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Tag: NC Election 2024

  • Meet Mo Green: Democratic candidate for N.C. Supt. of Public Instruction

    Meet Mo Green: Democratic candidate for N.C. Supt. of Public Instruction

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    RALEIGH, N.C. — As campaigns ramp up voter outreach in North Carolina, one race many are focusing on is the race to lead North Carolina’s public school system. Republican hopeful Michele Morrow and Democratic candidate Mo Green are running for State Superintendent of Public Instruction.


    What You Need To Know

    • One of the political races many folks are paying attention to is the race to lead North Carolina’s public school system
    • Republican Michele Morrow and Democrat Mo Green are running for North Carolina Superintendent of Public Instruction
    • Green served as the superintendent of Guilford County Schools for seven years and worked as general counsel for Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools
    • Green says one of his top priorities is increasing funding for public schools in order to pay teachers more

    Mo Green credits his mom, who was a special education teacher, for his admiration for educators and the public education system as a whole. The Duke University graduate started his professional career in the judicial system as a lawyer, transitioning to general counsel for Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools in 2001.

    Green describes himself as a champion for public education, but he stills believes there are things that can and should be improved upon.

    This may be the first political office Green has run for but, having served as the superintendent of Guilford County Schools for seven years and working for Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools, he’s very comfortable in the world of public education.

    “The thing that I always think about, when I think about public education, is the transformative value that it has,” Green said.

    Green, who has spent much of his career in philanthropy, now has his sights set on a state level political post leading the Department of Public Instruction and making decisions for kids in classrooms across the state.

    “So this focus on certainly, knowledge acquisition being critically important, but also development of character being equally as important,” Green said.

    Education remains a top expense in the state budget year after year, but Green argues there’s more work to be done in properly funding public education.

    “We’re about $5,000 or so, per student, below the national average. You think about our teachers, our beginning teachers, we’re 46th in the entire country with regards to what we pay our teachers, our beginner teachers,” Green said.

    After winning the primary in this highly contested race, Green reflected on the commitment people have made to public education.

    “Our schools didn’t become these bright beacons of hope all on their own. Generations of North Carolinians have made the choice to invest in them and make them strong,” Green said.

    Green also says he doesn’t support the Parents Bill of Rights law. It bans discussions of sexuality and gender identity in kindergarten through 4th grade and requires schools to tell parents if students change their pronouns. He says it does more harm than good.

    “The title itself raises a deep concern for me, because it might suggest to many that parents don’t already have a lot of access to our schools, that our schools are somehow not welcoming. And then there has to be sort of this enumerated set of rights provided to parents so they can engage with public schools. That’s a false narrative,” Green said.

    In fact, Green believes a majority of decision making around public schools should be left to those with experience in the field, which would include an overall curriculum plan being established and then allowing educators as much freedom as possible when it comes to teaching that material.

    “There are opportunities for local school systems, once the standard courses of study are set, to develop how they want to teach various subjects and, they know their communities well, what will work in their communities,” Green said.

    But, he says, don’t take his calls for action as criticisms of public schools. Green says he’s a staunch advocate and believes there are already countless positive things that deserve recognition.

    “We’ve got to be sure that folks truly understand how much good does happen, even while we absolutely have room to improve and must improve here is a lot that that that’s worthy of daily celebration,” Green said.

    Green also says there should be adequate and differentiated resources to prepare all students for life after they graduate, whether they go to college, trade school, join the military or go straight to work.

    Spectrum News 1 also talked with the Republican hopeful in this race, Michele Morrow, to get her perspective on this issue of preparing students for the real world.

    “I really think that our schools, this is the future of our state. If we are not preparing our children to be critical thinkers, to be problem solvers, to be able to handle conflict and then we are really doing ourselves a disservice because these are going to be the future leaders in North Carolina. And what I’m seeing is public schools, the majority of parents want their children to be in a public school. That’s kind of the easiest, you know, road to go,” Morrow said. 

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    Kyleigh Panetta

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  • Second primary: What separates the state auditor Republican candidates

    Second primary: What separates the state auditor Republican candidates

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    This week, the two Republican candidates for State Auditor, Jack Clark and Dave Boliek, join host Tim Boyum.

