despite his in character disclaimers of any belief that Judge Moore was a pedophile) that he believed Judge Moore's accusers, but he did not imply the existence of any independent factual basis for that belief besides the obviously farcical pedophile detecting 'device,' which no reasonable person could believe to be an actual, functioning piece of technology."[247] Responding to the judgement, Moore told the Associated Press that Baron Cohen's "pusillanimous and fraudulent conduct must be stopped," and that he will be making a further appeal.[248]

In August 2022, Moore was awarded $8.2 million by a jury from Anniston, Alabama, in a defamation lawsuit against a Democratic-aligned super PAC over their use of the allegations in advertisements. Lawyers for the PAC stated that they will appeal the decision.[249]

Personal life

[edit]

He is a Baptist Christian, a member of the Gallant First Baptist Church.[250]

Marriage and children

[edit]

Moore first saw his future wife, Kayla Kisor, when she was in her mid-teens performing at a dance recital. Moore was 31 at the time. In his 2005 autobiography, Moore described his reaction, writing: "I knew Kayla was going to be a special person in my life."[251] In 1984, Moore and Kayla Kisor Heald met again at a Christmas party but she was then a married mother. She filed for divorce from her first husband on December 28, 1984, and was divorced on April 19, 1985. Moore married Kayla on December 14, 1985. He was 38, she was 24.[33] They have four adult children.[252]

Columnist

[edit]

Moore wrote weekly columns for the far-right website WorldNetDaily from 2006 to 2009.[253][254]

Electoral history

[edit]
2000 Chief Justice of the Alabama Supreme Court election
Republican primary[255]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Roy Moore 115,204 54.6%
Republican Harold See 63,604 30.1%
Republican Pam Baschab 17,869 8.5%
Republican Wayne Thorn 14,369 6.8%
Total votes 211,046 100%
General election[256]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Roy Moore 878,480 54.6%
Democratic Sharon Gilbert Yates 726,348 45.2%
Write-In Write-ins 3,451 0.2%
Total votes 1,608,279 100%
2006 Alabama gubernatorial election
Republican primary[257]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Bob Riley (incumbent) 306,665 66.7%
Republican Roy Moore 153,354 33.3%
Total votes 460,019 100%
2010 Alabama gubernatorial election
Republican primary[258]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Bradley Byrne 137,349 27.9%
Republican Robert J. Bentley 123,870 25.2%
Republican Tim James 123,662 25.1%
Republican Roy Moore 95,077 19.3%
Republican Bill Johnson 8,350 1.7%
Republican Charles Taylor 2,622 0.5%
Republican James Potts 1,549 0.3%
Total votes 492,480 100%
2012 Chief Justice of the Alabama Supreme Court election
Republican primary[259]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Roy Moore 282,743 50.4%
Republican Charles Graddick 141,570 25.2%
Republican Chuck Malone (incumbent) 136,927 24.4%
Total votes 561,240 100%
General election[260]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Roy Moore 1,051,627 51.8%
Democratic Robert Vance 977,301 48.1%
Write-In Write-ins 2,189 0.1%
Total votes 2,031,117 100%
2017 United States Senate special election in Alabama
Republican primary[142]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Roy Moore 164,524 38.9%
Republican Luther Strange (incumbent) 138,971 32.8%
Republican Mo Brooks 83,287 19.7%
Republican Trip Pittman 29,124 6.9%
Republican Randy Brinson 2,978 0.6%
Republican Bryan Peeples 1,579 0.4%
Republican Mary Maxwell 1,543 0.4%
Republican James Beretta 1,078 0.3%
Republican Dom Gentile 303 0.1%
Republican Joseph Breault 252 0.1%
Total votes 423,282 100%
Republican primary runoff[154]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Roy Moore 262,204 54.6%
Republican Luther Strange (incumbent) 218,066 45.4%
Total votes 480,270 100%
General election results[261][262]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Doug Jones 673,896 50.0%
Republican Roy Moore 651,972 48.3%
Write-In Write-ins 22,852 1.7%
Total votes 1,348,720 100%
Democratic gain from Republican
2020 United States Senate election in Alabama
Republican primary[263]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Tommy Tuberville 239,616 33.4%
Republican Jeff Sessions 227,088 31.6%
Republican Bradley Byrne 178,627 24.9%
Republican Roy Moore 51,377 7.2%
Republican Ruth Page Nelson 7,200 1.0%
Republican Arnold Mooney 7,149 1.0%
Republican Stanley Adair 6,608 0.9%
Total votes 717,665 100%

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Roy Stewart Moore (born February 11, 1947) is an American jurist, lawyer, and Republican politician from Alabama who served two non-consecutive terms as Chief Justice of the Alabama Supreme Court, from 2001 to 2003 and 2013 to 2017.[1][2] A United States Military Academy at West Point graduate and Army captain who commanded a military police company in Vietnam, Moore pursued a legal career after his service, becoming a deputy district attorney and later a circuit court judge before ascending to the state's highest court.[1][2] Moore garnered national attention for installing a 5,280-pound granite monument inscribed with the Ten Commandments in the Alabama Judicial Building shortly after taking office in 2001, refusing to remove it in 2003 despite a federal court order deeming it an unconstitutional endorsement of religion, which resulted in his removal from the bench by the Alabama Court of the Judiciary.[3][2] Re-elected chief justice in 2012, Moore was suspended without pay for the remainder of his term in 2016 after issuing an administrative order advising probate judges not to issue same-sex marriage licenses in response to the U.S. Supreme Court's Obergefell v. Hodges ruling, a stance he defended as upholding state authority and natural law principles.[2][1] In April 2017, Moore resigned to pursue the Republican nomination in Alabama's special U.S. Senate election to replace Attorney General Jeff Sessions, defeating incumbent senator Luther Strange in the primary before losing the December general election to Democrat Doug Jones by 1.5 percentage points amid allegations from several women that Moore had sought romantic or sexual relationships with them when they were teenagers and he was a prosecutor in his thirties—allegations Moore denied as false and politically orchestrated to sabotage his campaign.[1][2] Moore has also sought the Alabama governorship twice and founded the Foundation for Moral Law in 2002 to advocate for the biblical underpinnings of American jurisprudence.[1]

