North Carolina
2 tax amendments will be on the ballot for North Carolina voters this November
ASHEVILLE, N.C. (WLOS) — Two proposed changes to North Carolina’s tax laws are now headed to voters in November after lawmakers approved both constitutional amendments this week.
Western North Carolina political science professor Dr. Chris Cooper says both amendments involve taxes, but in different ways.
“Part of the fight here is essentially about how much people should be taxed, but some of it is also about local government power and how much power should local governments have to be able to levy the higher property taxes to fulfill their needs,” Cooper said.
The first amendment seeks to permanently cap the state’s income tax rate at 3.5%, which Republican state leaders say is necessary.
“Now we’re at a point where we’ve proven that we are able to cut and we are still able to generate revenue by the business policies that we’ve had,” Rep. Mark Pless said.
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Democratic leaders, however, argue that the change would limit the state’s ability to raise revenue.
“If we’re saying that constitutionally the legislature can never raise the personal income tax above 3.5 percent, then we are necessarily limiting our ability to generate revenue to meet the needs of our growing state,” Senator Julie Mayfield said.
The second proposal focuses on property taxes and would limit how much local governments can increase them.
Democrats say the cap could reduce funding for schools, disaster response and local government services.
“Property taxes are the primary funder for local governments and the services they provide, and if we start limiting their ability to increase that revenue, again, to match their increasing needs, then communities are going to suffer, and public services are going to suffer,” Mayfield said.
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Republicans counter that voters should have a direct say in how tax policy is set.
“Members on the other side of the aisle wanted to say that it was going to raise gas, it was going to raise groceries, it was going to cause rent to go up, and that’s just not feasible. Reducing the income tax is only going to reduce the amount they pay for government services,” Pless said.
Some political observers also say the amendments are part of a broader political strategy ahead of the election.
“These are tools to turn out more conservative voters in a midterm election where the Republicans are worried that their voters aren’t going to turn out. That is the motivation behind all of these,” Mayfield said.
Political experts say these likely won’t be the only amendments on the ballot, and more could be placed before voters in November.
North Carolina
SpaceX Falcon 9 launch Thursday may be visible from Eastern North Carolina coast
EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA — A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launch from Florida could be visible from parts of Eastern North Carolina early Thursday morning.
The launch window is scheduled to open at 5:26 a.m. EDT from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida. According to Space Coast Daily, the Falcon 9 rocket is set to carry 29 Starlink satellites into low-Earth orbit.
If the rocket launches near the start of the window, viewers in Eastern North Carolina should look toward the southeastern sky shortly after liftoff.
Because the launch is scheduled before sunrise, the rocket’s exhaust plume may catch sunlight high in the atmosphere while the ground remains dark. That can create a glowing, fan-shaped effect sometimes called a “space jellyfish.”
Visibility will depend on the launch time, weather conditions, cloud cover and having a clear view of the horizon.
Viewers along the coast may have the best chance to see the rocket trail if the launch happens on schedule.
Launch schedules can change because of weather, technical issues or mission needs. SpaceX lists upcoming missions and launch coverage on its official launches page.
North Carolina
NC lawmakers back income tax cap measure for November ballot: ‘States aren’t here to make profits’
RALEIGH, N.C. (WTVD) — The North Carolina House voted to put a constitutional amendment before voters in November that, if approved, would limit the state’s personal income tax rate.
The amendment would ask voters whether they support capping the income tax rate so it cannot be raised above 3.5%.
Republicans promoted Senate Bill 1080, citing strong revenues and a need for affordability.
“This amendment will ensure the people’s elected representatives take the taxpayer’s money and spend the taxpayer’s money in a way that taxpayers want – in a controlled, measured way,” said Rep. Dean Arp, a Republican from Union County.
The state’s current income tax rate is 3.99%, though it is scheduled to drop to 3.49% next year because of a revenue trigger. A proposed budget framework would keep that rate in place for three years before another quarter-point reduction.
Debate on Wednesday focused on the future ability to adjust rates, rather than those specific scheduled changes.
“Constitutions are supposed to protect the ability of a free people to govern themselves. But this amendment desperately tries to permanently lock in one faction’s view, regardless of what the future holds, regardless of what emergencies are people may face, when none of us work here anymore,” said Rep. Phil Rubin, a Democrat from Wake County.
In 2018, voters approved a constitutional amendment that capped the income tax rate at 7%. The new proposal would cut that cap in half.
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“Sure, it’s great to lower taxes. But you’re also going to stop services, you’re going to slow services down. You’re going to squeeze people dry,” said Rep. Marcia Morey, a Democrat from Durham.
Republicans pushed back on that argument, saying funding for state agencies has increased year over year.
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“Ladies and gentlemen, states aren’t here to make profits. They’re here to provide services. We don’t lose money when we reduce people’s taxes. We allow them to keep what they have justly earned,” said Rep. Keith Kidwell, a Republican from Beaufort County.
The State Senate voted to pass the measure on Tuesday.
Wednesday’s vote was along party lines, with unaffiliated Representatives Carla Cunningham and Nasif Majeed, both of Mecklenburg County, joining Republicans to reach the required three-fifths majority needed. Both representatives had been Democrats before leaving the party at the start of the short session.
