North Carolina
Can Josh Stein beat Mark Robinson in the NC governor’s race? Insiders weigh in
Supporters of Legal professional Normal Josh Stein definitely have loads of causes to imagine he can develop into North Carolina’s subsequent governor.
Since turning into legal professional common in 2016, Stein has secured landmark authorized victories in opposition to drug makers and tobacco firms. He’s one in all solely a handful of Democrats to have received statewide races in North Carolina in recent times. And he’ll possible face a Republican opponent in Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson who’s identified for making controversial statements about girls, the LGBTQ neighborhood, and abortion — issues that might be turnoffs to doubtlessly deciding voter teams.
Robinson may be susceptible, Democrats say, due to his affiliation with former President Donald Trump, whose assist is seen by some to have hindered far-right gubernatorial candidates in different states final 12 months. Arizona’s Kari Lake and Pennsylvania’s Doug Mastriano misplaced their races regardless of assist from Trump, who praised Robinson final 12 months as the 2 shared a stage in Wilmington.
However some political analysts see a Stein-Robinson contest as being tighter than these different swing states.
“Robinson has some potential to be a poisonous common election candidate,” J. Miles Coleman, affiliate editor of Sabato’s Crystal Ball on the College of Virginia’s Middle for Politics, stated in an e mail. “However NC is a basically more durable state for Democrats” than Pennsylvania or Arizona, he stated.
In contrast to Lake and Mastriano, Robinson has received a statewide race — receiving extra votes for lieutenant governor in 2020 than Stein did for legal professional common. Final 12 months’s midterm elections additionally confirmed constructive indicators for Republicans as they received an enormous U.S. Senate race and improved their efficiency in among the Democrats’ long-held rural counties.
Robinson, a Greensboro native, speaks with an authenticity that many North Carolinians may admire, stated Jim Blaine, a Republican political strategist. Although Stein has spent most of his life in North Carolina, he might wrestle to attach with rural voters the way in which Gov. Roy Cooper has, Blaine stated. Cooper, who was born in Nashville, spent summers on a household tobacco farm and attended UNC-Chapel Hill, might be seen as a extra down-home candidate. Stein, the son of a civil rights lawyer, grew up in Chapel Hill and graduated from Ivy League faculties.
“I believe he has probability,” Blaine stated of Robinson, who outpolled different potential GOP candidates in a survey final month by Blaine’s consultancy.
In a telephone interview with WRAL, former Gov. Pat McCrory stated Stein possible introduced his gubernatorial marketing campaign early so as to scare off any potential challengers in a Democratic main.
“He is attempting to get it on the market that he is the candidate,” McCrory stated. “It is a traditional transfer.”
Stein hopes to observe within the steps of Cooper, who served as legal professional common for 16 years earlier than successful the 2016 race for governor. Cooper and Stein each use the identical political agency, Nexus Methods, and in 2016 they acquired almost equivalent ranges of assist of their respective races. Stein acquired solely 5,538 fewer votes than Cooper.
However as Cooper’s vote share rose between 2016 and 2020, Stein noticed his fall. Stein acquired 121,390 fewer votes than Cooper on his strategy to edging out Republican Jim O’Neill to stay legal professional common, in what was the closest Council of State contest of the 12 months.
In suburban counties — the place politicians recruit swing voters — Cooper carried out markedly higher than Stein.
In that group of counties — which incorporates Cabarrus, Harnett, Johnston and Union, amongst others – Stein acquired about 94.8% of Cooper’s assist, stated Michael Bitzer, a political scientist at Catawba Faculty. By comparability, Stein obtained 95.3% of Cooper’s votes in rural counties and 97% of Cooper’s votes in metropolis areas.
“What Stein must do is [be] barely higher within the central cities and regain floor within the city suburbs, whereas not shedding the encircling suburban counties and protecting the agricultural counties on the similar degree,” Bitzer stated. “He definitely can squeak out an election victory along with his 2020 efficiency, however it received’t depart a lot room for error.”
On Wednesday, Robinson’s group tied Stein’s announcement to his efficiency within the 2020 election.
“It needs to be clear that Stein is fearful of a main,” stated Conrad Pogorzelski, a political strategist for Robinson.
“He received his final election by lower than 15,000 votes out of the greater than 5 million forged. He’s hoping that by creating the narrative that it’s him in opposition to Robinson, he can keep away from a main,” Pogorzelski stated.
For some Republicans, Robinson’s trajectory appears to be like all too acquainted: a grassroots candidate with no political expertise runs for lieutenant governor, wins, after which comes up brief within the governor’s race.
