North Carolina
North Carolina Guv Rips State GOP for Ignoring ‘Will of the People’ With Abortion Ban
North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper on Saturday tore into his state’s Republicans for overriding his veto of their 12-week abortion ban, insisting that the GOP lawmakers “ignored the will of the people” and would pay for it during the upcoming 2024 election.
Additionally, Cooper also took a swipe at State Rep. Tricia Cotham, a former Democrat who switched parties last month and gave Republicans a veto-proof majority in both chambers of the state legislature. Prior to her flip to the GOP, Cotham had campaigned as a supporter of abortion rights and won her heavily Democratic district by nearly 20 points.
“It’s amazing how they’ve ignored the will of the people here,” Cooper said on MSNBC’s The Saturday Show with Jonathan Capehart. “Most North Carolinians do not want right-wing politicians in the exam room with women and their doctors, but Republicans are controlled by their right wing.”
He continued: “And in fact, as you heard, not a single Republican stepped up. Not a single Republican kept a campaign promise to protect women’s reproductive freedom, like they said they would. And therefore, you have unified Republicans who are all together in an assault on women’s reproductive freedom.”
Recent polls find that a majority of North Carolina voters oppose the GOP’s 12-week limit on abortions, and instead would prefer the state to keep the previous 20-week restriction or even expand it. Cooper, while acknowledging that the GOP had a supermajority in the legislature, announced his veto last Saturday at a pro-abortion rally in the hopes of pressuring at least one Republican to join Democrats in defeating the override.
In the end, that did not happen.
“This legislation slaps women in the face. It’s an insult. The people of North Carolina are mad,” Cooper declared on Saturday. “They pushed this thing through so fast. It took them 42 hours to turn back the clock 50 years. And they did it in the dark of night because they didn’t want anybody to know what was in this legislation because they know the people don’t support it.”
Turning his attention to Cotham, the Democratic governor claimed he had talked with her “quite a bit” in recent months and advised her to push back against her new party, especially since she had initially campaigned as a “pro-choice Democrat.”
“One of the reasons she said that she flipped was because she needed more opportunity for freedom of thought—imagine that—in the Republican Party,” he stated. “But what I’ve urged her to do is to stand up to her new party, just like she stood up to her old one, and keep campaign promises that she made to her constituents and the people of North Carolina.”
With North Carolina Republicans framing their 12-week ban as moderate compared to other states’ more restrictive measures, Cooper was asked what his state’s new law means in the broader national discussion over reproductive rights.
“I think what it means that this issue is going to be front and center in the 2024 elections,” the governor proclaimed. “President Biden has promised his support, and I think you’re going to see in states all over the country where, unfortunately, this battle is being fought because of the overturning of Roe v. Wade. Your zip code shouldn’t determine your constitutional rights, but unfortunately, that’s where we are.”
Cooper concluded: “And in North Carolina, I’ve told the president, I believe that we can win North Carolina for him. We’ll be electing a new Democratic governor to take office in January of 2025, and we’re going to work hard to break the supermajority in the North Carolina legislature.”
North Carolina
New poll shows Harris eyeing victory in North Carolina as possible pick-up
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North Carolina
In North Carolina, Democrats counting on young voters
For several months, Yampiere Lugo has been going door to door, urging young people in North Carolina to vote in November.
With Joe Biden’s withdrawal from the race and Kamala Harris’s arrival atop the Democratic ticket, the party activist says his generation — a key voting bloc — is fired up.
“I’ve talked to a lot of people around my age who have sort of all expressed the same sentiment — that they’re just so much more excited to have someone who’s just younger, more energetic,” Lugo told AFP.
The 25-year-old, who works as an administrative assistant at a local school, says even people he thought might skip the election altogether have said the vice president has their support.
The enthusiasm marks a sharp contrast with the situation Lugo was facing just over a month ago, when he was canvassing for Biden in Laurinburg, the seat of Scotland County, not far from the border with South Carolina.
At the time, the activist admitted to AFP that young voters were “frustrated” with their options, facing a choice between the 81-year-old Biden and Donald Trump, the 78-year-old Republican former president.
Now, Lugo believes Harris, 59, can win North Carolina, one of a handful of swing states likely to play a pivotal role in the race for the White House.