“For years we’ve seen some municipal and county governments impose exorbitant tax rates on their residents with little to no regard for fiscal restraint,” Sen. Tim Moffitt, R-Henderson, said. “At the General Assembly, we work hard to keep our spending in check so you can keep more of your hard-earned paycheck. Your local government should do the same. These property tax measures establish some commonsense safeguards to protect the taxpayers.”
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North Carolina
NC lawmakers consider constitutional amendments to boost turnout in midterms
Jamie Ager interview after Fairview campaign rally
Democratic congressional candidate Jamie Ager spoke with the Asheville Citizen Times following a campaign rally in Fairview on May 18, 2026, after former U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg addressed supporters ahead of the 2026 election.
How do you get Republican voters to the polls in a difficult political climate? Republican lawmakers in North Carolina are hoping a slate of up to seven constitutional amendments might do the trick.
Multiple polls nationally and in North Carolina show low enthusiasm among Republican voters, President Donald Trump’s approval rating sagging, and Democratic candidates up and down the ballot widening their leads over GOP rivals as the midterm election approaches.
“They’re probably seeing the winds of the political mood of the state against them,” said political scientist Michael Bitzer, director of the Center for Politics and Public Service at Catawba College. “The standard is that registered Republicans always overperform in terms of turnout, and they will need that historic turnout advantage to blunt what is obvious in the mood of the state and the country against the Republican party.”
In 2018, when a similar set of circumstances led Republicans to put six constitutional amendments on the ballot designed to appeal to conservatives, including a 7% income tax cap, photo voter ID, and a constitutional right to hunt. Four passed and two didn’t.
State House and Senate Republicans still lost their supermajorities, but the blue wave could have been worse than it was, said Bitzer. “Ours was fairly muted in comparison to what the national and other state dynamics were like.”
Eight years later, North Carolina Republicans are returning to the 2018 playbook, loading up the 2026 general election ballot with a raft of similar proposals aimed at boosting conservative turnout.
One constitutional amendment has already been approved for the November ballot — a provision that would require mail-in voters to include photo identification with their ballot. It’s already state law, but this would add it to the constitution. That was passed at the end of 2024.
As of May 19, 2026, there are six others under consideration. All six were heard in committees within a 24-hour span. And more could be filed at any time because constitutional amendments are exempt from rules that limit the bills legislators can consider during the short session.
Two proposals would limit taxes. Senate Bill 1080 would lower the state’s constitutional cap on the income tax rate from 7% to 3.5%. The state’s income tax rate is already slated to drop to 3.49% in 2027, so it wouldn’t actually lead to lower taxes, but it would keep state lawmakers in the future from raising it again without first getting voters to approve it.
The second, House Bill 1089, would require lawmakers to “enact a property tax levy limit” to rein in county governments’ ability to raise property tax rates. However, it lacks specifics about what the limit might be.
Two other proposals would put existing state laws in the state constitution. Senate Bill 1081 would create a constitutional right to “engage in farming and forestry.” The right to farm was written into state law in 1979. Senate Bill 1082 would enshrine the state’s 1947 right to work law. In committee hearings Monday, the sponsors of those bills were unable to come up with any actual threats to the existing laws.
The final two would further limit the governor’s appointment powers. House Bill 144 would allow voters, rather than the governor, to select the members of the State Board of Education. They would be elected from 14 districts, likely to be the same as the congressional districts, with the elected Superintendent of Public Instruction becoming the board chair.
House Bill 443 would spell out the process by which the governor can replace an elected member of the Council of State in case of a vacancy. The party of the departing official would nominate three potential replacements, and the governor would select one.
Bitzer told NC Newsline some of these are likely policy priorities that Republican leaders want to accomplish now in case they lose control of one or both legislative chambers in November. Constitutional amendments are not subject to the governor’s veto.
When it comes to enacting conservative policy objectives, “the most stable and hardest to change is a constitutional amendment,” he said.
Constitutional amendments require a vote of three-fifths in the House and Senate. Senate Republicans hold the 30 seats they will need to approve any amendment favored by the leadership, assuming they’re all present on the same day.
House Republicans are one vote shy of the 72 votes they need, but have proven themselves adept at finding votes across the aisle. Former Mecklenburg Democrats Carla Cunningham and Nasif Majeed have left their party and are now unaffiliated. And with the state budget still under negotiation, the $2 billion surplus this year could give Republican leaders more room to trade a project earmark for a Democratic vote.
Once they reach the ballot, amendments need only a simple majority to become law. The income tax cap amendment on the ballot in 2018 passed with 57% support, reflecting some crossover support among Democrats, Bitzer said. The same could be true in 2026.
“The tax issues — the property tax, the income tax — hearing those as limitations or caps, I think, will resonate with the public initially,” Bitzer said. “How the fight over that is framed will be, I think, a crucial voter education piece.”
While critics of the proposals have accused Republicans of turning the constitution into a “political tool” to boost their electoral prospects, Bitzer sees it as along the same lines as the extreme partisan gerrymandering — “gerrymaxxing,” he calls it — throughout the South.
“We’re taking politics and moving it to the extremes, so why not make constitutions into political tools in this hyper-polarized environment?” Bitzer said. “Welcome to North Carolina in 2026.”
Laura Leslie is an award-winning journalist and analyst who’s covered North Carolina state politics for 22 years. Before coming to NC Newsline, she served as capitol bureau chief for WRAL-TV in Raleigh and WUNC/NC Public Radio. She also wrote the award-winning political blog Isaac Hunter’s Tavern.
NC Newsline is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.
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