    The two aim share their backgrounds with voters, what they hope to bring to this elected position and their focus if elected. Neither got the 30%+ necessary to avoid a runoff and face the current state auditor, Democrat Jessica Holmes, in the fall.

    The candidates will face off in the second primary on May 14.

    About the Podcast

    With the speed of the local news cycle, it’s easy to forget that the politicians who represent us and the influencers in our communities are more than just a sound bite. North Carolina’s veteran reporter and anchor, Tim Boyum, loosens his signature bow tie to give listeners a glimpse behind the curtain, showing us who these power players really are and why they do what they do. Through Tim’s candid conversations on “Tying It Together,” his guests reveal their most fascinating life stories, passions, and help all of us get a better grasp on the issues affecting our communities.

    Listen and Subscribe

    Apple | Spotify | Stitcher | Google

    Join the Conversation

    Do you have any thoughts or questions for Tim? Weigh in on X with the hashtag #TyingItTogetherNC. Afterward, rate the podcast and leave a review to tell us what you think!

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    Spectrum News Staff

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  • Who is Carolina Forward, the new progressive group in N.C. politics?

    Who is Carolina Forward, the new progressive group in N.C. politics?

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    In the past few years, a progressive group in North Carolina seemed to have popped up out of nowhere. This year the nonprofit, Carolina Forward, succeeded in getting two of their Democratic picks through the primaries. 

    Carolina Forward Executive Director Blair Reeves joins host Tim Boyum this week to understand the origins of the all-volunteer group.

    They also discuss the criticism of going after Democrats who vote with Republicans. The two then widen the lens to talk about Carolina Forward’s outlook this November.

    About the Podcast

    With the speed of the local news cycle, it’s easy to forget that the politicians who represent us and the influencers in our communities are more than just a sound bite. North Carolina’s veteran reporter and anchor, Tim Boyum, loosens his signature bow tie to give listeners a glimpse behind the curtain, showing us who these power players really are and why they do what they do. Through Tim’s candid conversations on “Tying It Together,” his guests reveal their most fascinating life stories, passions, and help all of us get a better grasp on the issues affecting our communities.

    Listen and Subscribe

    Apple | Spotify | Stitcher | Google

    Join the Conversation

    Do you have any thoughts or questions for Tim? Weigh in on X with the hashtag #TyingItTogetherNC. Afterward, rate the podcast and leave a review to tell us what you think!

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    Spectrum News Staff

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  • Four GOP contests in North Carolina could go to a second election

    Four GOP contests in North Carolina could go to a second election

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    There was no clear winner Tuesday in four statewide Republican primary elections, for two congressional seats, lieutenant governor and auditor. The seats could head to second elections to pick the party nominees on May 14. 


    What You Need To Know

    •  Four Republican races could be headed for second elections to pick party nominees after North Carolina’s primaries
    •  Two congressional districts, 6 and 13, will have second elections. They are both heavily Republican districts, which means the winner of the primaries will most likely win the seat in November
    •  Second primary elections, which are technically not called runoff elections, will be held May 14
    • The GOP primaries for state auditor and lieutenant governor also appear to be headed to second elections

    North Carolina’s 13th Congressional District. (NCGA)

    The two congressional districts, 6 and 13, heavily favor Republican candidates after the latest round of redistricting. The winner of the GOP primaries in the two district will most likely win in November’s General Election. 

    District 13 curves around the Triangle and includes largely rural and suburban areas in eight counties. The GOP nominating contest for District 13 was crowded, with 14 candidates on the ballot. 

    Kelly Daughtry won more than 27% of the Republican vote for District 13. But she needed 30% to avoid going to a second election. Brad Knott came in second with almost 19% of the vote.

    “The results make it clear that voters are seeking a candidate who will prioritize America first,” Daughtry said Tuesday night. “Trump won in a landslide here in North Carolina, and I will work with Trump when I get to Congress to secure the border, reduce inflation, and refocus our foreign policy.” 

    “We defeated 12 candidates and qualified for a runoff on May 14,” Knott said in a message to supporters Wednesday. 

