
Republican attorney general nominee Katherine Robertson announced on Tuesday that veteran political strategist Katelanne Fadalla of Mobile has been appointed to serve as campaign manager for the general election.

The 2026 Alabama Republican primary runoff is in the books, as voters decided on Tuesday who they wanted as the GOP nominee in the November general election.

Katherine Robertson will now advance to the November general election as the Republican Party’s nominee to be the next attorney general, after defeating former Alabama Supreme Court Justice Jay Mitchell on Tuesday’s runoff election.

The Alabama Law Enforcement Agency (ALEA) and the Attorney General’s Office announced on Monday a recent statewide operation cracking down on illegal kratom products.

The U.S. Supreme Court has declined to let Alabama carry out the execution of a convicted double murderer by nitrogen hypoxia. A firing squad now appears to be the only remaining option available to the State, though Alabama law does not currently authorize that method.

According to Mitchell's campaign, Robertson represents "the swamp," and has already received over $3 million dollars from "dark money donors" outside of Alabama.

During Friday's broadcast of Mobile radio FM Talk 106.5's "The Jeff Poor Show," Republican candidate for Alabama attorney general Katherine Robertson responded to criticism from her opponent over political contributions from out-of-state donors.

The Eastern Shore Republican Women (ESRW) hosted three candidates at its June luncheon, just days before the primary runoff election.

Former Alabama Supreme Court Justice Jay Mitchell and chief counsel to the attorney general, Katherine Robertson, engaged in a contentious back-and-forth over "dark money" during Monday night's runoff debate as the pair vie for the soon-to-be-vacant AG position.

The months-long back-and-forth between former Alabama Supreme Court Justice Jay Mitchell and Attorney General Steve Marshall continued this week after Mitchell slammed Marshall in an attack against his runoff opponent, Marshall's chief counsel, Katherine Robertson.

Attorney General Steve Marshall openly condemned claims in campaign materials by GOP attorney general hopeful Jay Mitchell, who is vying for the office against Katherine Robertson later this month, regarding the Aaron Cody Smith case.

During a Wednesday episode of Alabama's Morning News with JT, Republican candidate for Attorney General, Katherine Robertson, criticized a federal appeals court's recent ruling blocking a 6-1 conservative congressional map passed by Alabama legislators in 2023.

Pamela Casey, the Republican candidate for attorney general who was defeated last week in the Republican primary, has endorsed her former opponent, former Supreme Court Justice Jay Mitchell, in the upcoming runoff election.

Madison County District Attorney Rob Broussard has endorsed Republican candidate for Attorney General, Katherine Robertson, in an upcoming GOP runoff against former Alabama Supreme Court Justice Jay Mitchell.

Katherine Robertson, a candidate for attorney general in next month's GOP runoff election against former Alabama Supreme Court Justice Jay Mitchell, recently received an endorsement from a River Region district attorney.

The heat does not appear likely to go down in the upcoming runoff election for Alabama’s next attorney general, as Chief Counsel Katherine Robertson and former Alabama Supreme Court Justice Jay Mitchell are ready to face off in a runoff election.

The race for the Republican nomination for the state's next attorney general is headed to a runoff between current Attorney General chief counsel Katherine Robertson and former Alabama Supreme Court Justice Jay Mitchell after Tuesday's primary election.
Chief counsel for Attorney General Marshall and current AG candidate Katherine Robertson recently used left-wing demonstrations as motivation to call on state leaders to secure a sweeping 7-0 Republican congressional delegation.

Katherine Robertson has picked up an endorsement from Club For Growth, the nationwide conservative advocacy group, less than a week away from the Republican primary.

State Attorney General Steve Marshall has issued an investigatory subpoena to the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) after opening a civil investigation alleging deceptive fundraising practices under Alabama’s consumer protection statutes.

In response to calls from her opponent in the race for state attorney general to retract previous attack ads, Katherine Robertson recently released another ad attacking Jay Mitchell for a ruling he made on the Alabama Supreme Court.

Former Alabama Supreme Court Justice and attorney general candidate Jay Mitchell has called for a retraction of accusations from one of his Republican primary opponents, Katherine Robertson, after campaign advertisements he claims are defamatory and false.

According to Katherine Robertson, the chief counsel for Alabama's attorney general, the U.S. Supreme Court's Wednesday decision in Louisiana v. Callais is vindication for decades of misinformed attacks by various federal courts against Alabama's congressional and legislative maps.

According to Robertson, a candidate for attorney general, Trump's positive impact in the Oval Office has caused factions of the left to support or engage in violence for political gain.

Former Alabama Supreme Court Justice Jay Mitchell, candidate for state attorney general, responded to an advertisement released by his leading opponent, Katherine Robertson, in which Robertson accuses Mitchell of being a registered agent of an Islamic country.

In a newly released TV ad, Katherine Robertson, chief counsel in the AG's Office and a candidate for the office, accuses her leading opponent, former Alabama Supreme Court Justice Jay Mitchell, of having previously served as a registered agent for Uzbekistan while pledging to fight Islamic extremism in the state.

Katherine Robertson, the Chief prosecutor in the Alabama attorney general’s office and current candidate for AG, gave a shot across the bow to a University of Alabama (UA) Professor who was subject to 1819 News reporting regarding his apparent flaunting of the state’s ban on Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) policies in the state.