Early Life and Education

Family Background and Upbringing

Roy Stewart Moore was born on February 11, 1947, in Gadsden, the seat of Etowah County, Alabama, to parents Roy Moore and Evelyn Stewart Moore.[1] He was the eldest of five children in the family.[1] The Moore family lived in Etowah County, a predominantly rural area in northeastern Alabama characterized by agricultural communities and modest economic conditions.[1] Moore's father worked in construction, reflecting the working-class background common in the region during the post-World War II era.[4] Raised in this environment, Moore experienced a childhood shaped by rural Southern values, including strong emphasis on family, faith, and self-reliance, amid the economic challenges faced by many families in mid-20th-century Alabama.[5]

Military Service in Vietnam

Roy Moore graduated from the United States Military Academy at West Point in 1969 with a Bachelor of Science degree.[2] Following graduation, he was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the United States Army and initially served at Fort Benning, Georgia, before being assigned to Illesheim, Germany.[1] [6] In 1971, Moore was promoted to captain and deployed to South Vietnam, where he took command of the 188th Military Police Company, part of the 504th Military Police Battalion.[6] [7] His unit was responsible for law enforcement and security operations amid the ongoing Vietnam War. Moore enforced strict discipline, including aggressive measures against drug use and other infractions among his troops, earning him the nickname "Captain America" for his rigid adherence to military regulations.[8] [9] Moore's command style reportedly led to tensions with subordinates, including an alleged attempt on his life by fragging—a tactic where disgruntled soldiers targeted officers with grenades—though no injuries occurred and the incident underscored the challenges of leadership in a war zone marked by low morale.[10] He served in Vietnam from approximately 1971 to 1972 before returning stateside.[11] Moore was honorably discharged from the Army in 1974 at the rank of captain.[1] Moore attended the University of Alabama School of Law, earning his Juris Doctor degree in 1977.[2][1] Following graduation, he returned to Etowah County, Alabama, where he began his legal practice.[1] From 1977 to 1982, Moore served as an assistant district attorney in the Etowah County District Attorney's Office, having been sworn in on October 1, 1977.[12][4] In this role, he prosecuted criminal cases, gaining experience in the local court system.[6] After leaving the district attorney's office, Moore briefly engaged in private practice before pursuing a judicial position.[6]

Judicial Career

Circuit Court Judge Tenure (1992–2000)

In 1992, Alabama Governor Guy Hunt appointed Roy Moore to the position of circuit judge in Etowah County's 16th Judicial Circuit Court, filling a vacancy created by the retirement of Judge Donald Stewart.[13][8] Moore, who had switched his party affiliation to Republican earlier that year, served in this role until 2000.[1] During his tenure, he earned the moniker "Ten Commandments Judge" for prominently displaying a hand-carved wooden plaque of the Ten Commandments in his courtroom, a practice he continued from his time in private practice.[14][15] Moore also initiated court sessions with voluntary prayer, often inviting local ministers or citizens to lead invocations, emphasizing what he described as the historical role of religion in American jurisprudence.[14] These practices drew both local support for upholding moral standards and criticism for potentially endorsing religion in a public forum. In March 1995, the American Civil Liberties Union of Alabama filed a federal lawsuit against Moore, claiming the Ten Commandments display and courtroom prayers constituted an establishment of religion in violation of the First Amendment.[16][17] The U.S. District Court dismissed the suit later that year, ruling that the plaintiffs lacked standing to challenge the practices.[18] In judicial rulings, Moore applied a strict interpretation favoring parental rights and traditional family structures. For instance, in a 1999 child custody case involving a divorcing couple, he granted temporary custody to the father and limited the mother's unsupervised visitation, citing her admitted extramarital lesbian relationship as a factor that could expose the children to a harmful lifestyle conflicting with their best interests.[19] The Alabama Court of Civil Appeals removed Moore from the case shortly thereafter, directing that custody decisions prioritize the child's welfare without presuming harm based solely on parental sexual orientation.[19] Moore's approach reflected his broader philosophy that acknowledgment of divine authority underpinned just governance and judicial restraint.[20] His tenure solidified his reputation as a judge committed to integrating Judeo-Christian principles into legal proceedings, setting the stage for his subsequent campaigns for higher office.[21]

First Term as Chief Justice (2001–2003)

Roy Moore assumed office as Chief Justice of the Alabama Supreme Court on January 15, 2001, following his election on November 7, 2000, where he secured victory with 51.8 percent of the vote against Democratic incumbent Robert S. Vance.[2][13] In his inaugural address, Moore pledged that "God's law will be publicly acknowledged in our court," emphasizing his view that Judeo-Christian principles formed the moral foundation of American law.[13][6] Shortly after taking office, in the summer of 2001, Moore commissioned and oversaw the installation of a 5,280-pound granite monument inscribed with the Ten Commandments in the rotunda of the Alabama State Judicial Building in Montgomery.[22] The monument, funded privately and carved by a local artisan, included additional inscriptions referencing the Declaration of Independence, the national anthem, and other historical texts, which Moore argued served to acknowledge the historical and moral basis of law rather than to establish religion.[23][24] This action drew immediate legal challenges from attorneys and the ACLU, who filed Glassroth v. Moore in federal district court, contending the display violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment by endorsing religion in a government building.[25] U.S. District Judge Myron Thompson presided over a seven-day trial in 2002 and ruled on November 18, 2002, that the monument constituted an impermissible religious endorsement, ordering its removal within 30 days.[25] The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the decision in June 2003, and the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal in August 2003.[18] Moore publicly refused to comply, stating he had "no intention of removing the monument," prioritizing his interpretation of moral law over the federal order.[26] On August 21, 2003, the other eight Alabama Supreme Court justices ordered the monument's relocation to comply, and it was moved to a less prominent area on August 27, 2003.[27] Moore's defiance led to ethics complaints, culminating in a hearing before the Alabama Court of the Judiciary. On November 13, 2003, the court unanimously removed him from office, finding that he had willfully violated the Alabama Canons of Judicial Ethics by failing to uphold the rule of law and execute court orders without alteration.[28][29] Moore maintained that his actions defended constitutional principles against judicial overreach, appealing the decision unsuccessfully to the Alabama Supreme Court.[30] This episode marked the primary controversy of his first term, highlighting tensions between state judicial authority and federal constitutional interpretations.[3]

Second Term as Chief Justice (2012–2017)