That’s what occurred to Dan Forest, the Republican who misplaced to Cooper in 2020.
“Stein has received two main elections with a powerful GOP wind in his face,” stated Republican strategist Paul Shumaker, who suggested U.S. Sen. Thom Tillis. “Robinson has solely received a statewide race with a powerful GOP win at his again.”
Many imagine Forest fell brief as a result of he went too far proper in his proposed response to the COVID-19 pandemic, when he known as to finish many pandemic restrictions.
The governor’s race is “going to be decided by Robinson’s capacity to message and persuade suburban, college-educated voters that he has the temperament to be governor of North Carolina,” Shumaker stated.
The 2024 gubernatorial elections will partially be influenced by a presidential race, and the way these candidates are in a position to encourage turnout. North Carolina voters are infamous ticket-splitters, although, typically sending Democrats to the Governor’s Mansion and conservative firebrands such because the late Sen. Jesse Helms to the U.S. Capitol.
The statewide races are nearly all the time shut. And, for candidates, the margins for error are skinny.
Stein’s political opponents are anticipated to make use of his actions within the 2020 election in opposition to him. That 12 months, a Stein marketing campaign advert accused Republican Legal professional Normal candidate Jim O’Neill of leaving “1,500 rape kits on a shelf and left rapists on the road.”
O’Neill, the Forsyth County district legal professional, stated the advert is defamatory as a result of DAs don’t have direct management over rape kits. O’Neill filed a legal criticism with the state Board of Elections, claiming Stein violated a legislation prohibiting lies in political advertisements.
The Wake County District Legal professional’s workplace has pursued the case, although the state elections board didn’t suggest prices. A federal appeals courtroom final 12 months briefly blocked enforcement of the legislation, saying it might have an effect on midterm election campaigns. The subsequent courtroom motion within the case is anticipated earlier than spring.
If convicted of the misdemeanor, Stein could be the primary individual ever held accountable below the 91-year-old legislation. The Wake DA’s investigation has drawn the ire of Cooper, who known as it an “unprecedented repression of free speech.”
Morgan Jackson, a companion with Nexus Methods, doesn’t imagine the case will probably be an element within the 2024 election.
Jackson thinks voters will care extra about points that have an effect on individuals’s day by day lives and impressed with Stein’s document, whether or not it’s “working with victims of sexual assault, whether or not it’s taking up opioid producers and Huge Pharma, going after polluters who poison the water … [or] working with sheriffs and DAs of each events, in rural counties in city areas, on a regular basis to determine how you can preserve their communities protected.”
With $5 million raised already, Jackson says Stein’s gubernatorial marketing campaign is already off to begin.
“He is raised twice what Cooper had at this actual cut-off date in each the 2016 marketing campaign and 2020 marketing campaign,” Jackson stated of Stein.
If Stein’s marketing campaign announcement is any indication, he’ll observe a Democratic playbook used to success in a number of gubernatorial races final 12 months: tout political expertise whereas casting the Republican candidate as a divisive determine, unfit for workplace.
That’s what Arizona Secretary of State Katie Hobbs did final 12 months, when she edged out Lake. It’s what Pennsylvania Legal professional Normal Josh Shapiro did to beat Mastriano. And it’s what Stein is trying to do with Robinson.
The marketing campaign video Stein launched Wednesday options audio of Robinson making claims that might offend swing North Carolina voters, together with clips of Robinson saying God known as David – “not Davida” – to slay Goliath in 1 Samuel, that homosexuality is “filth” and that “abortion is a scourge.”
The 2016 and 2020 wins by Trump, identified for his inflammatory speech, present that controversial feedback aren’t disqualifiers for North Carolina voters. If Robinson can preserve a gubernatorial marketing campaign in regards to the points, and never himself, political insiders say he’ll pose a severe problem to Stein.
However Stein’s supporters stay optimistic.
In final 12 months’s gubernatorial races, the Democratic Governors Affiliation boasted the “finest exhibiting for the president’s occasion for any midterm since 1986.” And, since first operating for workplace in 2008, Stein has by no means misplaced a race.
North Carolina
North Carolina among 18 states suing to stop Trump’s order blocking birthright citizenship
WASHINGTON, D.C. (WITN) – Attorneys general from 18 states sued Tuesday to block President Donald Trump’s move to end a decades-old immigration policy known as birthright citizenship guaranteeing that U.S.-born children are citizens regardless of their parents’ status.
