North Carolina
DraftKings North Carolina Promo Code: Grab $250 bonus in NC, $150 in other states
North Carolina recently launched online sports betting, and DraftKings Sportsbook has an outstanding new customer offer for Tar Heel State bettors! This offer works for all DraftKings sports markets.
The DraftKings NC welcome offer lets new users bet $5 to get $250 back in bonus bets, win or lose. Bonus bets function as bet credits that can earn profits on winning bets, but cannot be directly withdrawn and deposited into a bank account.
DraftKings is also promoting its standard welcome offer that allows bettors to wager $5 to get $150 in bonus bets instantly. You can use either offer on all DraftKings sports markets.
Click the links below for more information.
DraftKings promo codes
NC State-Virginia pick
The ACC Tournament has reached the semifinals and the second game of the night features the No. 10 seed NC State Wolfpack vs. the No. 3 seed Virginia Cavaliers.
Virginia is favored by 2.5 points on DraftKings Sportsbook. The Cavaliers make sense as a favorite, but I like NC State tonight because the Wolfpack have been playing well entering this game.
After a relatively unimpressive win over Louisville in the first round of the tournament, NC State looked great in a 83-65 win over Syracuse and pretty much led wire-to-wire in its victory over Duke in the quarterfinals yesterday.
DJ Horne is averaging 17 points in the last two games, Jayden Taylor, Michael O’Connell and Casey Morsell are bringing good guard play, and DJ Burns Jr. is playing well at center, so it looks like the Wolfpack are clicking at the right time.
Meanwhile, Virginia needed overtime to beat an okay Boston College squad last night.
The Cavaliers offensive struggles are a constant concern, as they average just 63.5 points per game this season, which is the worst in the ACC and bottom-10 in all of Division 1.
This team couldn’t even reach 50 points in three of its last six games and only has two players scoring in double digits.
Go with the hotter team and take NC State to cover with the DraftKings NC promo code.
Feel free to use the bonus on any other sport!
Pick: NC State +2.5
More on the DraftKings promo code
| DraftKings NC Promo Code | No Code required, Click here! |
| DraftKings NC Promo | Must be 21+ and present in North Carolina. Full T&C apply. Gambling problem? Call 877-718-5543 or visit morethanagame.nc.gov |
| DraftKings Sportsbook Promo T&Câs | Live in North Carolina: Bet $5, Get $250 in Bonus Bets! |
How to use your DraftKings Sportsbook promo code
- Click here to claim the DraftKings Sportsbook NC welcome bonus.
- Enter and verify your details.
- Make sure youâve read and understood the terms and conditions.
- Sign up and make a $5 first bet.
- Claim the $250 in bonus bets after the first bet.
- You have 7 days to wager your bonus bets or they will expire.
North Carolina
Wintry mix expected Friday across Central North Carolina: Weather timeline
A wintry mix is set to impact the Triangle and areas to the north on Friday, with snow and ice possible early in the day before transitioning to all rain by the afternoon. The system could end as a mix again by evening.
Snow accumulation is expected to be around an inch or less, with minor ice potential north of the Triangle during the morning hours.
The wintry mix will likely create slow and messy commutes Friday morning, with rain continuing through the afternoon. Be prepared for tricky travel conditions.
Here’s a timeline for Friday’s weather:
4 a.m.: Snow showers and a wintry mix begin.
10 a.m.: Transition to a mix of rain, snow, and wet conditions.
12 p.m.: Rain takes over, melting any snow or slush.
Evening: Lingering showers possible.
Looking ahead, the 7-day forecast shows chilly temperatures sticking around:
Wednesday: Bright and chilly, with highs in the upper 40s and lows in the upper 20s.
Thursday: Mostly cloudy, highs in the low 50s, lows in the low 30s.
Friday: First Alert Day. Wintry mix transitioning to cold rain, with highs in the upper 30s and lows in the low 30s.
Saturday: Cloudy with isolated showers, highs in the mid to upper 40s, and lows in the upper 20s.
Sunday: Partly cloudy, highs in the upper 40s, and lows in the low 30s.