Moore assumed office as Chief Justice of the Alabama Supreme Court on January 15, 2013, following his election in November 2012.[13] During this term, the court under his leadership handled various civil and criminal appeals, but Moore's tenure became defined by administrative actions challenging federal authority on same-sex marriage, echoing his prior conflicts with federal courts.[31] In response to a January 23, 2015, ruling by U.S. District Judge Callie Granade declaring Alabama's same-sex marriage ban unconstitutional under the U.S. Constitution's Equal Protection and Due Process Clauses, Moore issued an administrative order on February 8, 2015, directing the state's 68 probate judges—who issue marriage licenses under Alabama law—to adhere to state statutes defining marriage as between one man and one woman.[32] The order stated that neither the U.S. Supreme Court nor Granade's decision had mandated issuance of such licenses, emphasizing that probate judges operated under state authority and that the federal ruling pertained only to the plaintiffs before Granade.[31] Moore argued this preserved Alabama's sovereign interest in marriage definitions, rooted in the state constitution and longstanding precedent, and the Alabama Supreme Court subsequently issued a one-sentence order on March 3, 2015, affirming that state law remained controlling absent direct U.S. Supreme Court intervention. Following the U.S. Supreme Court's June 26, 2015, decision in Obergefell v. Hodges, which held same-sex marriage bans unconstitutional nationwide, Moore maintained that the ruling did not explicitly compel state officials to issue licenses and continued public statements urging resistance, including at a September 2015 event where he declared obedience to federal orders on the matter unnecessary.[33] The Alabama Judicial Inquiry Commission charged him in 2016 with violating judicial canons by failing to respect the rule of law and engaging in conduct prejudicial to the administration of justice.[34] On September 30, 2016, the Alabama Court of the Judiciary suspended Moore without pay for the remainder of his term, finding his actions undermined public confidence in the judiciary and disregarded the supremacy of federal law as interpreted by Obergefell. Moore appealed the suspension, but on April 19, 2017, a specially appointed Alabama Supreme Court upheld it, rejecting claims that his orders merely advised on unsettled legal questions and affirming the ethics violations under Canons 1, 2, and 3 of the Alabama Canons of Judicial Ethics.[33] He submitted retirement papers on April 26, 2017, effectively ending his judicial service amid the ongoing controversy.[26] Throughout, Moore defended his stance as fidelity to state constitutional duties and divine law over perceived judicial overreach, though the proceedings highlighted tensions between state judicial autonomy and federal supremacy.[34]

Foundation for Moral Law

Founding and Core Objectives

The Foundation for Moral Law was founded by Roy Moore in 2003, immediately following his ouster from the Alabama Supreme Court for refusing to comply with a federal court order to remove a granite monument inscribed with the Ten Commandments from the state judicial building.[35] Initially established as a legal defense fund to support Moore's appeal of the removal order and related litigation, the nonprofit organization quickly expanded its scope beyond the immediate controversy.[35] Incorporated as a 501(c)(3) entity in Alabama, it received tax-exempt status from the IRS in March 2005.[36] The foundation's core objectives center on defending the inalienable right to acknowledge God as the moral foundation of American law and government, preserving religious liberty, and advocating for a strict, originalist interpretation of the U.S. Constitution aligned with the Framers' intent.[37] It promotes the view that Judeo-Christian moral principles underpin the nation's legal and governmental traditions, countering what it describes as judicial overreach that erodes these foundations.[1] Through amicus briefs in Supreme Court cases, public education initiatives, and litigation support, the organization seeks to restore constitutional recognition of divine moral law in public life.[37]

Key Activities and Financial Scrutiny

The Foundation for Moral Law has primarily focused on legal advocacy to defend religious liberty and promote the integration of Judeo-Christian moral principles into public policy and jurisprudence. It participates in litigation by providing direct representation or support in cases involving religious freedom, such as defending Pastor Tony Spell against charges related to church gatherings during COVID-19 restrictions in Spell v. Edwards (Louisiana Supreme Court, 2022), where charges were quashed, and ongoing federal claims for damages.[38] The organization has also represented individuals in pro bono criminal appeals, including Willie Lee Conner on wrongful conviction claims (appeals pending before the Alabama Supreme Court as of 2023) and Rickey Caster in a Selma, Alabama, case dismissed in March 2023.[38] In addition to direct involvement, the Foundation files amicus curiae briefs in state and federal courts, including the U.S. Supreme Court, on issues like prayer in schools, parental rights, and the sanctity of life. Notable examples include briefs supporting Coach Joe Kennedy's right to pray in Kennedy v. Bremerton School District (U.S. Supreme Court, decided July 2022) and advocating for overturning Roe v. Wade in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization (U.S. Supreme Court, decided June 2022).[38] More recent filings address free speech (Volokh v. James), conversion therapy bans (Chiles v. Salazar), and school policies (Vitsaxaki v. Skaneateles Central School District, 2025).[39][40][41] Educational initiatives include circulating position papers, such as critiques of Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson's record (2022) and opposition to Alabama's Act 2022-442 on school policies, as well as counseling individuals on religious exemptions from vaccination mandates.[38] Financial practices of the Foundation have drawn scrutiny, particularly regarding compensation to Roy Moore, its founder and president. Internal documents reveal that in 2003, following Moore's removal from the Alabama Supreme Court, the organization arranged to pay him an annual salary of $180,000 for part-time work as president, comprising speaking fees and direct donations funneled through the charity, though public tax filings reported lower amounts.[42] In 2011, the Foundation promised Moore approximately $500,000 in back pay via a second mortgage on its property but failed to report it as taxable income on his behalf or its returns, potentially subjecting Moore to over $100,000 in federal income taxes and the organization to taxes, interest, and penalties exceeding $159,000.[43] Further examination arose from allegations of improper political activity. The Campaign Legal Center filed complaints with the IRS in September and November 2017, asserting that the Foundation, led by Moore's wife Kayla Moore as chairman, violated its 501(c)(3) tax-exempt status by using charitable funds to promote Roy Moore's 2017 U.S. Senate campaign through newsletters, emails, and events urging support for his candidacy.[44] The organization also did not file required Form 990 tax returns for 2015 and 2016, prompting questions about transparency amid its small revenue (under $1 million annually in recent years per ProPublica data).[45][36] No public records indicate resolved IRS audits or imposed penalties as of available data, though tax experts noted the arrangements risked private inurement prohibitions under IRS rules for nonprofits.[42]