Trump’s roughly 700-word executive order, issued late Monday, amounts to a fulfillment of something he’s talked about during the presidential campaign. But whether it succeeds is far from certain amid what is likely to be a lengthy legal battle over the president’s immigration policies.
North Carolina is one of the 18 states challenging the executive order. Attorney General Jeff Jackson is asking the court to invalidate the executive order and stop it from being implemented.
“This executive order is a straightforward violation of the Fourteenth Amendment, which guarantees citizenship to all people born on U.S. soil. For over a century, this principle has been upheld by the Supreme Court and remains a bedrock of our constitutional framework,” said Jackson.
Attorney General Jackson says the Constitution leaves no room for reinterpreting this matter.
“As Attorney General, my role is straightforward as well: to defend the Constitution. That’s why I’ve joined this lawsuit, to uphold the rule of law and preserve the rights that have defined our nation for generations,” said Jackson.
Here’s a closer look at birthright citizenship, Trump’s executive order and reaction to it:
What is birthright citizenship?
Birthright citizenship means anyone born in the U.S. is a citizen, regardless of their parents’ immigration status. People, for instance, in the United States on a tourist or other visa or in the country illegally can become the parents of a citizen if their child is born here.
It’s been in place for decades and enshrined in the 14th Amendment to the Constitution, supporters say. But Trump and allies dispute the reading of the amendment and say there need to be tougher standards on becoming a citizen.
What does Trump’s order say?
The order questions that the 14th Amendment extends citizenship automatically to anyone born in the United States.
The 14th Amendment was born in the aftermath of the Civil War and ratified in 1868. It says: “All persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.”
Trump’s order excludes the following people from automatic citizenship: those whose mothers were not legally in the United States and whose fathers were not U.S. citizens or lawful permanent residents; people whose mothers were in the country legally but on a temporary basis and whose fathers were not citizens or legal permanent residents.
It goes on to bar federal agencies from recognizing the citizenship of people in those categories. It takes effect 30 days from Tuesday, on Feb. 19.
What is the history of the issue?
The 14th Amendment did not always guarantee birthright citizenship to all U.S.-born people. Congress did not authorize citizenship for all Native Americans born in the United States, for instance, until 1924.
In 1898 an important birthright citizenship case unfolded in the U.S. Supreme Court. The court held that Wong Kim Ark, who was born in San Francisco to Chinese immigrants, was a U.S. citizen because he was born in the country. After a trip abroad, he had faced denied reentry by the federal government on the grounds that he wasn’t a citizen under the Chinese Exclusion Act.
But some advocates of immigration restrictions have argued that while the case clearly applied to children born to parents who are both legal immigrants, it’s less clear whether it applies to children born to parents without legal status.
What has the reaction to Trump’s order been?
Eighteen states, plus the District of Columbia and San Francisco sued in federal court to block Trump’s order.
New Jersey Democratic Attorney General Matt Platkin said Tuesday that presidents might have broad authority but they are not kings.
“The president cannot, with a stroke of a pen, write the 14th Amendment out of existence, period,” he said.
Connecticut Attorney General William Tong, a U.S. citizen by birthright and the nation’s first Chinese American elected attorney general, said the lawsuit was personal for him.
“The 14th Amendment says what it means, and it means what it says —- if you are born on American soil, you are an American. Period. Full stop,” he said. “There is no legitimate legal debate on this question. But the fact that Trump is dead wrong will not prevent him from inflicting serious harm right now on American families like my own.”
Not long after Trump signed the order, immigrant rights groups filed suit to stop it.
Chapters of the American Civil Liberties Union in New Hampshire, Maine and Massachusetts along with other immigrant rights advocates filed a suit in New Hampshire federal court.
The suit asks the court to find the order to be unconstitutional. It highlights the case of a woman identified as “Carmen,” who is pregnant but is not a citizen. The lawsuit says she has lived in the United States for more than 15 years and has a pending visa application that could lead to permanent status. She has no other immigration status, and the father of her expected child has no immigration status either, the suit says.
“Stripping children of the ‘priceless treasure’ of citizenship is a grave injury,” the suit said. “It denies them the full membership in U.S. society to which they are entitled.”
In addition to North Carolina, New Jersey and the two cities, California, Massachusetts, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, New York, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Wisconsin joined the lawsuit to stop the order.
Copyright 2025 WITN. All rights reserved.
North Carolina
Tropical Storm Helene destroyed nearly 1,000 homes in NC, FEMA maps show
McDowell County resident shares his story of loss from Helene floods in western North Carolina
Chris Loftis shares his story of the Tropical Storm Helene floods along Highway 80 in McDowell County.