    North Carolina’s 6th Congressional District (NCGA)

    “We’re hitting the campaign trail again to secure victory in the NC 13 Republican Primary Runoff on May 14 so that I can fight for you in Congress to secure the border, stop the surge in crime and disorder, and reduce inflation by cutting wasteful spending. In the fall election, I will join with President Trump to take the fight to the Democrats,” he said. 

    In the 6th Congressional District, six candidates ran for the Republican nomination.

    Addison McDowell, a first-time candidate endorsed by former President Donald Trump, won more than 26% of the vote. He will face off against former Rep. Mark Walker, who won more than 24% of the vote. 

    Walker represented the 6th District from 2015 to 2021. 

    The Republican race for lieutenant governor was another crowded one, with 13 candidates vying for the seat. It’s an open race for lieutenant governor, with Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson winning the Republican nomination for governor on Tuesday.

    Hal Weatherman won almost 20% of the GOP vote for lieutenant governor. Jim O’Neill can in second with almost 16%.

    In the Republican race for state Auditor, Jack Clark and Dave Boliek were the two top candidates, but neither hit 30%.

    Voter turnout for the Super Tuesday primary in North Carolina was about 24%. That’s down from four years ago, when about 31% of voters cast ballots in the primaries.

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    Charles Duncan

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  • Election Day: Polls open in North Carolina’s Super Tuesday primary

    Election Day: Polls open in North Carolina’s Super Tuesday primary

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    Polls will be open for North Carolina’s Super Tuesday primaries from 6:30 a.m. until 7:30 p.m. Voters are choosing party nominees for president, governor, each of the state’s 14 congressional seats and every member of the General Assembly.


    What You Need To Know

    • Polls will be open from 6:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. in North Carolina’s primary elections Tuesday
    • Voters will cast ballots in primaries for president, governor, attorney general, North Carolina’s 14 congressional seats and every member of the General Assembly
    • Photo ID is required to cast a ballot
    • Voters can find their polling place and get a sample ballot here

    North Carolina is one of more than a dozen states with primary elections on Tuesday. The presidential nomination contests are essentially done at this point. President Joe Biden is the only Democrat on the ballot in North Carolina. On the GOP side, former President Donald Trump is expected to easily win this state.

    Two of the most closely watched races in North Carolina are open contests for governor and attorney general. Gov. Roy Cooper, Democrat, cannot run again after serving two terms. 

    Attorney General Josh Stein, a Democrat, is running for governor, leaving his post open. Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson is running for the Republican gubernatorial nomination.

    More than 690,000 people voted early in the primary, including almost 20,000 mail-in ballots, according to data from the State Board of Elections. The early voting numbers are down from four years ago, when more than 794,000 voted early or by mail as of the Sunday before Election Day.

    Fifteen states and one U.S. territory are holding elections on Tuesday, the biggest day for primaries each national election cycle.

    Voting

    On Election Day, voters will have to go to their assigned polling place to cast their ballots. Voters can look up their polling place and get a sample ballot on the State Board of Elections website. 

    Unaffiliated voters can cast ballots for the party of their choice. Voters registered with a party will have to vote the ballot of that party. 

    Voters will be required to show photo identification to cast a ballot. If a voter does not have an ID, they may be able to claim an exception and cast a provisional ballot. 

    Most voters will be able to show their driver’s license. Voters can also use a military ID, passport, school ID or other photo identification card. The State Board of Elections has a full list of acceptable IDs.

    Absentee ballots are due to county boards of elections by 7:30 p.m. on Election Day.

    Stay tuned to Spectrum News 1 and the Spectrum News app for Super Tuesday updates and to get results as they come in.

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    Charles Duncan

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  • North Carolina’s 5 open congressional seats drawing candidates in droves

    North Carolina’s 5 open congressional seats drawing candidates in droves

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    RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — With five members of North Carolina’s U.S. House delegation declining to run this year, next week’s primaries have attracted dozens of Republican candidates seeking what could become extended time on Capitol Hill.

     

    What You Need To Know

    Dozens of Republicans are competing for five of North Carolina’s 14 congressional seats on Super Tuesday

    Democrats Jeff Jackson, Kathy Manning and Wiley Nickel decided against reelection, as did Republican Reps. Patrick McHenry and Dan Bishop

    Four of the Republican primaries for these seats have at least five candidates; a Raleigh-area district has 14, which also raises the possibility of multiple runoffs in May

     

    Some of the turnover can be attributed to redistricting — the Republican-controlled General Assembly last fall approved districts skewing rightward, prompting Democratic Reps. Jeff Jackson, Kathy Manning and Wiley Nickel to forgo reelection bids.

