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Dianne Little Standing Up As The True Education Candidate

9/6/2018

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[The following was written by J.W. Williamson at 9/03/2018 08:12:00 AM  for Watauga Watch blog ]

​Dianne Little in NC House District 94

Few other things a candidate does will get my attention like direct voter contact ... doors knocked, phone calls made, hands shaken.

That's why I sat up when I saw the numbers of direct voter contact for Democrat Dianne Little, running next door in House District 94 (Alexander and part of Wilkes counties). Only one other candidate for the General Assembly has higher numbers, and none of this year's Democratic stars in Wake, Mecklenburg, and Guilford have come close to hustling like Dianne Little is hustling.

We like her campaign theme: "Brave Enough to Say ENOUGH!" That's aimed at the corruption and misrule flowing out of Raleigh. Here's how her platform pokes at the current Republican super majority in the NC House and Senate:

✤ They have funneled money designated for public schools – our tax dollars – into private schools; and they have allowed charter schools to increase in number while public schools have lost enrollment. 

✤ They have allowed teacher salaries to plummet to as low as 47th in the nation, taken away the due process that employees need for fair treatment, and robbed educators of professional development funding and master’s degree stipends. 

✤ Those same leaders have denied equal access to quality healthcare for all North Carolina residents and have failed to provide access to health insurance. 

✤ They watched our environment be polluted while refusing to hold the polluters accountable for the clean-up cost, and instead, passed that cost on to taxpayers. 

✤ They have placed a larger tax burden on the shoulders of the average citizen and given huge tax breaks to larger corporations.


She's a veteran educator with over 40 years active experience in teaching, so naturally she's got education at the top of her issues. She taught at Alexander Central High School for 23 years, served as assistant principal and principal at Newton-Conover High School, and now is the director of the Phillips Leadership Institute at Catawba Valley Community College in Hickory.

More importantly, she's obviously got a corps of volunteers working for her, which means more than a large bank account.

Who's she running against? This dude, Jeffrey Elmore, first elected to the NC House in 2012. We remember him mainly from the Republican primary he ran against Dan Soucek in 2010 for the NC Senate Dist. 45, which Soucek ultimately won.

While Little decries the backhand that public education has suffered during Elmore's term in office, Elmore can manage only a shrug: In 2014, he said "issues with abolishing teacher tenure would have to sort themselves out." Now, there's a leader!

He's hardcore on every issue where moderation might expose some humanity.

He doesn't appear to be taking Dianne Little seriously. If his Facebook page is any indication -- he hasn't posted anything since May, which was a new profile photo -- he appears to expect to coast back into office, and his website still says he represents Allegheny County, which was under a previous map.

Smugness in an incumbent in a year like 2018 might be a stumbling block.

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Join Us for A Politic Picnic on September 29th!

9/3/2018

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Download a Flyer To Share (PDF)
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Local early voting sites cut to two

8/6/2018

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Reprinted from Wilkes Journal Patriot - story by Jule Hubbard - Aug 3rd, 2018
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The Wilkes County Board of Elections has decided to provide two satellite one-stop, early voting sites in the county this fall after opting for four satellite sites for the general elections in 2016 and 2014 and three in 2010.

The four-member board on Tuesday morning approved a one-stop, early voting plan with satellite sites at the Pleasant Hill and Millers Creek fire stations for this year’s non-presidential general election. The plan now goes to the N.C. Board of Elections for approval.

The Millers Creek Fire Station by far has had the largest one-stop, early voting turnout in the past, while the Pleasant Hill and Mulberry-Fairplains fire stations have ranked second with similar turnouts. Wilkes Board of Elections Director Kim Caudill said the Millers Creek and Pleasant Hill fire stations were also chosen because Millers Creek is in the western end of Wilkes and Pleasant Hill is in the eastern end.
The Mountain View Ruritan Club building was also a satellite site in 2016 and 2014.

The two satellite sites are in addition to a required site at a central location, which for Wilkes is the county commissioners’ meeting room on the first floor of the Wilkes County Office Building in Wilkesboro.

Voter turnout in 2014 (the last non-presidential general election) included Millers Creek Fire Station, 745; Mulberry-Fairplains Fire Station, 377; Pleasant Hill Fire Station, 334; and Mountain View Ruritan Club building, 198. The total at the Wilkes County Office Building in 2014 was 3,582.

Under a state law enacted earlier this year, each county must provide one-stop, early voting at a central location for 13 weekdays from Oct. 17 through Nov. 2, plus Saturday, Nov. 3. Weekdays hours at this one mandatory site per county must be either 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. or 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.

The Wilkes Board of Elections opted to have weekday hours in the county commissioners’ meeting room on the first floor of the Wilkes County Office Building be 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Oct. 17 to Nov. 2.