Tropical Storm Helene destroyed nearly 1,000 homes when it tore through Western North Carolina Sept. 27, maps from the Federal Emergency Management Agency show.
The maps, which show verified damage to homes as of Jan. 7, were presented to the Buncombe County Board of Commissioners at its Jan. 16 budget retreat.
In Buncombe County, Helene destroyed 340 homes, according to the maps. More than 170 were owner-occupied, while the remaining were rental properties.
The maps also show how many homes across the state sustained major damage and how many require repairs so residents can move back in.
According to the maps, 2,360 homes suffered major damage. Nearly one-third were rentals. Additionally, nearly 30,000 homes require habitability repairs, according to the maps. More than 6,000 of those homes were occupied by renters.
The number of damaged homes verified by FEMA is significantly lower than initial estimates from the state. According to a Dec. 13 damage needs assessment compiled by the N.C. Office of State Budget and Management, more than 73,000 homes were projected to be damaged, the majority of which were expected to be single-family and manufactured homes, and duplexes. In total, the state is estimating nearly $13 billion in residential damage alone.
The Citizen Times requested updated damage maps from FEMA on Jan. 17.
How did homes in Buncombe, Henderson, McDowell, Madison and Yancey counties fare?
Destroyed homes:
Buncombe: 340
Henderson: 89
McDowell: 92
Yancey: 100
Madison:11+
Major damage:
Buncombe: 640
Henderson: 354
McDowell: 128
Yancey: 166
Madison: 56
Homes requiring habitability repairs:
Buncombe: 8,920
Henderson: 3,988
McDowell: 1,442
Yancey: 1,767
Madison: 302
Jacob Biba is the county watchdog reporter at the Asheville Citizen Times, part of the USA TODAY Network. Email him at jbiba@citizentimes.com.
North Carolina
Vote: Who Should Be the North Carolina Boys High School Basketball Player of the Week? (1/20/2025)
Who was the North Carolina Boys Basketball Player of the Week last week?
Each week, High School On SI scours the state of North Carolina and compiles the top performances from the previous week.
Congratulations to last week’s winner: Jalin Sutton of Greene Central.
Voting closes at 11:59 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 26. The winner will be announced in the following week’s poll. Here are this week’s nominees:
The 6-foot-5 junior guard scored 26 points on 9-of-13 shooting, grabbed 7 rebounds and blocked 4 shots in the Sabres’ 71-63 win over Myers Park. Houpt also had 15 points in a 65-56 win over White Oak.
Kerr, a top 100 national recruit, scored 24 points as the Cougars toppled nationally ranked and previously undefeated Christ School 73-66. The 6-foot-4 junior guard has 10 college offers.
Charles scored 27 points and got 8 rebounds in a 56-42 win over Southside. The 6-foot-4 senior also had 22 points, 8 rebounds and 4 assists in an 84-38 rout of Pamlico County.
Blow scored 17 points and got 6 rebounds in a 67-59 victory over Ayden-Grifton.
Barron scored 19 points while getting 7 steals and 5 assists in a 77-57 victory over Northwest Halifax.
Edwards posted 27 points, 8 rebounds and 8 assists in an 89-39 romp over Wayne Christian. He also had 17 points in an 84-57 win over First Flight.
Brewer dominated with 34 points, 9 rebounds, 7 assists and 4 steals in a 66-48 win over Pisgah.
Parkins erupted for 39 points, tying a career high, in a 90-66 win over Asheville. The 6-foot-7 senior also had 17 rebounds. He had 27 points and 13 rebounds in an 81-65 win over Erwin.
Brown scored 30 points and had 5 rebounds in an 84-80 overtime win over Tuscola. In addition, he had 21 points in a 59-45 loss to East Henderson.
Fannon scored 31 points, including 9-of-14 from 3-point range, as the Mustangs beat St. Stephens 93-70.
-
Technology1 week ago
Amazon Prime will shut down its clothing try-on program
-
Technology1 week ago
L’Oréal’s new skincare gadget told me I should try retinol
-
Technology6 days ago
Super Bowl LIX will stream for free on Tubi
-
Business1 week ago
Why TikTok Users Are Downloading ‘Red Note,’ the Chinese App
-
Technology4 days ago
Nintendo omits original Donkey Kong Country Returns team from the remaster’s credits
-
Culture4 days ago
American men can’t win Olympic cross-country skiing medals — or can they?
-
Technology1 week ago
Meta is already working on Community Notes for Threads
-
Politics4 days ago
U.S. Reveals Once-Secret Support for Ukraine’s Drone Industry