Political Campaigns

Statewide Races Prior to 2012

In 2005, following his removal from the Alabama Supreme Court chief justiceship in November 2003 for refusing to comply with a federal court order to remove a Ten Commandments monument from the state judicial building, Roy Moore announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination for governor of Alabama in the 2006 election.[46] His campaign emphasized a return to "moral law" and Judeo-Christian principles in governance, drawing on his prior national attention from the monument dispute, while criticizing incumbent Republican Governor Bob Riley for insufficient conservatism on issues such as taxes, gambling expansion, and illegal immigration.[47] Moore positioned himself as an outsider challenging the political establishment, arguing that Alabama needed leadership rooted in biblical values to address moral decay and governmental overreach.[48] Moore's campaign struggled with fundraising and polling disadvantages from the outset, trailing Riley by a 3-to-1 margin in early surveys and receiving significantly less financial support from party donors and establishment figures who backed the incumbent.[47] He garnered endorsements from social conservatives and religious leaders but faced criticism for his limited executive experience and the lingering controversy over his judicial ouster. The Republican primary election was held on June 6, 2006, with no runoff required as Riley secured a decisive victory.[49] Official results showed Moore receiving 153,354 votes, or 33.34% of the total, while Riley obtained approximately 308,000 votes, or 66.66%.[50] Voter turnout in the primary was around 460,000 ballots cast statewide. Moore conceded the nomination that evening, praising his supporters but acknowledging the outcome, after which Riley proceeded to win the general election against Democratic nominee Lucy Baxley.[49] This marked Moore's first foray into partisan statewide elective office following his judicial career, highlighting his appeal among a conservative base but limited broader Republican support prior to his 2012 judicial comeback.[48]

2012 Chief Justice Re-election

In the Republican primary for Chief Justice held on March 13, 2012, Moore secured victory with slightly over 50 percent of the vote against challengers including former Alabama Attorney General Charles Graddick and Circuit Judge Charles Price.[51] His campaign emphasized a return to the bench to uphold what he described as the foundational role of divine law in American jurisprudence, drawing on his prior tenure and ouster over the Ten Commandments monument dispute.[52] Moore faced Democrat Bob Vance, a Jefferson County Circuit Judge, in the general election on November 6, 2012. The contest highlighted contrasts in judicial philosophy, with Moore advocating for the acknowledgment of God in public institutions and criticizing federal overreach on issues like same-sex marriage, while Vance positioned himself as a moderate emphasizing impartiality and experience without the controversies of Moore's past.[53] [54] Campaign spending reflected Alabama's history of high-stakes judicial races, though totals were lower than in prior cycles, with negative ads targeting Moore's 2003 removal.[51] Moore prevailed with approximately 52 percent of the vote to Vance's 48 percent, reclaiming the office he had held from 2001 to 2003.[53] [55] The narrow margin underscored divisions over Moore's approach to religion and law, yet voter support in rural and conservative areas proved decisive.[54] He was sworn in on January 15, 2013, pledging to "stand for the acknowledgement of God" in state governance.[56]

2017 U.S. Senate Special Election

The special election for Alabama's Class II U.S. Senate seat was triggered by Jeff Sessions' confirmation as U.S. Attorney General on February 8, 2017, creating a vacancy that Governor Robert Bentley called for a special election to fill. Republican Roy Moore, a former Alabama Chief Justice known for his conservative stances on social issues, announced his candidacy on June 2, 2017, positioning himself as an outsider against establishment figures. In the August 15, 2017, GOP primary, Moore advanced to a runoff against incumbent Senator Luther Strange, whom President Donald Trump had endorsed.[57] Moore won the September 26 runoff decisively, receiving approximately 50.3% of the vote to Strange's 49.0%, bolstered by support from evangelical voters and figures like Steve Bannon.[58] Democrat Doug Jones, a former U.S. Attorney, won his party's nomination unopposed and focused his general election campaign on healthcare, economic issues, and Moore's controversial record.[59] On November 9, 2017, The Washington Post published allegations from Leigh Corfman claiming Moore initiated a sexual encounter with her in 1979 when she was 14 and he was 32, along with accounts from three other women alleging romantic pursuits or harassment as teenagers in the late 1970s and early 1980s.[60] Additional women came forward in subsequent days, including one represented by attorney Gloria Allred alleging assault at age 16.[61] Moore categorically denied the accusations, stating on November 10, 2017, "I have never engaged in sexual misconduct" and dismissing the reports as politically motivated "fake news" from opponents tied to the Democratic Party and media outlets.[62] He suggested the timing, just weeks before the election, indicated a coordinated effort to derail his campaign, and he filed defamation lawsuits against accusers and reporters, though none resulted in immediate legal vindication during the race.[63] The allegations prompted swift backlash from national Republicans: Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell called for Moore to withdraw on November 13, 2017, and the National Republican Senatorial Committee halted financial support and ads.[61] President Trump initially avoided full endorsement but shifted on December 4, 2017, praising Moore's denial and warning that a Jones victory would aid Democrats' legislative agenda, effectively urging Alabama voters to support him despite the controversy.[64] Moore refused to exit the race, rallying core supporters by emphasizing his faith, opposition to abortion, and criticism of "Washington elites," while turnout efforts targeted evangelicals and rural voters. Jones, meanwhile, mobilized urban and suburban demographics, particularly African American voters, through ads highlighting the allegations and emphasizing civil rights prosecutions from his prosecutorial past.[65] The December 12, 2017, general election saw Doug Jones defeat Moore by 1.6 percentage points, with Jones receiving 671,151 votes (50.0%) to Moore's 649,227 (48.4%), a margin of 21,924 votes amid provisional and absentee ballots.[66] Voter turnout reached approximately 40% of registered voters, exceeding pre-election projections of 25-30%, driven by high African American participation (around 30% of the electorate, with 98% supporting Jones) and suburban white women shifting against Moore.[67] Youth turnout was estimated at 23%, favoring Jones decisively.[68] Post-election, Moore requested a recount on December 14, 2017, alleging irregularities including non-citizen voting and absentee ballot fraud, but Alabama officials certified Jones' victory on December 28, 2017, after a partial recount confirmed the margin.[69] Moore filed a federal lawsuit to delay certification and seating, claiming violations of the Constitution and state law, but courts rejected his challenges, allowing Jones to be sworn in on January 3, 2018.[70] The outcome narrowed the Republican Senate majority to 51-49, marking the first Democratic statewide federal win in Alabama since 1992 and attributed by analysts to the allegations' erosion of moderate GOP support, though Moore maintained the race reflected broader cultural divides over media credibility and partisan warfare.[71]

