WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump announced Tuesday that U.S. Space Command’s headquarters will move to Alabama from Colorado, reversing a decision the Biden administration made about its main location.
In remarks at the White House, Trump said he was making the shift in part because of Colorado’s use of mail-in voting.
“The problem I have with Colorado, one of the big problems, they do mail-in voting, they went to all mail-in voting, so they have automatically crooked elections,” Trump said in the Oval Office.
Colorado holds in-person elections, but every voter automatically receives a ballot in the mail.
“We can’t have that when a state is for mail-in voting, that means they want dishonest elections, because that’s what that means. So that played a big factor also,” Trump said while flanked by the Alabama lawmakers who lobbied for Space Command’s move to their state.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and several Alabama Republicans at the event noted that it was President Joe Biden who changed Space Command’s headquarters to Colorado from what was supposed to be Alabama.
Hegseth said that Trump was restoring its headquarters to “precisely where it should be, based on what the Space Force, the Air Force, your leadership,” which he said will “give us strategic advantage in the future.”
“That is Huntsville, Alabama,” the defense secretary continued. “We are way ahead in space, but this will ensure we stay leaps and bounds ahead, because that’s the most important domain. Whoever controls the skies will control the future warfare. And Mr. President, today you’re ensuring that happens.”
Trump created the “Space Force” in 2018 during his first term in office to compete with other world powers like China and Russia in space. While he had announced and it was later confirmed that Huntsville was the preferred location for its headquarters, the Biden administration halted those plans in 2023 because of concerns with Alabama’s restrictive abortion law. As a result, the head of U.S. Space Command decided that year that the military branch would build out its headquarters in Colorado Springs instead.
Trump said Tuesday that the move to Alabama would result in 30,000 jobs in the state and lead to hundreds of billions of dollars in investment. “Most importantly, this decision will help America defend and dominate the high frontier, as they call it,” he said.
The president added that Space Command, from its new location, will play a “key role” in the development of the “Golden Dome,” the missile defense system Trump wants modeled after Israel’s Iron Dome.
“We’re going to be having a Golden Dome that the likes of which nobody’s ever seen before, the finest, the best,” he said.