Monday: Partly cloudy, highs in the low 40s, and lows in the low 20s.
Tuesday: Chilly, with highs in the mid-40s and lows in the low 30s.
Copyright © 2025 WTVD-TV. All Rights Reserved.
North Carolina
Michael Whatley officially enters North Carolina Senate race, endorsed by Trump
RALEIGH, N.C. (WLOS) — Michael Whatley, former chairman of the Republican National Committee, is now officially in the running for the U.S. Senate in North Carolina.
On Tuesday, Dec. 2, Whatley shared photos of himself filing at the State Board of Elections via his “Michael Whatley for Senate” Facebook page.
“It’s official! I am running for Senate to fight for every family across North Carolina,” the post said. “I am honored to have President Trump’s endorsement and will work every day to create jobs, raise wages, lower costs and keep our communities safe.
RNC CHAIR MICHAEL WHATLEY ANNOUNCES BID FOR NORTH CAROLINA’S OPEN SENATE SEAT
Whatley served as the chair of the Republican National Committee (RNC) from March 2024 to August 2025 before resigning to pursue the Senate seat.
In July, President Donald Trump announced his official endorsement of Whatley. In a post on Truth Social, Trump expressed his support for Whatley, calling him “one of the most capable executives in our country.”
“So, should Michael Whatley run for the Senate, please let this notification represent my complete and total endorsement,” Trump wrote in the July 2025 post.
TRUMP ENDORSES MICHAEL WHATLEY FOR NORTH CAROLINA SENATE SEAT IN 2026
In the aftermath of Hurricane Helene, Trump appointed Whatley to oversee recovery efforts throughout western North Carolina. During a visit to western North Carolina in January 2025, Trump said Whatley’s role as a hurricane recovery “czar” would be to help push recovery forward and get money to the region.
In September, residents and business owners from Black Mountain and Swannanoa held a press conference where they criticized Whatley, claiming they had not seen any efforts from him.
Read more: ‘OUR NEEDS ARE URGENT’: WNC RESIDENTS SAY MICHAEL WHATLEY ISN’T HELPING AFTER HELENE
Jonathan Felts, Michael Whatley’s spokesperson for his Senate campaign, sent News 13 the following statement after this press conference:
“While Roy Cooper botched multiple hurricane responses because he was too distracted freeing violent criminals to ravage our streets, Michael Whatley stepped in with President Trump to fix the Cooper-Biden hurricane disaster. It’s only because of President Trump and Michael Whatley that billions – including over $220 million direct for hurricane recovery – has been secured for the citizens of North Carolina that Roy Cooper betrayed and failed as Governor.”
FILING OPENS FOR 2026 NC ELECTION CANDIDATES, INCLUDING HIGH-PROFILE SENATE RACE
Whatley will face off against former Gov. Roy Cooper in the race for North Carolina’s open Senate seat in 2026. This comes after Republican Sen. Thom Tillis announced in June that he will not seek re-election.
A Democrat has not won a U.S. Senate election in North Carolina since 2008.
As of Tuesday evening, the former Democratic governor has not yet officially filed his candidacy.
North Carolina
Impending federal hemp ban puts North Carolina’s $1B industry at risk | Port City Daily
NORTH CAROLINA — A sweeping change tucked into the federal government’s latest funding package is poised to wipe out most of North Carolina’s hemp industry, banning nearly all cannabinoid products and leaving farmers and retailers across the state facing an uncertain future.
READ MORE: Hemp under threat: NC lawmakers debating crackdown, business owners push back
ALSO: NC legislators propose recreational marijuana bills in Senate and House
Under a provision tucked into the bill, most hemp-derived products sold in North Carolina — including Delta-8, Delta-10 and THCA flower — will become illegal by November 2026. The change rewrites the federal definition of hemp to exclude cannabinoids that are synthesized or modified outside the cannabis plant, closing loopholes that fueled the rise of these products and effectively wiping out the retail market that now dominates the state’s industry.
The measure was folded into the 394-page Continuing Appropriations, Agriculture, Legislative Branch, Military Construction and Veterans Affairs, and Extensions Act of 2026 — the funding package which ended the 43-day federal government shutdown when it was signed into law Nov. 12.