2020 U.S. Senate Campaign

Roy Moore announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination in Alabama's 2020 U.S. Senate election on June 20, 2019, aiming to challenge incumbent Democrat Doug Jones.[72][73] The campaign highlighted Moore's conservative stances on issues such as restricting abortion, defending Second Amendment rights, and prioritizing Christian principles in governance, consistent with his prior platforms.[2] However, national Republican organizations, including the National Republican Senatorial Committee, stated they would not support Moore if nominated, citing concerns over his electability stemming from the 2017 sexual misconduct allegations that had derailed his previous Senate bid.[74] In the Republican primary held on March 3, 2020, Moore garnered 22,994 votes, or 7.3% of the total, placing third behind Jeff Sessions (31.6%) and Tommy Tuberville (29.4%).[75][76] The low showing reflected limited fundraising—his campaign reported raising under $300,000 by early 2020—and opposition from party leaders who viewed him as a liability in the general election against Jones.[77] Sessions and Tuberville advanced to a July 14 runoff, which Tuberville won, securing the nomination.[78] Moore did not endorse either runoff candidate and exited the race without advancing, effectively ending his 2020 effort as Tuberville went on to defeat Jones in the November general election.[79] His campaign's failure underscored ongoing GOP divisions over his candidacy, with polls prior to the primary showing him trailing significantly among Republican voters.[80]

Judicial and Political Philosophy

Originalism and Constitutional Interpretation

Moore espoused a strict constructionist view of the U.S. Constitution, advocating interpretation based on the original intent of the framers as expressed in 1787.[81] In judicial opinions and public statements, he contended that modern rulings deviating from this framework, particularly those incorporating evolving societal norms, undermine the document's foundational principles.[82] For instance, during his 2015 opposition to the U.S. Supreme Court's Obergefell v. Hodges decision legalizing same-sex marriage nationwide on June 26, 2015, Moore argued that lower federal courts had strayed from the Constitution's original design by imposing judicial policy over historical limits on federal authority.[83] This approach aligned with broader originalist tenets, emphasizing the public meaning of constitutional text at ratification rather than contemporary reinterpretations.[84] Moore's philosophy extended to viewing the Constitution as rooted in Judeo-Christian moral foundations acknowledged by early American leaders, asserting that acknowledgment of divine authority—evident in founding-era practices—formed part of the original constitutional order.[85] He criticized "living Constitution" theories, which he saw as enabling judges to substitute personal views for fixed textual constraints, as exemplified in his 2003 Time interview where he faulted federal judges for ruling based on "their own feelings" instead of established interpretation.[82] Critics, including legal scholars, have contested the consistency of Moore's originalism, arguing that his resistance to federal supremacy—such as refusing to remove the Ten Commandments monument on November 18, 2001, despite a 2003 federal order—prioritized theological convictions over the framers' allocation of judicial power under Article III and the Supremacy Clause.[86] Moore countered that such federal interventions themselves violated original federalism by encroaching on state sovereignty preserved in the 1787 document.[83] His stance drew support from proponents of constitutional restoration efforts, like the Constitution Restoration Act of 2004, which sought to limit judicial review of actions acknowledging God, reflecting Moore's belief in restoring interpretive fidelity to founding principles.

Religion in Public Life

Roy Moore has maintained that the separation of church and state, as interpreted by the First Amendment, does not require excluding God from public institutions or government functions. He has explicitly stated, "Separation of church and state never meant to separate God from government," emphasizing that the clause prevents the establishment of a national religion while permitting acknowledgment of divine sovereignty.[52] Similarly, Moore has asserted, "You cannot separate God from government," particularly in the United States, where rights such as life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness originate from God, as affirmed in the Declaration of Independence.[87] Central to Moore's stance is the belief that the moral foundation of U.S. law, including the Constitution, derives from biblical principles, with God's sovereignty superseding human enactments. He has argued that public officials have a duty to recognize this, declaring, "I will not neglect my duty. And I will never, never deny the God upon whom our laws and our country depend."[52] In this view, judicial oaths and governmental proceedings should reflect dependence on God, and failures to do so, such as certain Supreme Court rulings, represent an illegitimate elevation of man-made authority over divine law, warranting impeachment of offending justices.[88] Moore's position manifested prominently in his installation of a 5,280-pound granite Ten Commandments monument in the Alabama State Judicial Building rotunda in 2001, intended to symbolize the moral foundation of law and affirm God's role in American jurisprudence rather than to endorse a specific denomination. When federal courts ordered its removal in 2003, citing Establishment Clause violations, Moore refused, framing the conflict as a defense of religious acknowledgment against secular overreach, which resulted in his ouster as chief justice.[52] He has cited historical precedents, such as Joseph Story's 1833 Commentaries on the Constitution, to contend that encouraging Christianity is compatible with the founding document so long as it avoids coercing conscience or prohibiting free exercise.[89]

Social and Cultural Issues

Moore has expressed staunch opposition to abortion, viewing it as the taking of innocent life and prioritizing its prohibition above many other policy concerns. During his 2017 U.S. Senate campaign, he criticized opponent Doug Jones for supporting abortion rights, arguing that such positions enable the "murder of unborn children" and contrasting it with his own commitment to protecting life from conception, with exceptions only to save the mother's life.[90][91] He has described abortion as a greater moral failing than certain personal misconduct allegations leveled against him, reflecting its centrality to his worldview.[92] On marriage and family, Moore has defended traditional definitions limited to one man and one woman, contending that the U.S. Supreme Court's 2015 Obergefell v. Hodges decision undermined the nation's moral foundation and system of family values more severely than historical segregation.[93] As Alabama Chief Justice in 2015–2016, he issued administrative orders directing probate judges to disregard the federal ruling and cease issuing same-sex marriage licenses, asserting that the decision lacked binding authority under state sovereignty and divine law; this led to his suspension from office for violating judicial ethics.[94][95][96] He has spoken publicly at churches and events emphasizing the protection of traditional marriage as essential to societal stability, warning that deviations erode family structures ordained by God.[97][98] Regarding homosexuality, Moore has described homosexual conduct as immoral and "inherent evil," stating in a 2005 interview that it "should be illegal" based on natural law and scriptural prohibitions.[99][100] He has opposed gay adoption and parenting, citing a 1996 circuit court ruling where he denied custody and visitation rights to a lesbian mother on grounds that her lifestyle posed risks to the children involved.[101] In broader critiques of LGBTQ issues, Moore has labeled transgender identity a "sin" and accused "lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender" advocates alongside socialists of orchestrating attacks against him, framing such movements as assaults on conservative moral order.[102][103][104] During his 2019 Senate bid, he invoked a return to pre-Obergefell "moral times" when such conduct was stigmatized.[104]