    Compared to a map drawn by state judges for 2022 elections that resulted in Democrats and Republicans winning seven congressional seats each, the latest map makes it likely the GOP will win at least 10 of the 14 seats, according to election data. These seat flips could benefit national Republicans trying to retain what is now a fragile House majority in 2025.

    Republican Reps. Patrick McHenry and Dan Bishop also declined to seek reelection, opening up vacancies in heavily GOP areas.

    With courts rejecting legal arguments that redistricting maps can be struck down for favoring a party’s candidates disproportionately, chances are improved that North Carolina’s current congressional lines will stay in place through the 2030 elections, one redistricting expert says.

    Given voting behavior and the shape of the districts, whoever wins can conceivably hold a seat “as long as they want,” said Michael Bitzer, a Catawba College political science professor. “This could be a very long career for whoever gets elected in this primary.”

    Four of the Republican primaries for seats where no incumbent is running have at least five candidates. That raises the possibility of May 14 runoffs between a race’s two top vote-getters should a leading candidate fail to receive more than 30% of the vote.

     

    2024 North Carolina Primary Elections

     

    The open seats have attracted candidates including current North Carolina House Speaker Tim Moore, former U.S. Rep. Mark Walker and the Rev. Mark Harris. Harris appeared to receive the most votes for a 2018 congressional election but never took office as a new election was ordered over an absentee ballot fraud probe.

    Fourteen Republicans are competing for Nickel’s seat in the 13th District, now shaped like a horseshoe arcing around most of Raleigh and stretching from Lee County — then east and north — to the Virginia border.

    Candidates include Kelly Daughtry, a Smithfield attorney, and Johnston County businessman DeVan Barbour, both of whom ran in the 2022 primary. Television ads have helped raise the profiles of Wake Forest businessman Fred Von Canon and former federal prosecutor Brad Knott of Raleigh. And Dr. Josh McConkey of Apex gained attention after winning a state lottery jackpot. The nominee will take on Democrat Frank Pierce in November.

    Republican former President Donald Trump so far has endorsed candidates for two of the five open seats, including Addison McDowell in the 6th District and Moore in the 14th District.

    McDowell, most recently a lobbyist for Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina, received Trump’s backing and those of legislative leaders in his first bid for public office. The reconfigured 6th District, whose seat is currently held by Manning, stretches from Greensboro and Winston-Salem south and west to Concord.

    McDowell’s rivals include Bo Hines, who received Trump’s endorsement when he won the 13th District GOP nomination in 2022, and Walker, who served in Congress in the Greensboro area for six years through 2020. Hines, who narrowly lost to Nickel in the 2022 general election, this time around again received the endorsement of the Club for Growth PAC. Christian Castelli is a retired Army officer and Green Beret who lost to Manning in the 2022 general election. He is also in the six-person field to become the GOP 6th District nominee, who will face no Democratic opposition in the fall.

    Moore is seeking the nomination for the 14th District, which includes portions of Charlotte and points west to the foothills. The Kings Mountain lawyer has served in the General Assembly since 2003 and was first elected speaker in 2015. With Jackson deciding against reelection and running for attorney general instead, Pam Genant and Brendan Maginnis are running for the Democratic nomination.

    In the south-central 8th District, with Bishop also deciding instead to run for attorney general, the six-candidate GOP field includes Harris and state Rep. John Bradford of Charlotte.

    Harris, a Baptist minister, finished first in the 2018 general election in a similarly situated congressional district. But the State Board of Elections ordered a new election after receiving allegations and evidence that a political operative who worked for Harris had run an illegal “ballot harvesting” operation. Several people ultimately entered plea convictions. Harris wasn’t charged. He called publicly for a new election in which he declined to run. Now, Harris says he was the victim of a “manufactured scandal.”

    The five-member GOP field seeking to succeed McHenry in the 10th District — anchored by Iredell County while stretching to Winston-Salem and Lincolnton — includes 2022 congressional candidate Pat Harrigan and state Rep. Grey Mills. The winner will take on Democrat Ralph Scott Jr. and a Libertarian Party candidate in the fall.