Counties have the option of providing as many one-stop, early voting satellite sites as they wish—or none. If they do provide satellite sites, they must open all 13 weekdays (Oct. 17 through Nov. 2), with weekday hours from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.

The law requires being open at least from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 3, with an option to extend hours until 5 p.m. Hours for the four Wilkes sites on Nov. 3 will be 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Having to be open all 13 weekdays and from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. greatly increased the cost of satellite sites for counties that opt to provide them. In the last three general elections, Wilkes County’s three or four satellite sites were only open four or five days and had considerably shorter hours each day.

Wilkes Board of Elections Chairman Tim Joines asked Caudill about her level of comfort with the plan approved at the meeting.

“I feel pretty good about it. I believe we can handle it, particularly since it isn’t a presidential year,” she responded.

Board member Garland Hill asked Caudill if she believed enough backup workers had been secured for one-stop, early voting and Caudill answered affirmatively. Hill then made a motion to approve the plan and his motion was unanimously approved.

Caudill said the board considered the increased cost of satellite sites and past voter turnout in deciding how many satellite sites to provide. She said it had been hard for Wilkes Board of Election staff to find enough people to man satellite sites due to the additional days and longer hours.

Caudill said the county’s costs for one-stop, early voting costs this year would include a little over $6,000 per satellite site, compared to about $1,300 per satellite site last year due to the additional and longer days. She said the Wilkes Board of Elections should still have enough money in its budget to cover this.

She said 15-16 people have been signed up to work at satellite sites this year, which she said is enough for three to four people per site at any given time under the approved plan.

Fulltime Wilkes Board of Elections staff and regular poll workers would man the site in the county commissioners’ meeting room, with two to three workers there most of the time and more in busier periods, Caudill added.

The plan calls for poll workers secured for the satellite site in Millers Creek to work in two shifts, with one group working on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturday and another group working on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays.

At the satellite site in Pleasant Hill, the plan calls for some people to work only half days and others to work full days.

Caudill said there may be “floaters” available to work on an as-needed basis at both sites.
Wilkes Board of Elections member Lynn Day asked Caudill if the same one-stop, early voting plan would be used for the presidential election in 2020.

Caudill said that depended on whether the legislature made more changes in state election laws. “It’s always subject to change,” she added.

Some critics of the new law requiring that all satellite sites be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. all 13 weekdays Oct. 17 to Nov. 2 if a county opted to provide satellite sites have said this was done to reduce voter turnout.
Legislators who supported the new law said the goal was ensuring uniformity to avoid confusion they said has occurred when satellite sites within a single county had differing hours. Satellite sites in Wilkes have all had the same hours in the past.

In addition to the one-stop, early voting dates in the plan approved Tuesday, key voter dates for this year’s election include:
  • Sept. 7, first day voters can be mailed an absentee ballot. These are available from the Wilkes Board of Elections;
  • Oct. 12, voter registration forms for voting on Nov. 6 (election day) due by 5 p.m. at Wilkes Board of Elections;
  • Oct. 30, last day to request an absentee ballot by mail;
  • Nov. 5, last day for a military/overseas absentee ballot request;
  • Nov. 6, Election Day;
  • Nov. 9, last day to turn in absentee ballots by mail (must be postmarked by Election Day);
  • Nov. 15, last day to receive military/overseas absentee ballots (mailed).
Caudill said new vote tabulators, which the county commissioners agreed to fund in the 2018-19 budget, won’t be purchased in time for voting this October and November.
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CoOPER on UNC-Tv's "FIRST IN FUTURE"

7/9/2018

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3rd Vice Chair of the Wilkes Democratic Party, Michael Cooper, went on UNC-TV's "First In Future" to speak on small town politics and how to keep young people engaged in the towns in which they grew up. ​
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Brandon whitaker for board of education

4/30/2018

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​The Board of Education Vote on May 8th Is the Final Vote for 2 seats on the board. Brandon Whitaker is running for Board of Education. The May 8th election is the ONLY election for Wilkes Board of Education. If you have kids, grandkids, or know any kids at all in the Wilkes County schools, we urge you to vote "1 and done" for Brandon Whitaker, the ONLY democrat running in this non-partisan race.  

Whitaker attended C.B. Eller Elementary, graduated from East Wilkes High and attended Wilkes Community College before enrolling at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in civil engineering.
Whitaker, son of Paula Norman and the late Wade Whitaker of Elkin, has lived in Wilkes County most of his life. He and his wife, Kimberly Whitaker, have two children, Brittany, a fifth-grader at C.B. Eller Elementary, and Chandler, a senior at East Wilkes High School.

