North Carolina – Democrats
Obama’s Head Fake
Barack Obama is supposed to be quite the pickup basketball player, and he’s putting quite the head fake on John McCain in North Carolina. It’s good strategy. Obama has the money and the grassroots organization to make the Republicans worry – at least for now – about how much time and money to spend here.…
Read MoreHow McCrory Can Win
Pat McCrory was always the Republicans’ best bet to win the Governor’s race in November. But how can he win in what may be a Democratic year? There is only one way: Use Obama’s strategy. Be the candidate of Change. Attack “a culture of corruption and mismanagement in Raleigh.” He doesn’t have to overstate things.…
Read MoreDrescher Vs. Easley, Round II
Raleigh hasn’t seen a good fight between an editor and a Governor in 20 years. John Drescher, Executive Editor of the N&O, has a good one going now with Governor Easley. Witness these zingers from Drescher’s Sunday column: “He’s a big-picture guy detached from his own government.” “It’s not that we don’t like Easley and…
Read MoreBy the Numbers
Here are some numbers worth pondering as you ponder this year’s elections in North Carolina. On May 6, 1.58 million people voted in the Democratic presidential primary. That’s more than the 1.52 million who voted for John Kerry and John Edwards here in November 2004. Thanks to this year’s registration surge, there are now 2.6…
Read MoreMcCrory and Perdue
Given that this should be a Democratic year and that Democrats have won the last four Governor’s races, it is surprising that early polls show the Governor’s race essentially tied. The polls may be underestimating the African-American vote. Early polls often show Democrats getting only 60-70 percent of that vote. But they always end up…
Read MorePresident Perdue?
The N&O pointed out that The New York Times may be a tad premature in touting Bev Perdue’s national prospects. But if Hillary Clinton does not become the first woman President – now or in four years or in eight years – there is a good chance a North Carolina woman will be. Here’s why:…
Read MoreGovernor Edwards?
John Edwards’ political timing throughout his career has been both astute and atrocious. Running in 1998 was brilliant. It was an off-year. Lauch Faircloth was a vulnerable incumbent and the perfect foil for a young, fresh opponent. The Clinton-impeachment mess in Washington was the perfect environment for a political outsider. After that, his timing was…
Read MoreWho Are Those Guys?
Ferrel Guillory, the director of the Program on Public Life at UNC, made a penetrating observation the other day. We were talking about Hillary Clinton’s focus on white working class voters – and the resultant media obsession on the same. Clinton argues, essentially, that Obama can’t win in November because he can’t get working-class whites.…
Read MoreTax Hike Mike
It’s tempting to dismiss Governor Easley’s proposed “sin tax” increases: Spoken like a man who’s not up for reelection. But give the Governor credit here. He pushed for higher taxes his first term, and he survived the predictable Republican challenge that resulted. Besides, he needs a good word. He had a tough spring, with the…
Read MoreShooting the Wounded
Bert Bennett, who was Governor Hunt’s political godfather, had a characteristically terse way of dismissing election post-mortems: “When you win, you did everything right. When you lose, you did everything wrong.” But there are always lessons to be learned after campaigns. Governor: Bev Perdue won for structural and strategic reasons. For more than 20 years,…
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