    Voting patterns and past election results show the reconfigured 1st District — covering all or parts of 22 eastern counties — as the likely lone toss-up race in November. The district is currently represented by first-term Democratic Rep. Don Davis, who beat Republican Sandy Smith in 2022 and is seeking reelection. Smith is competing with ex-Army colonel Laurie Buckhout for the GOP nomination. Smith received Trump’s endorsement in 2022.

    Other incumbents competing in the March 5 primaries are first-term Republican Rep. Chuck Edwards in the far-western 11th District; GOP Rep. Virginia Foxx in the northwestern 5th District; Richard Hudson in the Piedmont and Sandhills-area 9th District; and Democratic Rep. Deborah Ross in the Raleigh-dominated 2nd District.

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    Associated Press

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  • Republicans vie to replace outgoing Patrick McHenry

    Republicans vie to replace outgoing Patrick McHenry

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    Rep. Patrick McHenry’s departure from Congress next year will be significant for the North Carolina congressional delegation. He was arguably the most influential Representative from the state in Congress last year.

    McHenry briefly served as acting Speaker of the House when Kevin McCarthy was ousted and he serves as chair of the House Financial Services Committee.

    North Carolina has new congressional districts for the 2024 elections. (NCGA)

    McHenry has represented North Carolina’s 10th District for almost two decades but recently announced he would leave Congress after this term.

    The newly redistricted 10th District, drawn by state Republican lawmakers, is located north of Charlotte and includes Statesville and parts of Winston-Salem. It remains solidly Republican, which means whoever wins the March 5 primary will likely be the winner in November.

    Republicans Charles Eller, Brooke McGowan, Diana Jimison, Grey Mills and Pat Harrigan are running.

    Mills and Harrigan are getting the most attention.

    Harrigan is an Afghanistan war veteran who owns a gun manufacturing business. He lost to Democrat Jeff Jackson in the 14th district last election.

    “When you have a redistricting process every two years and you don’t get to hold the cards…we kind of have to go with where the political winds blow,” Harrigan told Spectrum News 1.

    Mills is an attorney in his fourth term in the North Carolina House of Representatives.

    “I’m upset, just like many people, with the lack of leadership coming out of the White House. And a lot of people in Congress are distracted. So, I’m running to take our values to Washington, D.C.,” Mills said in an interview.

    Both candidates said security at the U.S.-Mexico border is their top issue.

    But Harrigan and Mills said they would have voted against the bipartisan Senate border package that was endorsed by the conservative National Border Patrol Council but failed to get enough votes from Senate Republicans in February.

    “We can do a lot better than that…. on this issue, we need to stand united. We have got to address the problems. That bill didn’t go far enough,” said Mills.

    “That bipartisan legislation was an absolute slap in the face to the American people because it didn’t solve the problem of fixing the national security threat that exists at the southern border,” said Harrigan.

    The Mills campaign has accused Harrigan of being soft on immigration, pointing to stances he took in 2022 when he ran in a much more Democratic district.

    While not calling Mills out by name. Harrigan said voters are tired of attorneys turned politicians. 

    On Ukraine, Harrigan said the U.S border needs to be addressed before sending more funding to the war-torn country. Mills said he wants to see a clearer path to victory and didn’t specify to us whether he would support more funding.

    On the question of a federal abortion ban, Mills said he would want to see the legislation before committing, but said he would vote to “save lives.”

    In 2022, when Harrigan was running in the 14th District, he told us he did not support a federal ban on abortion. He now said, given the makeup of this different district. He would support one. But, he added, he supports certain exceptions.

    Both men are looking to replace McHenry, who was the only North Carolina Republican in 2021 to vote to certify Joe Biden’s election win.

    Harrigan said he also would have certified the results. Mills did not directly answer the question.

    McHenry has not endorsed a candidate in this primary race.

    Two people who have endorsed are NC House Speaker and 14th Congressional Republican candidate Tim Moore and Lt. Gov. and Republican gubernatorial candidate Mark Robinson.

    Moore endorsed Mills. Robinson endorsed Harrigan.

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    Reuben Jones

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