Tommy Tuberville (born September 18, 1954, Camden, Arkansas, U.S.) is a Republican U.S. senator from Alabama and a former high-school and college football player and coach. For some 10 months in 2023 Tuberville used his authority under the Senate’s standing rules to block hundreds of senior promotions of U.S. military officers in protest of a U.S. Defense Department policy granting leave of absence and reimbursement of travel expenses to military personnel seeking abortions or other reproductive health services.
Tuberville played football at Harmony Grove High School near his birthplace at Camden, Arkansas, and later at Southern State College (now Southern Arkansas University) in Magnolia, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in physical education in 1976. He also played on the college’s golf team. After graduating he coached high-school football for several years before joining the coaching staff at Arkansas State University in Jonesboro in 1980. There he specialized in coaching linebackers and defensive ends. From 1986 to 1993 Tuberville held several positions on the coaching staff at the University of Miami in Coral Gables, Florida, including defensive coordinator during the 1993 season. In 1994 he served as defensive coordinator at the main campus of Texas A&M University in College Station, helping lead its football team to a 10–0–1 record and a number eight ranking in that year’s final Associated Press (AP) college football poll.
In 1995 Tuberville became the head football coach at the main campus of the University of Mississippi (“Ole Miss”) in Oxford. Prior to his arrival the school’s football program was hit with strong sanctions by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) for an array of recruiting violations. The sanctions included a two-year ban on postseason play in bowl games and a one-year ban on television appearances. The team compiled an 11–11 win-loss record during Tuberville’s first two seasons as head coach. In 1997, after the sanctions ended, Tuberville guided the team to an 8–4 record and a victory in the Motor City Bowl. He was named the Southeastern Conference (SEC) Coach of the Year that season.
Tuberville was hired away from the University of Mississippi by Auburn University in Alabama in late 1998. It was at Auburn that he enjoyed his greatest success as a head football coach. He led the Tigers to eight consecutive bowl appearances between 2000 and 2007. In 2004 the team went 13–0, won the Sugar Bowl, and finished the season ranked second in the AP poll. Auburn struggled in 2008, however, finishing with a 5–7 record. Tuberville resigned at the end of the season. He went on to coach at Texas Tech University in Lubbock from 2010 to 2012 and at the University of Cincinnati in Ohio from 2013 to 2016. After the conclusion of the 2016 season Tuberville retired from coaching with a career win-loss record of 159–99 over his 21 seasons as a head coach.
In 2017 Tuberville became a college football analyst for the cable television sports-broadcasting network ESPN. That year he also publicly entertained the idea of entering the 2018 Alabama governor’s race, but he ultimately decided against it. In 2019, however, Tuberville announced that he was running for the U.S. Senate from Alabama. During his campaign he aligned himself closely with Republican Pres. Donald Trump. In the Republican primary in 2020 Tuberville advanced to a runoff against Jeff Sessions, who had been forced out as U.S. attorney general under Trump after enduring persistent criticism from the president. Buoyed by Trump’s endorsement, Tuberville easily defeated Sessions in the runoff. Tuberville then faced incumbent Democrat Doug Jones in the November 2020 general election. Jones was widely viewed as one of the most vulnerable Democratic senators seeking reelection that year. When the balloting took place on November 3, Tuberville won by a wide margin. He was sworn into office on January 3, 2021.
Three days after Tuberville assumed office a violent mob of Trump supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol, disrupting a joint session of Congress convened to certify Joe Biden’s victory over Trump in the 2020 presidential election (see January 6 U.S. Capitol attack). Trump and his backers—including Tuberville and a number of other Republican members of Congress—had publicly challenged the election results, claiming without evidence that Democrats had stolen the election through massive voter fraud. Once the certification session resumed, Tuberville joined a handful of Senate Republicans in voting to sustain objections to Biden’s electoral victories in two swing states, Arizona and Pennsylvania. A week before Trump left office on January 20, 2021, the U.S. House of Representatives impeached him for “incitement of insurrection” in connection with the Capitol attack. (This was the second time Trump had been impeached during his presidency.) The Senate impeachment trial began in early February. On February 13 Trump was acquitted of the incitement charge. Although a majority of the senators—57 to 43—voted to find Trump guilty, the count was 10 votes short of the two-thirds necessary for conviction. Tuberville voted to acquit Trump.
In its June 2022 decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, the U.S. Supreme Court overturned its historic ruling in Roe v. Wade (1973), which had established a constitutional right to abortion. Several states then restricted the availability of abortion or adopted nearly total abortion bans. In order to preserve access to reproductive health services for military personnel stationed in those states, in February 2023 the Defense Department announced that it would provide time off and cover travel expenses for personnel who needed to journey to other states for abortion services or fertility treatments. In response to what he characterized as a “gross misuse of taxpayer dollars,” Tuberville effectively blocked all promotions to senior military positions by means of a Senate hold—an informal process in which a senator indicates to Senate leaders an objection to a bill or nomination and thereby prevents its expedited approval by unanimous consent, instead forcing a full Senate vote (which would then be subject to filibuster). During the next 10 months, Tuberville prevented or significantly delayed more than 450 promotions, including to the chairmanship of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. In December 2023, facing intense criticism from Republican as well as Democratic members of Congress, Tuberville finally relented, removing his hold on promotions to three-star rankings and below and later to four-star rankings.