North Carolina | Politics.MyNC.com - Part 2

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After Top-Of-Ticket Sweep, Dems To Keep Building

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Democrats in North Carolina have long controlled state politics, holding power in Raleigh with leaders whose social values matched those of the conservative South. But they struggled at the same time to win federal races, often weighed down by presidential candidates too liberal for the state’s voters.

But this past year’s sweep across the top of the ticket marked a striking shift in the types of candidates able to compete in North Carolina – if the circumstances are right.

Just six years after the departure of arch conservative GOP Sen. Jesse Helms, North Carolina voters – hundreds of thousands casting ballots for the first time – embraced Barack Obama. It turns out one of the party’s most liberal candidates ever managed to do what more than three decades of Democratic presidential hopefuls couldn’t: win the Old North State.

And in 2009, the state’s progressive Democrats plan to keep hard at work building the political coalition that moved North Carolina out of the GOP’s solid South.

“It really is a new era,” said Pete MacDowell, a Chapel Hill activist who served as president of the Progressive Democrats of North Carolina in the 2008 election cycle. “Increasingly, a progressive candidate can win in North Carolina.”

That new political trajectory faces its first test in 2009, when Democrats select a new party chairman and begin the process of picking a candidate to challenge Republican Sen. Richard Burr the following year. State Treasurer Richard Moore, Attorney General Roy Cooper and Rep. Heath Shuler have all been mentioned as possible challengers, although they’re all keeping mum for now about a possible run.

“I don’t have any definite plans,” Moore said in a recent interview. “I’m not worried about my ability to make a living going forward, and I’ll deal with that when I’m not the treasurer anymore.”

Republicans, meanwhile, believe things can’t get any worse.

However, one of the party’s most reliable leaders, Charlotte Mayor Pat McCrory, has said he will not seek an eighth term leading the state’s largest city. His decision came a month after he narrowly lost the race for governor this year.

Ferrell Blount, an adviser to John McCain’s presidential campaign and a former chairman of the state Republican Party, said the nation’s financial collapse and Republican departure from the party’s core values doomed GOP candidates in 2008. Democrats also successfully tied the party’s candidates to the unpopular President George W. Bush, he said, something they won’t have the luxury of doing now that Democrats are fully in charge in Washington.

“This year was absolutely an anomaly,” Blount said. “I was somewhat amazed the election was as close as it was. We were swimming against a 10 or 12 knot current.” Blount argues voters galvanized only by Obama’s candidacy aren’t certain to become a reliable Democrats, and it’s something party activists are worried about.

Morgan Jackson, a Democratic consultant in Raleigh, points to Georgia. Democratic Jim Martin forced a runoff in his race for the U.S. Senate with a strong showing on Election Day, but GOP incumbent Sen. Saxby Chambliss won handily in the second round. It raised questions about the reliability of newly courted Democrats that backed Obama – most notably, the black voters who rushed to the polls in record numbers.

“The key will be to cement the people Obama has brought to the table as Democrats – not just Democrats in name but as in activists,” Jackson said. “It means keeping them engaged with the candidates, the platform and the ideals of the party,” he said. “That’s the key challenge of the next years, to harness all of this momentum and energy.”

Democrats trying to pull their party to the left weren’t thrilled with the candidacy of Sen.-elect Kay Hagan or Gov.-elect Bev Perdue; MacDowell, for example, considered both to be pro-business moderates. But he said their wins provide a transition toward a new political era – Hagan is a pro-abortion former state senator and Perdue as the state’s first female chief executive.

When both appear on the ballot next, they’ll have a voting record to defend. Hagan was often shy about her views during her Senate campaign, and she’ll be voting in Washington under the leadership of Democrats more liberal than she. Perdue served for eight years in the comfortable but generally uncontroversial job of lieutenant governor, and she has already acknowledged she’ll take some hits as she prepares a budget with large cuts amid a dour economy.

And new North Carolina Rep. Larry Kissell, who for two election cycles criticized former Republican Rep. Robin Hayes, will have to do more than just talk about change now that he’s in office. Jackson said much of the party’s future success will depend on how Obama governs.

“If Obama governs from the middle and if Obama governs as pragmatic and as deliberative as he campaigned, that’s a guy that could absolutely be in a position to come here and push Democratic candidates over the line,” Jackson said. “Obama is a guy who could come down here and be extremely popular – 2010 could buck the history and it could be a Democratic year again.”

The Count: Obama By 13,692

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The North Carolina result is not official until the State Board of Elections certifies in in a few weeks. But for now, Obama is ahead by 13,692 votes.

After Election, NC No Longer A Red State

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RALEIGH, N.C. – Don’t call North Carolina a red state anymore.

Whether this year’s election marked a permanent or temporary turning point toward the Democrats, the results indicate just how much North Carolina has changed in the six years since arch conservative Sen. Jesse Helms left office.

Helms’ seat is now in Democratic hands for the first time since 1973, and the party handily snatched it from one of the GOP’s most respected names, Elizabeth Dole, by putting forth a pro-abortion candidate that few had ever heard of, Kay Hagan.