Winning here will be an uphill battle — the southern state has not voted for a Democrat in the presidential election since Barack Obama in 2008.
“North Carolina is going to have something to say in November,” said Zach Finley, the president of the Young Democrats of North Carolina.
But for Harris to turn the state Democratic blue, the party needs to campaign “the right way, turning out the folks we need to,” added Finley, who is also 25.
– ‘Excited’ –
On a national level, voters between the ages of 18 and 39 favored Biden over Trump in 2020 by a margin of about 20 percentage points, according to the Pew Research Center.
Finley says the party needs to “turn out young people who, especially in the last couple of years, have been really disincentivized” by the political process.
Democrats are getting out the vote the old-fashioned way in Scotland County — knocking on doors and talking to people.
The rural area is one of the most hotly contested political battlefields in the country — Hillary Clinton bested Trump here in 2016, but the Republican bounced back to defeat Biden in 2020, by just 287 votes.
In November, “it’s all about turnout,” says Garland Pierce, a Democratic state representative and a Baptist pastor.
“That’s what everybody’s really depending on, is the young voters to really go to the polls.
The lawmaker says Harris’s somewhat surprise breakthrough into the race has galvanized voters in North Carolina.
“It appears that young people are really excited” about her candidacy, he said, adding that the economy will be a key issue in the contest.
– ‘Cost of things’ –
Pierce’s prediction about the economy is shared by a number of young voters AFP met in the streets of Laurinburg, which is home to 15,000 residents.
“Everything used to be cheaper,” laments Donnie Leviner, an 18-year-old student with his own home renovation business.
Before Biden won the White House, “gas prices used to be way lower,” said Leviner, who added that he would vote for Trump in his first-ever trip to a presidential voting booth.
For Lucas Wylie, a 26-year-old engineer having a coffee at an outdoor cafe with his dog, young voters are “very focused on the cost of things and affordability.”
Wylie cited expensive housing and high interest rates as evidence of soaring prices, and said both would be important to him in November.
Finley agreed.
“There’s just a lot of pent-up anxiety being a young person in this country, not even being able to afford a home,” he said. “It’s almost out of reach, especially in North Carolina.”
Finley said Democrats need to reassure young voters that they are attuned to their concerns, and ready to deliver solutions.
Harris will need to convince young people that they will ultimately be able to “achieve some form of the American dream” — and offer the same thing to the next generation, Finley said.
rle/sst/bfm
North Carolina
North Carolina QB Max Johnson exits game after brutal injury, out for the season
Max Johnson’s first season under center for the North Carolina Tar Heels came to an abrupt end Thursday.
The senior quarterback grabbed his leg as he lay on the turf for several minutes in the third quarter of UNC’s season opener against Minnesota. Johnson would eventually need the assistance of a cart to exit the field. He was then taken to a hospital.
On Friday, UNC confirmed Johnson had undergone a medical procedure in Minneapolis. The school also noted he would travel back to North Carolina in the coming days.
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While Johnson is expected to make a full recovery, the injury will sideline him for the rest of the 2024 season, ESPN reported.
SHEDEUR SANDERS, TRAVIS HUNTER SHINE AS COLORADO BARELY GETS BY NORTH DAKOTA STATE IN SEASON OPENER
Conner Harrell, who played for the Tar Heels in last season’s bowl game after Drake Maye declared for the draft, led the team the rest of the way in the 19-17 win at Minnesota and is positioned to take over the starting job for a Sept. 7 home game against Charlotte.
Johnson, the son of former NFL quarterback Brad Johnson, had transferred from Texas A&M and won the starting job over Harrell to replace Drake Maye, the No. 3 overall NFL draft pick.
But Johnson was hurt when his leg bent awkwardly as he was taken to the ground on a blitz by Justin Walley in the second half.
North Carolina head coach Mack Brown addressed Johnson’s injury after the game.
“I hate that Max got hurt for him and for us. Conner [has] got to come on,” Brown said.
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Johnson, a fifth-year quarterback who started his career with two years at LSU, finished 12-for-19 for 71 yards with one interception while also running for a score. The team awarded Johnson a game ball afterward.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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