Although the restrictions do not take effect until the end of next year, the language marks a major shift in national cannabis policy. Championed by Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-KY), the provision aims to close gaps left by the 2018 Farm Bill, which defined hemp solely by its Delta-9 THC concentration.
McConnell justified the ban by citing rising public-health incidents, pointing to statistics from the Kentucky Poison Center showing cannabis-related calls more than doubled over five years. Nearly 40% of the center’s THC-related calls in 2024 involved children under 12, with most hospitalizations linked to THC gummies marketed in packaging resembling candy.
The 2018 Farm Bill allowed hemp to be grown and sold so long as it contained no more than 0.3% Delta-9 THC by dry weight. Because the federal definition focused on just one cannabis compound, manufacturers exploited two glaring omissions. The first was the law ignored other psychoactive compounds like Delta-8 and Delta-10 THC, which are chemically similar to Delta-9 and produce a high for users.
Delta-8 and Delta-10 THC compounds can be created by extracting CBD — which is non-intoxicating — from hemp and chemically converting it into a psychoactive substance. The second gap in the Farm Bill was the law’s failure to regulate THCA (tetrahydrocannabinolic acid), the raw, non-intoxicating compound found in hemp flower. THCA becomes illegal Delta-9 THC only when heated, meaning retailers could legally sell flower functionally identical to cannabis sold in dispensaries in states where the drug is legalized.
Any cannabinoid synthesized or manufactured outside the cannabis plant is explicitly removed from the definition of legal hemp, outlawing most Delta-8 and Delta-10 products, along with many of the processes used to isolate and refine CBD.
The legislation also imposes an extremely strict limit on finished consumer products: anything intended for human consumption will be illegal if the container holds more than 0.4 milligrams of total THC. Commonly consumed low-dose gummies typically contain 5 to 10 milligrams of THC per gummy so a standard package of 10 gummies containing 50 to 100 milligrams of total THC, rendered illegal under the new law.
According to Phil Dixon Jr., professor at the UNC School of Government and expert in cannabis law, the new federal language represents a “radical reworking of the federal definition of hemp to effectively eliminate everything but hemp oils and hemp seeds.”
He said the law is so broad because it doesn’t just target finished intoxicating products, it criminalizes many of the processes used to make otherwise legal hemp extracts. Widely sold CBD products often require extracting and isolating cannabis compounds which results in THC byproducts. Under the new definition, the process could make the entire product unlawful. Thus, non-intoxicating CBD items — gummies, oils, and lotions — would also fall under the ban.
“I think it will drastically shrink the market all around and there will be way less products that are legal under federal law,” Dixon said. “That presumably means less people will be doing it, and there will be less of a supply all around and so less demand from the producers and the farmers.”
Dixon described the federal drafting as “pretty airtight,” noting Congress appears to have erred on the side of “over-inclusion,” sweeping in Delta-8, THCA, and newer compounds such as Hexahydrocannabinol (HHC) to ensure no future chemical workaround remains possible.
HHC, a semi-synthetic cannabinoid, often derived from CBD, is believed to fall under the ban because the law excludes any cannabinoids “synthesized or converted” outside the plant.
Focusing on intoxicating products, the federal ban does not target agricultural hemp grown for fiber, grain, textiles, or industrial uses. However, it is still expected to affect the farming sector because the high-profit consumable cannabinoid market largely subsidizes the much lower-value industrial hemp market.
North Carolina has 858 licensed hemp growers, according to state agriculture licensing records. A 2023 economic impact study on the state’s hemp industry estimated the sector supports nearly 9,000 jobs and generates between $759 million and $1.1 billion in annual sales, with the majority of revenue coming from hemp-derived cannabinoid products.
Earlier this year, state lawmakers attempted to regulate hemp with House Bill 328, which proposed age limits, testing requirements, and a product licensing system. Though it had strong support from the hemp industry — due to creating standards without banning products — it didn’t move forward. Senate lawmakers rewrote the bill into a much stricter measure mirroring the new federal approach, banning intoxicating hemp-derived cannabinoids, restricting chemical conversion processes used to make Delta-8 and similar products, and limiting total THC in consumer goods. Negotiations between the chambers ultimately stalled.