That Barack Obama is on the brink of becoming the first Democrat to win here since 1976 underscores a daunting downfall for Republicans in a state that just one election ago backed President Bush by 12 percentage points – the same year that John Edwards, a North Carolinian, was on the Democratic ticket.

Exit poll numbers indicate that Obama’s aggressive push here, which helped sweep in Hagan and gubernatorial candidate Bev Perdue, may have established a brawny base that could be here for years to come.

Voters under the age of 30 comprised 17 percent of the electorate this year, higher than the 14 percent from four years ago. And they broke heavily to Obama, with more than seven in 10 choosing the Democrat. Hagan and Perdue rode those coattails, backed by more than six in 10 of younger voters.

By comparison, Democratic hopeful John Kerry won just over half of the support of voters under 30 in North Carolina four years ago. And Democrat Al Gore won less than half of that demographic in 2000.

Paul Shumaker, a Republican political consultant who works with Sen. Richard Burr, said the party needs to become competitive in growing urban areas by talking about kitchen-table issues instead of ideology.

He said Charlotte Mayor Pat McCrory was the ideal candidate for the state – a pro-business moderate – but that he failed to win because of an unreliable donor base. The Democrats have a more steady stream of donations that have long helped keep them in office, and Perdue far outpaced him in such fundraising.

“We cannot approach these campaigns with a 1980s mentality and a 1980s budget,” said Shumaker, arguing that the GOP needs to reorganize in the state to bring forward a common message that has broad appeal.

But Shumaker disputed the idea that this year’s election marked an ideological shift. He said the race was a matter of issues that matter to voters. With the right candidates and the right message at the right time, the Republicans will make a comeback, he said.

“Politics is fluid,” Shumaker said. “It swings to the left; it swings to the right. It can’t swing any further to the left.”

It’s no coincidence that North Carolina’s sharp trajectory away from the era of Helms came during its rapid growth spurt. North Carolina has added more than 1 million residents since the beginning of the decade, with the most recent years showing growth of 200,000 new people annually.

Much of that growth has come in the state’s more liberal communities along the Interstate-85 corridor. Tryon Street in Charlotte – home to the Bank of America Corp. and the remnants of Wachovia Corp. – feels more like Wall Street. The Research Triangle Park serves as the source for thousands of high-tech jobs. Both regions have young work forces drawn in part from the nationally ranked colleges and universities in North Carolina.

And those areas broke heavily to Obama. Durham County went to him by a remarkable 52 points. He won Orange County by 43 points, Mecklenburg County by 25 points, Guilford County by 18 points and Wake County by 15 points.

In other words, for political purposes, North Carolina’s urban areas looked more like a northern state the a southern one. Obama did well with voters on both ends of the education spectrum, winning big among those who didn’t finish high school and having a slight advantage with voters who’ve done at least some postgraduate study. Voters in between – high school grads and people who went to college, but not graduate school – leaned toward McCain.

Hagan and Perdue had similar advantages in their respective races at both ends of the educational spectrum. They ran roughly even with their Republican opponents among voters in-between. Jack Hawke, McCrory’s chief political strategist, attributed the Democrats’ victories at the top of the ticket to the Obama campaign strategy in North Carolina.

“You had one of the best organizational ground-game type efforts that has ever been seen in the state. … It’s amazing,” Hawke said. “The Obama ground game was delivering party voters.

They were not delivering split-ticket voters. So that helped the entire Democratic ticket.”

Hunter Bacot, the poll director at Elon University, said the GOP in North Carolina will have to evolve quickly to keep the state competitive by winning new residents into their fold. After all, those retirees from the north that are coming to North Carolina also tend to be wealthy and somewhat conservative.

“The Republicans are going to have to transition to this new Republican – more of a pro-business Republican – which in North Carolina is very similar to the Democrats,” Bacot said. “So what you might actually see is a fusion where they come close together rather than farer apart.”

Bacot said one example of the Republican needed for the future would be someone like Burr.

Problem is, the GOP landed with such a candidate for governor. McCrory still lost, and didn’t even win his home county of Mecklenburg – the state’s largest.

Likewise, Tuesday’s election served as a warning to Republican candidates for president who can no longer assume that North Carolina’s in their column.

“They can’t be complacent with North Carolina anymore,” Bacot said. “They’re going to have to come in to work. How intense that will be remains to be seen.”

PPP: Why Obama Could Win NC

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-41. That’s his lead among people who didn’t vote in 2004 (65-24) They’re providing his current small lead in the state, as McCain is up 49-48 with those who did vote in the last election.

Palin Speech To Launch Wild Week Of N.C. Campaigning

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Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin’s speech in Asheville on Sunday night will kick off a wild week of campaigning across North Carolina that will put all four major candidates on the trail in the state.
     
Read the full story

Poll: Obama’s NC Lead Increases

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Barack Obama is out to his largest lead yet in a PPP survey of North Carolina, and his remarkably strong standing with white voters in the state is the main reason.