National Security and Foreign Policy

Moore served in the U.S. Army as a captain during the Vietnam War, where he commanded a military police unit, an experience that informed his emphasis on military strength as essential to national security.[8] In a June 28, 2017, press conference, he identified national security as America's foremost challenge, pledging to rebuild military readiness by prioritizing equipment, armories, weaponry, combat ships—including one under construction in Mobile, Alabama—and F-35 aircraft to ensure the U.S. military could deter adversaries.[105] He advocated a foreign policy of "walking softly but carrying a big stick," fostering trust among allies while instilling fear in enemies, and criticized U.S. arms deals with Iran as undermining American interests.[105] Moore has portrayed Islamic terrorism as a primary existential threat to the United States, attributing the September 11, 2001, attacks exclusively to adherents of Islam and describing the nation as engaged in an ongoing war with Islamic terrorists.[106][107] In this context, he argued that "common sense alone dictates" against placing Muslims in positions of significant authority, given the incompatibility he perceives between Islamic doctrine and American constitutional principles during such conflicts.[107][5] On broader foreign engagements, Moore opposed U.S. involvement in wars driven by presidential whim rather than principled national interests, stating that foreign policy must transcend partisan politics and avoid unnecessary entanglements.[108] He rejected international agreements subordinating U.S. sovereignty to the United Nations, including the Law of the Sea Treaty and the Convention on the Rights of the Child, while supporting a robust nuclear arsenal and opposing arms reduction pacts that could leave America vulnerable.[109] Regarding Russia, Moore expressed partial alignment with Vladimir Putin on resistance to Western promotion of same-sex marriage, remarking that "maybe Putin is right" in contrast to U.S. policies under prior administrations.[109]

Ten Commandments Disputes

As a circuit judge in Etowah County from 1992, Roy Moore displayed a wooden plaque of the Ten Commandments in his courtroom, which drew legal challenges but was upheld in a 1995 state court declaratory judgment action filed by Alabama affirming its constitutionality under state law.[14] During his 2000 campaign for Chief Justice of the Alabama Supreme Court, Moore pledged to install a larger monument if elected, emphasizing the Ten Commandments as the foundation of American law and morality.[3] Upon taking office in January 2001, Moore commissioned and installed a 5,280-pound granite monument depicting the Ten Commandments, along with other religious and historical texts, in the rotunda of the Heflin-Torbert Judicial Building in Montgomery on July 31, 2001, without consulting other justices or obtaining building approval.[29] The monument, funded privately at a cost of approximately $15,000 contributed by supporters, stood over six feet tall and featured inscriptions from the King James Bible version of Exodus 20:2-17.[3] Moore described the installation as a symbolic acknowledgment of God's sovereignty over law, arguing it did not establish religion but recognized historical truths reflected in U.S. founding documents.[52] In August 2001, attorneys Stephen Glassroth and Melinda Maddox, represented by the Southern Poverty Law Center and the ACLU of Alabama, filed Glassroth v. Moore in U.S. District Court, alleging the monument violated the First Amendment's Establishment Clause by endorsing religion in a government building. After a seven-day trial in 2002, U.S. District Judge Myron Thompson ruled on November 18, 2002, that the monument's prominent placement constituted an unconstitutional establishment of religion under the Lemon test, as it lacked secular purpose, advanced religion, and fostered excessive government entanglement. Thompson ordered its removal within 30 days, a decision upheld by the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on June 19, 2003, and denied certiorari by the U.S. Supreme Court on August 21, 2003.[28] Moore publicly refused to comply, stating on August 21, 2003, that he would not remove the monument to avoid defying what he viewed as an erroneous federal interpretation overriding state sovereignty and divine moral authority.[110] That night, while Moore and supporters prayed nearby, state officials including Associate Justice John Horn and law enforcement removed the monument to a storage facility to avert contempt charges against the court.[3] On November 13, 2003, the Alabama Court of the Judiciary, in a 8-0 vote with one recusal, unanimously removed Moore from office, finding he willfully violated his ethical duty to uphold the law by defying the federal order, emphasizing that judicial independence does not permit ignoring higher court rulings.[28][29] Moore appealed his removal to the Alabama Supreme Court, which declined to hear the case, and later pursued unsuccessful state constitutional amendment efforts to restore his position, framing the disputes as a defense against federal judicial overreach eroding acknowledgment of God in public institutions.[111] The monument remained in storage until 2005, when it was moved to the Gadsden Etowah County Courthouse under private ownership, avoiding further public display challenges.[3] In early 2015, following U.S. District Judge Callie V.S. Granade's January 23 ruling in Strawser v. Strange declaring Alabama's statutory and constitutional bans on same-sex marriage unconstitutional under the U.S. Constitution's Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses, Chief Justice Roy Moore issued an administrative order on February 8 directing the state's probate judges to adhere to existing Alabama law prohibiting the issuance of marriage licenses to same-sex couples.[112][113] Moore contended that the federal decision invalidated the bans but did not mandate licensing same-sex unions, emphasizing probate judges' ministerial duty under Alabama's Sanctity of Marriage Amendment (2006), which defines marriage as solely between one man and one woman and declares the state has no authority to recognize otherwise.[114][115] On March 3, 2015, the Alabama Supreme Court, with Moore concurring, issued an order in Ex parte State ex rel. Alabama Policy Institute affirming that "nothing in the United States Constitution or in this state's Constitution mandates that probate judges issue marriage licenses or recognize marriages between members of the same sex," effectively halting same-sex marriage licensing in Alabama pending further review.[116][117] The 7-2 decision, supported by arguments invoking Alabama's marriage laws and distinguishing prior U.S. Supreme Court precedents like Lawrence v. Texas (2003) as inapplicable to state recognition of same-sex unions, reflected Moore's originalist view that federal courts lacked authority to redefine marriage absent explicit constitutional text or historical precedent.[118] Following the U.S. Supreme Court's June 26, 2015, decision in Obergefell v. Hodges holding that state bans on same-sex marriage violate the Fourteenth Amendment, Moore issued a second administrative order on January 6, 2016, instructing probate judges that Alabama's bans "remain in full force and effect" and that they retained a duty not to issue licenses to same-sex couples, as Obergefell purportedly did not directly address or invalidate the state's specific amendment.[119][120] He argued this stance preserved judicial integrity against what he described as an extraconstitutional federal imposition, prioritizing state constitutional sovereignty and traditional definitions of marriage rooted in natural law and Judeo-Christian principles.[93][115] Moore's directives drew federal court injunctions blocking their enforcement and prompted ethics complaints, culminating in his September 30, 2016, suspension without pay for the remainder of his term by the Alabama Court of the Judiciary, which found he violated Canons 1, 2, and 3 of the Alabama Canons of Judicial Ethics by failing to respect binding federal precedent and undermining public confidence in the judiciary.[94][121][122] The panel rejected Moore's defense that his orders were advisory interpretations rather than mandates, determining they effectively directed non-compliance with Obergefell.[123] Moore maintained the suspension exemplified federal judicial overreach, vowing to continue advocating against same-sex marriage recognition as incompatible with Alabama's legal framework.[124]

