Gregory Scott Stadthagen Jr. is an American politician who is a member of the Alabama House of Representatives, representing the 9th district since 2018. He was elected under the Republican Party and, as of 2026, is the incumbent chair of the Alabama Republican Party.

Stadthagen held the position of majority leader in the Alabama House of Representatives from 2022 to 2026. He resigned from the majority leader position to run for chair of the Alabama Republican Party; Stadthagen was elected and sworn in as chairman on March 7, 2026.

Education and early career

Stadthagen graduated from the University of West Alabama with a B.S. in 2002.

Stadthagen started his business, Hagen Homes Incorporated, in 2005, which he owned until 2018, when he announced his run for the Alabama House of Representatives. He holds many local leadership positions in Hartselle, including Chair of the Hartselle Area Chamber Commerce, member of the Economic Development group of Hartselle, member of the Morgan County Builders Association, member of the Hartselle Rotary, member of the Hartselle Kiwanis, and member of the Leadership of Hartselle Association.

Political career

Stadthagen won the 2018 Republican primary for Alabama House District 9 with 62.4% of the vote before running unopposed in the general election.

Stadthagen has sponsored numerous bills targeting LGBT people as part of the larger 2020s anti-LGBT movement. In February 2022, he introduced House Bill 322, a bathroom bill targeting transgender students. The bill was later amended by the Alabama Senate to include a restriction of classroom discussion or instruction about sexual orientation or gender identity from kindergarten through fifth grade, drawing comparisons to Florida's Don't Say Gay bill. "The aims of the bill are not controversial — or, at least, they weren’t controversial until the Left made the simple act of going to the bathroom a political issue," said Stadthagen after the bill was signed into law by Governor Kay Ivey in April. "I refuse to play politics with the safety of Alabama’s schoolchildren." In April 2023, Stadthagen was one of six Republicans who introduced House Bill 401, which looked to ban drag performances in public spaces where minors were present by amending the Anti-Obscenity Enforcement Act to expand the definition of "sexual conduct" to include drag. The proposal did not make it into law.

After winning reelection in 2022, Stadthagen was chosen by the Republican caucus as the majority leader of the Alabama House of Representatives; he was inaugurated in that position in January 2023.

In October 2023, Stadthagen was honored by the American Legislative Exchange Council as one of the top "50 under 50" legislators who represented the conservative think tank's principles and values.

In February 2026, Stadthagen resigned as majority leader of the Alabama House of Representatives ahead of a campaign to become the next chair of the Alabama Republican Party, following the resignation of John Wahl. Stadthagen won the internal election on March 7, 2026, defeating former Alabama Secretary of State John Merrill and acting chair Joan Reynolds.

Committee positions

Stadthagen is a member of the Fiscal Responsibility, Rules, and State Government committees.

Elections

Alabama House of Representatives District 9

2018 Republican primary

2018 Republican Primary
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanScott Stadthagen4,66462.4%
RepublicanJustin Morrow1,56320.9%
RepublicanJames Bowling1,24516.7%
Total votes7,472100.0%

2018 general election

2018 General Election
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanScott Stadthagen13,29799.1%
Write-in1270.9%
Total votes13,424100.0%

2022 general election

2022 General Election
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanScott Stadthagen (incumbent)11,04191.83%
LibertarianGregory Bodine9537.93%
Write-in290.24%
Total votes12,023100

External links

Alabama House of Representatives
Preceded byNathaniel LedbetterMajority Leader of the Alabama House of Representatives 2023–2026Succeeded byPaul Lee