Industry organizations such as the American Healthy Alternatives Association have opposed the new federal language, contending an outright ban on intoxicating hemp cannabinoids will shutter small businesses and eliminate a profitable industry.
Despite the lack of regulation, hemp retailers continued to expand across the state, with more than 100 businesses operating in North Carolina. Wilmington alone now has dozens of hemp dispensaries, smoke shops, vape shops, and convenience stores selling THCA flower and Delta-8 and Delta-10 THC products permitted under the 2018 Farm Bill. Under the new federal restrictions, hemp consumable stores will soon face decisions about whether to shut down, liquidate stock, attempt to pivot to non-intoxicating products, or risk federal enforcement after November 2026.
Dixon emphasized that even if some businesses hope to continue selling products under North Carolina’s permissive state laws they will face multiple obstacles.
Because the new federal definition makes most hemp products controlled substances, banks will be legally unable to accept proceeds from sales. Hemp producers, wholesalers, and retailers would also be unable to ship products across state lines, disrupting the supply chain. In addition, businesses would be subject to federal controlled-substance tax provisions normally applied to illicit drug operations.
“Even putting aside the risk of a criminal prosecution by the feds, there are these very practical problems, like: Can you ship it? Can you get a bank account for your business?” Dixon said. “If this is your business, are you exposed to some new and different tax liability because of this change? I think all of those are very possible.”
Dixon noted federal enforcement remains unpredictable. While the Department of Justice has not prioritized raids on state-licensed marijuana dispensaries in places like Colorado, the protection these businesses enjoy is not permanent. It exists only because of a Congressional provision attached to a federal spending bill — known as a budget rider — preventing the use of federal funds to take action against state-compliant marijuana operations. Since a budget rider must be renewed annually by Congress, the shield could be removed at any time. No such agreement currently exists for hemp.
Marijuana and hemp remain legally distinct substances at the federal level — marijuana is defined as any cannabis with more than 0.3% Delta-9 THC, while hemp is defined as anything under that limit. Even if North Carolina were to legalize recreational or medical marijuana, Dixon said it would not resolve the conflict for hemp specific businesses.
“Us changing our marijuana laws wouldn’t really change this,” he said. “Perhaps there could be a similar kind of agreement that says, ‘If you’re operating consistent with your state law, we’re not going to mess with you.’”
In the coming year, Dixon expects some hemp businesses will begin phasing out operations or selling off inventory, while others may hold out in hopes the legal landscape changes.
“My assumption is that you will see businesses starting to wind down the closer we get to November,” he said. “But I also imagine that there will be people who hold out and say, ‘I’m committed to this industry. I think I do good work, and I think there’s a market for my products.’ We’ll just have to see. If I was their attorney, I would say you need to be concerned.”
Have tips or suggestions for Charlie Fossen? Email charlie@localdailymedia.com
At Port City Daily, we aim to keep locals informed on top-of-mind news facing the tri-county region. To support our work and help us reach more people in 2026, please, consider helping one of two ways: Subscribe here or make a one-time contribution here.
We appreciate your ongoing support.
-
News23 hours agoTrump threatens strikes on any country he claims makes drugs for US
-
Politics22 hours agoTrump rips Somali community as federal agents reportedly eye Minnesota enforcement sweep
-
World23 hours agoHonduras election council member accuses colleague of ‘intimidation’
-
Technology7 days agoNew scam sends fake Microsoft 365 login pages
-
Politics6 days agoRep. Swalwell’s suit alleges abuse of power, adds to scrutiny of Trump official’s mortgage probes
-
Business1 week agoStruggling Six Flags names new CEO. What does that mean for Knott’s and Magic Mountain?
-
Ohio1 week agoSnow set to surge across Northeast Ohio, threatening Thanksgiving travel
-
News7 days ago2 National Guard members wounded in ‘targeted’ attack in D.C., authorities say