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marions ghost

(19,841 posts)
Tue Jul 2, 2013, 10:49 PM Jul 2013

How North Carolina Became the Wisconsin of 2013

Article in The Atlantic, July 1, 2013.

http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2013/07/how-north-carolina-became-the-wisconsin-of-2013/277007/

Nowhere is the battle between liberal and conservative visions of government fiercer than North Carolina. From the environment to guns, abortion to campaign finance, religion to taxes, Raleigh has become a battleground that resembles Madison, Wisconsin, in 2011.

Just as Wisconsinites seemed shocked that their state could become so polarized, North Carolina seems like an unlikely candidate for such fierce political clashes. North Carolinians like to boast that their state is "a vale of humility between two mountains of conceit." Until recently, it was certainly an oasis of political calm between Virginia -- a fast-changing purple state fighting battles over transvaginal ultrasounds -- and South Carolina, home of outspoken conservatives like Jim DeMint and Joe Wilson. The Tar Heel State was more moderate. For most of the last century, Democrats controlled the governorship, and they also tended to control the state legislature. Meanwhile, the state voted for a Republican in every presidential election from 1980 to 2004. In 2008, a major push by Barack Obama won him the state by a tiny margin, and it seemed that North Carolina, like Virginia, might be an emerging purple or even bluish state.

Then in the 2010 election, Republicans took control of both chambers of the General Assembly for the first time since 1870. Two years later, Republican Pat McCrory won the governorship (incumbent Governor Bev Perdue, a Democrat, opted not to run in the face of almost certain defeat). Obama, meanwhile, failed to hold the state in the 2012 presidential race, even after Democrats staged their nominating convention in Charlotte.

That's where our story begins: when the Republicans took over Raleigh. McCrory seems like an unexpected man to oversee a dramatic rightward shift. He was the more centrist GOP contender for the gubernatorial nomination in 2008 (he lost to Perdue, barely) and had spent 14 years as mayor of Charlotte, earning a reputation as a moderate. But the combination of Republican control of both the governorship and the legislature has emboldened the GOP to take up a slew of conservative priorities. Central to the push is Art Pope, a wealthy businessman and political benefactor who is sometimes described as North Carolina's answer to the Koch brothers, and whom McCrory appointed as state budget director. Pope and his associates spent $2.2 million in state races in the 2010 cycle alone, Jane Mayer reported in 2011.
(more at link)

Article goes on to detail the multiple issues in North Carolina.

4 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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How North Carolina Became the Wisconsin of 2013 (Original Post) marions ghost Jul 2013 OP
My state is so screwed! CRK7376 Jul 2013 #1
These are just dominos along the train Doctor_J Jul 2013 #2
Message auto-removed Name removed Jul 2013 #3
That's awfully optimistic marions ghost Jul 2013 #4

CRK7376

(2,203 posts)
1. My state is so screwed!
Sat Jul 6, 2013, 08:15 AM
Jul 2013

Public educations, assistance, aboration, voter id. Idiots rule in Raleigh and those of us outside the Liberalish Triangle are totally out of luck. And I have a crazy Representative in Virginia Foxx (R), horrible wacky Repub....Sadly, It's painful to be a North Carolinian now...

 

Doctor_J

(36,392 posts)
2. These are just dominos along the train
Sat Jul 6, 2013, 09:09 AM
Jul 2013

Coming soon to a state near you. Unless we do something to stop it. I keep thinking the time is coming, but there is no resistance to speak of. Our forefathers from 1760 and 1860 would be appalled.

Response to marions ghost (Original post)

marions ghost

(19,841 posts)
4. That's awfully optimistic
Sat Jul 6, 2013, 01:23 PM
Jul 2013

because of the gerrymandering. And the damage done by ALEC and Art Pope. Not buying it unless the people really do wake up and see what a disaster the current government is.

NC has a lot of unchecked corruption. It's really a battleground between the majority who have some degree of integrity, and the immoral & greedy few.

Hillary winning wouldn't mean much for NC unless some congress critters could ride the coat-tails.
That being said, I'd rather see a more liberal Dem presidential candidate than Hillary, no matter what happens to NC in 2016.

In NC, it's up to the people to reject what is going on. How long that takes is anybody's guess.

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