“I am running because we have two children in the Wilkes County Schools. We have experienced what it is like to have a struggling student and a successful student. Fortunately, we were blessed with some outstanding teachers and administrators during the struggles,” said Whitaker.​

“My training and work experience make me uniquely qualified for this position. Engineers are expert problem solvers. It’s what we do for a living. As a career state employee, I know how government works and sometimes doesn’t. I am responsible for managing multiple multimillion-dollar projects every day and have been for most of the last 23 years. I know how important it is to be good stewards of our limited tax dollars. I must make decisions every day to make sure we use those dollars in the most efficient and effective way possible. I think my skills as a problem solver and a steward of our tax dollars are exactly what the board needs,” he said.​


"I think by now we know the recurring theme from all my posts; the need for more, more security, more school nurses, more school psychologists, more teacher assistants, more school resource officers, more parental involvement, more vocational training, more teacher pay, more of lots of things.

The question is how do we do that. The answer is not simple. The Board does not control how much money is allocated by the county, state, or federal government. They do act as advocates and ask other government officials for the funding required to meet those needs.

So, why are we not meeting all those needs? I think the most obvious cause is the failure of other elected officials to recognize those needs and fund them. It just isn’t the priority it should be. We all should be advocates and call our elected officials to tell them we need more. If they continue to fail to meet those needs, we need to find other candidates that will. We all need to be involved and be more vocal 
with our concerns.

Our democracy is supposed to be by the people and for the people. It really doesn’t seem to be that way much anymore. I think sometimes we forget that we all have a duty to be involved, after 
all, we are the people. That is one of the reasons I am running for this office. We should no longer be silent and just accept that this is the way things are. We ARE the people."  
                                                                                                                                     ~ Brandon Whitaker
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REGISTERING, EARLY VOTING, AND WHY THE PRIMARY MATTERS

4/10/2018

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REGISTERING TO VOTE:
Friday, Apr. 13th is the deadline for all Voter Registration forms must be turned in to the Board of Elections by 5pm OR postmarked with that date to allow you to be able to vote in primary or change party affiliation if you wish to vote on the May 8th Election Day.


Voter registration applicants who have met the voter registration deadline should expect to receive their voter card within 1 to 2 weeks. Applicants should contact their county board of elections if they do not receive their voter card within two weeks.

WHAT TO TAKE WITH YOU TO REGISTER: 
First-time voters, who at the time of their initial voter registration did not provide their North Carolina driver license number or the last four digits of their Social Security number, or who provided a number that could not be validated, are required to show identification when they vote.

This identification does not have to be a photo ID. The requirement for first-time voters to show identification is a requirement of the Help America Vote Act (HAVA) of 2002, a federal law not unique to North Carolina. Acceptable forms of HAVA ID include:
  • A current and valid photo identification; or
  • A copy of one of the following documents that show the name and address of the voter: a current utility bill, bank statement, government check, paycheck, or other government document.
  • First-time voters who are required to show HAVA ID will have been notified of this requirement by their county board of elections
The requirement to show a photo ID for voting and other associated laws has been struck down by a Federal court. Photo ID is not required to vote if you've already registered and voted prior. If any election official asks for a Photo ID and you've voted previously call the state board of elections immediately at (866) 522-4723 while at the polls. 

ONE-STOP: REGISTERING AND VOTING ALL AT THE SAME TIME
OR, if you miss that deadline you can then wait until "One-Stop" voting period when you can register and vote early in-person all at the same time at County Commissioners room on the bottom floor of the county office bldg in Wilkesboro. Those dates are shown here:

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EARLY VOTING:
If you're already registered, you can vote early during the above one-stop voting times as well. It is called "One-Stop" because if does offer the option to register and vote all at the same time if necessary. This year, we have more Democrats on the Board of Elections, and a Democrat Chairman,...so we were able to have more Saturday dates for one-stop early voting AND extended hours in the final days closer to the election. This is hugely convenient to those of us who work. 

ABSENTEE VOTING:
If you can't make it to the polls or early voting site, an absentee ballot that you mail in is an option as well. But ANYONE can request and get an absentee ballot for any reason. 
Absentee voting is available before every election in the form of mail out ballots. You must fill out the NC Absentee Ballot request form to have a ballot mailed to you. The request form can be found HERE. 

The last day to request an absentee ballot for the May 8th election is Tuesday, May 1st. The deadline for the Boad of Election to receive your absentee ballot back (MUST be postmarked by election day) is Friday, May 11th at 5:00 pm. 
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WANT TO CHECK VOTER REGISTRATION:
Don't know if you're registered? Unsure if the correct address is on your voter registration? Confused as to your precinct? Need to know which NC House district you're in? All of that can be easily found at the NC State Board of Elections Voter Look Up Tool. It really is a convenient tool, and you can look up other folks too, since it's all public record. So you can check up on the status of your family and friends to make sure they're registered. 

WHAT IS ON THE MAY 8th BALLOT?

