Alabama's Republican primary Tuesday turned into a referendum on Roy Moore's Ten Commandments stand, with three of four supporters of the ousted chief justice losing or trailing in their bids for party nominations.
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Former Moore aide Tom Parker had 80,925 votes, or 51 percent, compared to 76,621 votes, or 49 percent, for Associate Justice Jean Brown, with 73 percent of precincts reporting.
Shelby County judge Patti M. Smith defeated Pam Baschab, a judge on the Court of Criminal Appeals with Moore's support, in a primary race for another court seat. Smith had 58 percent of the vote to Baschab's 42 percent, with 76 percent of precincts reporting.
Moore supporter Jerry Stokes was in second place and well behind Jefferson County Probate Judge Mike Bolin in a four-way race for the third seat, with 76 percent of precincts reporting. But Bolin, with 51 percent of the vote, needed to remain over 50 percent to avoid a runoff.
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The Ten Commandments issue was little help for Moore's attorney, Phillip Jauregui, who put up an underfunded GOP primary challenge to six-term Rep. Spencer Bachus. Bachus trounced Jauregui, garnering 87 percent of the vote with 88 percent of precincts counted in the congressional district.
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