2017 Sexual Misconduct Allegations

On November 9, 2017, The Washington Post published allegations from Leigh Corfman, who claimed that in 1979, when she was 14 years old and Roy Moore was a 32-year-old assistant district attorney, Moore offered her alcohol, undressed her, and touched her over her underwear and bra in his home after taking her there twice.[60] Corfman stated she told no one at the time and had no contemporaneous records, though The Post cited two friends she confided in decades later as partial corroboration.[60] The report followed The Post's contact with over 30 potential sources over months, amid Moore's Republican nomination for the U.S. Senate special election set for December 12, 2017.[60] Three additional women told The Post that Moore, then in his 30s, pursued romantic or sexual relationships with them while they were teenagers in the late 1970s: Debbie Wesson Gibson (17 at the time), who described kissing but no further advances; Gloria Thacker Deason (18), who alleged kissing and brief fondling; and Kellie Kennedy (allegedly 15, though she clarified she was 16). Subsequent reports detailed further claims, including from Tina Johnson, who alleged Moore grabbed and squeezed her in 1991 when she was in her early 30s while seeking his assistance after her home was damaged by a tornado; and others describing unwanted advances, such as buttock-grabbing or persistent mall pursuits, bringing the total to nine women by mid-November 2017.[125] None of the allegations involved contemporaneous complaints to authorities, and no physical evidence or eyewitnesses to the alleged acts emerged.[126] Moore categorically denied the accusations, stating on November 10, 2017, "I have never engaged in sexual misconduct with anyone," and asserting he did not know Corfman or recall the others in the manner described.[62] He portrayed the claims as a politically motivated "witch hunt" orchestrated by Democrats and the Republican establishment to derail his campaign, noting the timing weeks before the election and lack of prior public knowledge over nearly four decades.[63] In a November 16 press conference, Moore reiterated his innocence, suggested yearbook signatures attributed to him were forged, and claimed he had been barred from a local mall not for misconduct but possibly due to his strict demeanor as a deputy district attorney.[127] No formal criminal investigation substantiated the allegations, and they remained unproven assertions without legal convictions.[128] Following his electoral defeat to Democrat Doug Jones on December 12, 2017, Moore pursued defamation actions, including suits against accusers and political groups. In 2018, he filed claims against three women alleging a "political conspiracy," and countersued Corfman.[129] [130] A 2022 federal jury awarded him $8.2 million against a Democratic super PAC for a TV ad implying guilt based on the unverified claims, finding it defamatory.[131] These outcomes highlighted evidentiary challenges in the original allegations, as no accuser prevailed in related countersuits, underscoring the absence of conclusive proof.[132]

Defamation Lawsuits and Outcomes

In response to the 2017 sexual misconduct allegations that emerged during his U.S. Senate campaign, Roy Moore initiated multiple defamation lawsuits against his accusers and organizations that amplified the claims. In April 2018, Moore filed suit in Etowah County Circuit Court against four women—Leigh Corfman, Debbie Wesson Gibson, Tina Johnson, and Beverly Young Nelson—alleging that their public accusations of sexual misconduct or assault were fabricated and intended to damage his reputation, seeking unspecified compensatory and punitive damages.[133][134] The litigation with Corfman, who alleged Moore molested her at age 14 in 1979, advanced to trial in January 2022 after she countersued Moore and his campaign for defamation over his public assertions that her claims were "false and malicious." During the five-day trial in Gadsden, Alabama, witnesses testified on both sides, including Corfman's recounting of the alleged incident and Moore's defense that the accusations were politically motivated fabrications timed to derail his campaign. On February 1, 2022, the jury deliberated for under three hours and returned a verdict finding no defamation by either Moore or Corfman, effectively resolving their mutual claims without awarding damages.[135][136] The outcomes for Moore's suits against the other three accusers were not publicly detailed in trial records, with some claims reportedly narrowed or dismissed pretrial by the court.[137] Moore separately pursued defamation claims against media and political entities. In a federal case filed in 2018, he sued the Democratic-aligned Senate Majority PAC over a television advertisement aired during the 2017 campaign that referenced the allegations and depicted Moore as unfit for office. On August 12, 2022, a jury in Anniston, Alabama, found the PAC liable for defamation and awarded Moore $8.2 million in damages, including $3 million compensatory and $5 million punitive, determining the ad falsely implied guilt without sufficient evidence.[131][138] The PAC appealed, but the Alabama Supreme Court affirmed the lower courts' rulings on August 30, 2024, upholding the verdict while noting ongoing collection disputes.[139] Other media-related suits yielded mixed or unfavorable results for Moore. In 2021, he filed a $95 million defamation claim against Sacha Baron Cohen and others involved in the Showtime series Who Is America?, alleging a segment falsely portrayed him as supportive of pedophilia through edited footage and implications. A federal judge dismissed the suit in July 2021, citing First Amendment protections for satirical content, and the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the dismissal on July 7, 2022.[140] Moore's 2020 libel suit against Washington Examiner staff for articles linking him to the allegations was dismissed by the district court, with the Eleventh Circuit affirming the dismissal on January 22, 2024, on grounds that the statements were opinion or substantially true.[141] These outcomes highlighted judicial deference to political speech and satire, even amid Moore's arguments of reputational harm from unproven claims propagated by outlets with perceived partisan incentives.

