Genuinely honest question. They were completely red for the presidential election, but elected a Democratic governor again. How is this possible?
Because the Democrat ran against a guy who called himself a black Nazi and said he wished slavery was legal so he could own slaves. And said so on porn sites. And that was the printable stuff. A lot of it involved weird sexual shit and fantasies about his wife’s sister.
The real question is how he still got 40% of the vote.
The real question is how he still got 40% of the vote.
I truly believe the only reason he didn’t get elected is that he did all that weird shit while being a Black man.
echoes of Roy Moore
Roy moore was taking teenagers on “dates” as an 30yo district attorney…
Black dude made tasteless shit posts…
Josh Stein (the winning Democrat) has been a popular vote for years now in other local races. It wasn’t a given win, but he had a lot of backing historically. Robinson hasn’t been popular as Lieutenant Governor, and his latest stuff didn’t help. But the case another brought up is how he still got 40%. And that’s after Trump cut ties. The rural area amazes me sometimes.
As I said to my Mom earlier today: White nazis? That’s no problem for them. Black nazis? That’s where they draw the line.
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It wasn’t just Governor though, also Lt Gov flipped blue, AG stayed blue, and we flipped enough state seats to blue to break a super majority even with the gerrymandering, and state level Superintendent for Education went blue…
Because Harris ran a pretty shitty campaign - unfortunately Harris ended up underperforming a lot of democratic candidates downballot. In Florida she even managed to underperform the abortion ammendment by 15%.
Both Florida amendments were designed to fail. This is the same state where when I was there had an amendment for high speed rail, that passed! And then the government decided it would cost too much, so F the people’s choices.
If the governor has done well by them, why get rid of them?
If the last for years were worse than the four years prior, why would you vote for the last four years again?
Our current governor, Roy Cooper, is term limited and he couldn’t run again. So the current state AG Josh Stein ran (and won)
His opponent (our current Lt Gov) was a man who is um …interesting. And made national news for um …interesting things he posted on a porn site. Among other things.
I can’t remember where I heard it, maybe NPR politics podcast, but essentially, the election was more so a referendum on Biden’s (and Harris) perceived poor performance in office, particularly around immigration and inflation.
That’s an analysis that makes sense in my mind. My family is clearly in the middle class nowadays and we’ve struggled to keep up financially. Growing up poor, I remember how impossible the situation can be when times are tough.
So in that retrospective, it wasn’t necessarily that the public preferred MAGA policies, they just either like DT or liked him more than the current administration.
Also keep in mind that the vote margins were pretty thin in most swing states - within 1%.
So how does that translate to NC? Well, rebuke of Harris for one, but this is what no full endorsement of MAGA looks like. So we’re seeing that DT is a force all on his own, he’s like an FDR or TR or a Raegan, people just gravitate to him more that your typical politician.
Dems won downballot as well - Buckhout aligned herself with DT and lost. Same thing with Michelle Murrow.
Elaine Marshall, Rachel Hunt and Jeff Jackson won theirs. But further down Republicans, particularly incumbents, performed well.
Yes part of it was Robinson being a closet Nazi, but with DT at top of ticket attrition shouldn’t have been a concern with downballot races.
NC is one of those rare places that has long been purple. It likes to vote Republican for federal but moderate Dem for state. In a world where many other states have gone to “all politics are national”, NC is a holdout in that regard. Dems know how to win here (when not gerrymandered all to hell).
I attribute it to a) a well educated citizenry b) diversity c) dems sticking to their moderate constituency d) the right passing some unpopular laws this year
Ė lȯt v pıpėl rılı d’n want t ekſept ðæt buıpaṙtizæncip dėz’n egzizt f big icyuz.
spoiler
A lot of people really don’t want to accept that bipartisanship doesn’t exist for big issues.
This happened in another state and this news station did a video on it which was kind of interesting https://youtu.be/mgh3xL5SieI