Report: Voter Purges In 6 States May Violate Law

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NEW YORK – Tens of thousands of eligible voters have been removed from rolls or blocked from registering in at least six swing states, and the voters’ exclusion appears to violate federal law, according to a published report.

The New York Times based its findings on reviews of state records and Social Security data.

The Times said voters appear to have been purged by mistake and not because of any intentional violations by election officials or coordinated efforts by any party.

States have been trying to follow the Help America Vote Act of 2002 by removing the names of voters who should no longer be listed. But for every voter added to the rolls in the past two months in some states, election officials have removed two, a review of the records shows.

The newspaper said it identified apparent problems in Colorado, Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, Nevada and North Carolina. It says some states are improperly using Social Security data to verify new voters’ registration applications, and others may have broken rules that govern removing voters from the rolls within 90 days of a federal election.

Democrats have been more aggressive at registering new voters this year, according to state election officials, so any closer screening of new applications may affect their party’s supporters disproportionately, the Times said.

The result is that on Election Day, voters who have been removed from the rolls could show up and be challenged by political party officials or election workers.

The six states seem to have violated federal law in two ways. Some are removing voters from the rolls within 90 days of a federal election, which is not allowed except when voters die, notify the authorities that they have moved out of state, or have been declared unfit to vote.

And some of the states are improperly using Social Security data to verify registration applications for new voters, the newspaper reported.

“Just as voting machines were the major issue that came out of the 2000 presidential election and provisional ballots were the big issue from 2004, voter registration and these statewide lists will be the top concern this year,” said Daniel P. Tokaji, a law professor at Ohio State University.

Tickets Still Available For Palin’s NC Visit

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Tickets are available for Gov. Sarah Palin’s first visit to North Carolina tomorrow.

Palin will hold a rally in Greenville Tuesday. Doors Open at 4 p.m. The event takes place at Williams Arena at Minges Coliseum, East Carolina University, 1 Ficklen Drive in Greenville.

After the rally concludes, attedees are invited to join fellow McCain-Palin supporters to watch the second Presidential Debate.

Tickets for the event are available for pickup at all North Carolina Victory Offices. Tickets are free of charge and will be distributed on a first come, first serve basis.

For additional information, call 919-828-6423 or email email@ncgop.org

Ticket Distribution Offices:

Asheville Victory Office
16 Regent Park Blvd, Suite I
Asheville, NC 28806
(919) 866-2130

Boone Victory Office
149 Meadowview Drive
Boone, NC 28607
(573) 647-1616

Charlotte Victory Office
1515 Mockingbird Lane, Suite 218
Charlotte, NC 28209
(704) 910-0696

Cornelius Victory Office
8301-17 Magnolia State Drive
Cornelius, NC 28031
(704) 987-4301

Durham Victory Office
4600 Durham Chapel Hill Blvd
Durham, NC 27707
(919) 539-5928

Fayetteville Victory Office
201 S. McPherson Church Road, Suite 204
Fayetteville, NC 28303
(910) 864-6584

Gastonia Victory Office
224 South New Hope Road
Gastonia, NC 28055
(704) 868-3330

Goldsboro Victory Office
147 South Center Street
Goldsboro, NC 27530
(573) 647-9016

Greensboro / High Point Victory Office
3800 Tinsley Road, Suite 103
High Point, NC 27265
(336) 885-0467

Greenville Victory Office
103B Commerce Street
Greenville, NC 27858
(252) 321-1996

Hickory Victory Office
1899 Tate Blvd. SE, Suite 1105
Hickory, NC 28602
(828) 324-1639

Jacksonville Victory Office
487 Western Blvd
Jacksonville, NC 28540
(910) 347-7442

Laurinburg Victory Office
684 Highway 401 North
Laurinburg, NC 28532
(919) 862-6079

Raleigh Victory Office
1506 Hillsborough Street
Raleigh, NC 27605
(919) 828-6423

Rocky Mount Victory Office
1826 Sunset Avenue
Rocky Mount, NC 27804
(919) 862-6183

Salisbury Victory Office
100 West Innes Street
Salisbury, NC 28144
(919) 827-5949

Wilmington Victory Office
3145 Wrightsville Avenue
Wilmington, NC 28403
(910) 251-8493

Winston-Salem Victory Office
2110 Cloverdale Ave, Suite D
Winston Salem, NC 27013
(336) 724-6000

 

 

 

 

 

Obama Returns To NC Sunday

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ASHEVILLE, N.C. – Senator Barack Obama returns to North Carolina Sunday with a rally at Asheville High School.  

It’s the candidate’s third visit to North Carolina in two weeks. He and vice presidential nominee Senator Joe Biden were in Greensboro on Saturday, and Obama was in Charlotte Sept. 21. 

Sunday’s event is free and open to the public and tickets are not required, but an RSVP is strongly encouraged. 

Asheville High School is located at 419 McDowell St. Gates open at noon and the program begins at 2 p.m.

The public may enter at the stadium’s SW Gate located off the A-B Tech Azalea parking lot.

For more information, call 828-254-2379. To RSVP, visit www.barackobama.com.

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