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Tuberville's asinine blockade of military promotions presumably played a big part in this. I think it's a smart idea even in a vacuum though. The types of people that would be interested in serving in Space Command positions are, I expect, going to be the types of people least likely to find living in Alabama to be tolerable. Locating the HQ in Colorado is going to be a lot better for their recruitment efforts.
That's not to mention the official reasons offered, that it would be a clusterfuck to relocate the HQ. Which is a perfectly sufficient reason on its own too.
This is the first I've heard of this, what an asshole:
https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/what-tubervilles-blockade-of-military-promotions-means-for-the-pentagon
Can they wait until tuber illegal is absent?
Certain things need unanimous approval. Guess that includes people when absent.
Colorado Springs is conservative Colorado, though.
The overall state matters far more than the local area for determining what your government is going to be like. Colorado Springs cannot make abortion illegal for its residents; Colorado can. Colorado Springs cannot ignore the state's laws on minimum wages, or LGBTQ rights, or any myriad other laws.
It's why I, as a progressive, would have no interest in living in Austin Texas: as left-leaning as Austin is, the state of Texas plays a bigger part in that governance and would make it an undesirable place for me to live.
Incidentally, Colorado Springs has been moving left. It has a non-republican independent mayor now, and the democratic governor even won the city in his reelection campaign (still lost the county, but came close). Trump won the county by 10% in 2020, after winning it by 20% in 2016. Likewise, Romney and McCain won it by 20%; Bush Jr. won it by 30% and 34%. In 1988 Bush Sr. won it by 40%. I expect the city-only results are even closer at the presidential level but cannot find data for that quickly.
As stated here, the Springs are moving left. It's Weld county that appears to be the new Conservative bastion here, but even that is starting to weaken.
It's not the solid red base it once was. The GOP lost the mayor's office by a large percentage to an independent. It's a purple city due to so many people moving down from Denver.
A ton of the contractors and civilians that work there don’t live in the springs though.