Personal Life and Public Engagements

Family and Personal Relationships

Roy Moore was born on February 11, 1947, in Gadsden, Alabama, to Roy Baxter Moore, a construction worker and farmer, and Evelyn Stewart Moore.[4] He was the eldest of five children in the family, which included three sons and two daughters; his younger brother Jerry Moore has publicly defended him in various contexts.[142] The family relocated multiple times during his youth within Etowah County, reflecting a modest, rural upbringing.[6] Moore married Kayla Kisor on December 14, 1985, when he was 38 years old and she was 24.[143] Kisor, born April 26, 1961, had previously been married to John Charles Heald; the couple separated on December 1, 1984, filed for divorce on December 10, 1984, and the divorce was finalized in April 1985, though Moore began dating her in late 1984 prior to the final decree.[144] In a 2017 interview, Moore recounted first noticing Kisor at a church youth group event when she was 15 or 16 years old, though their romantic involvement began years later after her first marriage ended.[145] Kayla Moore has been active in conservative causes, serving as president of the Foundation for Moral Law, an organization founded by her husband.[146] The Moores have four children together; Kayla brought a daughter, Heather, from her prior marriage, whom Roy Moore adopted in 1989 and who later took the surname Mayo.[146] Heather Mayo has testified in support of her adoptive father's character during legal proceedings.[146] The family has maintained a low public profile outside of Moore's political activities, with Kayla and other relatives occasionally appearing in defense of him amid controversies.[146]

Writing, Speaking, and Advocacy

Moore co-authored the book So Help Me God: The Ten Commandments, Judicial Tyranny, and the Battle for Religious Freedom with John Perry, published on March 1, 2005, which details his defense of displaying the Ten Commandments in public buildings and critiques federal judicial decisions on religious expression.[147] The work argues that American law derives from biblical principles and that acknowledging God in governance aligns with the nation's founding intent.[147] Moore has written opinion articles advancing his views on governance and morality, including a piece published on August 13, 2017, in AL.com, where he claimed that God's intervention granted America "a second chance" through the 2016 presidential election outcome and called for leaders to restore biblical foundations in policy.[148] As a public speaker, Moore has addressed conservative audiences at political rallies and conferences, such as his victory speech on September 26, 2017, after winning the Republican Senate primary runoff in Alabama, emphasizing faith-based leadership and opposition to secularism.[149] He spoke at the Values Voter Summit on November 15, 2017, advocating for deregulation, military strength, and adherence to Judeo-Christian values to "make America great again."[150] Additional engagements include church addresses and campaign events where he defended traditional moral standards against cultural shifts.[151] Moore founded the Foundation for Moral Law, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization focused on preserving religious liberty through strict constitutional interpretation and defending the acknowledgment of God as a foundational right.[152] The group engages in advocacy by filing amicus briefs in religious freedom cases, such as Ermold v. Davis before the U.S. Supreme Court, and issuing public statements on issues like judicial overreach.[153] Under the presidency of his wife, Kayla Moore, the foundation continues litigation and commentary promoting moral law derived from biblical sources in public policy.[152]

Later Career and Recent Developments

Post-Resignation Activities

Following his defeat in the December 12, 2017, U.S. Senate special election, Moore filed a formal complaint in April 2018 challenging aspects of the allegations that emerged during the campaign, while stating he had no immediate plans to seek public office again.[154] However, on June 20, 2019, he announced a bid for the Republican nomination in the 2020 Senate election to challenge incumbent Democrat Doug Jones.[72] In the March 3, 2020, Republican primary, Moore received 191,807 votes (10.4 percent), finishing third behind former U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions and former college football coach Tommy Tuberville, who advanced to a runoff that Tuberville won.[155] Tuberville subsequently defeated Jones in the general election on November 3, 2020, reclaiming the seat for Republicans.[156] Moore maintained involvement with the Foundation for Moral Law, a Montgomery-based nonprofit he established in 2003 to promote religious liberty, strict constitutional interpretation, and the influence of Judeo-Christian principles in governance.[37] The organization, led by his wife Kayla Moore as president since 2013, continued advocacy efforts, including defending First Amendment rights in cases such as a 2019 lawsuit supporting an Alabama sheriff's religious expression.[157] In the 2020s, Moore has advocated for parole or clemency in select cases involving defendants he sentenced as a judge. On January 31, 2024, he expressed regret over the life sentence he imposed on Stacy Shadwrick in 1991 for a robbery conviction, urging the Alabama Board of Pardons and Paroles to grant her release despite prior revocations. Similarly, on July 25, 2024, he supported parole for Willie Conner, convicted of shoplifting in 1998, arguing against the state's opposition to his release after multiple denials.

Involvement in Contemporary Issues (2020s)

In 2024, Moore engaged in advocacy for criminal justice reform by intervening in Alabama parole proceedings for individuals he had previously sentenced during his tenure as a circuit judge and chief justice. He testified before the Alabama Bureau of Pardons and Paroles in support of Willie Conner, whom he had sentenced to life imprisonment for stealing $150 worth of goods from a Lowe's store in 1999 under Alabama's habitual offender laws; Moore argued that the sentence was excessive and urged the board to grant parole, stating that Conner posed no ongoing threat to society.[158] Similarly, Moore expressed regret over the life sentence he imposed on Stacy Shadwrick in 1991 for a robbery conviction, advocating for her release after decades of incarceration, though the parole board denied her application despite his support.[159] These efforts aligned with broader criticisms of Alabama's parole system, which Moore publicly described as "broken" amid low approval rates and procedural inconsistencies, contributing to discussions on reform as the state's parole grant rate more than doubled that year to address prison overcrowding.[160][161] Moore's parole interventions marked a departure from his earlier emphasis on strict sentencing, reflecting personal reassessments of cases influenced by habitual felony statutes; he collaborated across ideological lines, including with former Democratic Chief Justice Sue Bell Cobb, to challenge Parole Board decisions and push for greater transparency.[162] In one July 2024 hearing documented by the board, Moore appeared as a supporter for an inmate serving life, facing opposition from victims' advocates and state attorneys.[163] This activity drew attention from civil liberties groups, with the ACLU of Alabama highlighting Moore's role in parole reform discussions, though it contrasted with his historical opposition to leniency in non-violent offenses. Regarding religious displays in public institutions, Moore praised Louisiana's June 2024 law mandating Ten Commandments posters in classrooms as a "wonderful thing," expressing confidence that it would withstand legal challenges similar to those he faced in Alabama two decades earlier.[164] He framed the measure as a restoration of foundational moral principles, consistent with his prior judicial actions but adapted to contemporary state-level initiatives amid ongoing debates over church-state separation. Moore's 2017 defamation lawsuit against the Senate Majority PAC proceeded through the 2020s, culminating in an August 2022 federal jury award of $8.2 million for false statements in campaign ads linking him to sexual misconduct allegations; the super PAC appealed the verdict, arguing in federal court filings as late as March 2025 that the damages were unsupported and that political speech protections applied.[131][165] The case underscored persistent legal repercussions from his Senate campaign, with Moore maintaining that the claims lacked substantiation beyond partisan motivations.[165]

References

User Avatar
No comments yet.