It's the FINAL ELECTION for Wilkes Board of Election. Vote Brandon Whitaker as he is the only Democrat on the ballot. And you need to vote only for 1, even though you ma vote for two. But with so many Republicans against him, he doesn't have a chance if you share that second vote with any other candidate.

Also on the ballot is the primary for the Democrats vying for Virginia Foxx's seat in November, either DD Adams or Jenny Marshall. Both are strong candidates that know the way to Wilkes County and have made themselves available for forums, meetings, and visits.

All the sample ballots for Wilkes are posted here: https://wilkescounty.net/563/Sample-Ballots
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Got a question that we didn't answer here? Just drop us an email: [email protected] and we will find that answer. Or, call the Wilkes Board of Elections at (336) 651-7339 Monday through Friday 8:30am - 5pm. 
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Wilkes Democratic County Convention This Saturday, March 24th

3/21/2018

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Each year, every Democratic Party in every county all across North Carolina gathers together for an annual convention. At our precinct meetings in February and march, attendees elected delegates to represent each precinct at this annual gathering.
Conventions are grassroots democracy in action and represent a powerful force in the Democratic party. At this year’s convention, we’ll elect delegates to the District and State, and approve resolutions written at precinct meetings this past year.  Conventions are fun, energetic environments where you can meet folks from all across the county who share your passions and Democratic values.
Our convention is open to the public but only delegates elected at precinct meetings in February will be eligible to cast votes. All Democrats are encouraged to attend. We will have coffee and doughnuts for those that arrive at 9pm. 

Click f for a proposed Agenda for the Wilkes County Convention. 

Since that is on the same day as March for Our Lives, we will have folks carpooling up to Boone after the convention for the 2pm protest up there. So come dressed for that!



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Guns Over People

3/9/2018

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Open Letter Representative Virginia Foxx, Senator Richard Burr and Senator Thom Tillis:


With mass shootings continuing to be a rampant problem in our country, a majority of Americans are demanding that our elected officials take sensible, effective action to keep guns out of the wrong hands and prevent more heinous acts of violence against our children and all citizens. 66% of Americans want stricter gun control laws, and 67% support a ban on assault weapons, according to a recent Quinnipiac University poll.

So, Representative Foxx, Senators Burr and Tillis, how have you protected us?  Voting records show that you, Virginia Foxx and Richard Burr, supported The Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act in 2005, a measure to protect firearm manufacturers from being sued for crimes committed with the firearms they manufactured. You also supported Concealed Carry Reciprocity bills in 2011, 2013 and 2017 that would have allowed a person with a concealed-carry permit in one state to legally carry a concealed firearm in other states.

You, Senators Burr and Tillis, voted against the Manchin-Toomey Bill in 2015, which would have required background checks for the purchase of guns at gun shows and online. You also voted against the Murphy Amendment in 2016, which would have expanded background checks to cover guns sold online and at gun shows. You also voted against the Feinstein Amendment in 2016 which would have barred people on terrorist watch lists from buying firearms. In 2017, all of you, Foxx, Burr and Tillis, voted to undo the Mental Health bill in 2017, a regulation that added certain people with mental illnesses to the FBI's background check database.

Senators Burr and Tillis, you share the dubious honor of being among the top five senators receiving contributions from the National Rifle Association (NRA), with Burr ranking 2nd receiving $6.99 million and Tillis ranking 4th receiving $4.42 million. Virginia Foxx is also proudly endorsed by the NRA, of which she is a member.  Because of the continued lobbying by the NRA, our members of Congress have failed to take meaningful action to curb gun violence, and have consistently voted “Guns Over People”. Enough is Enough. Now Americans are demanding that you step up to the task of protecting our citizens. There are several issues before the House and Senate now which must be addressed with the safety of our citizens as a priority concern.

Congress should oppose S.446, the Constitutional Concealed Carry Reciprocity Act, under which residents of states that do not require concealed carry permits could travel to any other state and carry their concealed weapon without a permit. Law enforcement organizations, including the Law Enforcement Coalition for Common Sense, have opposed concealed carry reciprocity, noting that it would make it difficult or impossible for police to confirm if a person with a concealed weapon is carrying the weapon legally. Thirty-nine states require gun safety training for any concealed carry permit applicant, but under this act, this safety measure would be invalidated, and “permitless concealed carry” would be legal in every state.

Congress should support S.1539, the Protecting Domestic Violence and Stalking Victims Act, to close dangerous loopholes in gun laws that allow perpetrators of domestic abuse easy access to deadly firearms.

Congress should support S. 1923, Background Check Completion Act, and other legislation which close legal loopholes that allow people to buy guns without background checks from private sellers, websites, or gun shows, institute universal background checks for both gun and ammo purchasers and require gun licenses.

Congress should support H.R.3999 and S.1916, the Automatic Gunfire Prevention Act, to ban the use and sale of “bump stocks” which effectively circumvent restrictions on automatic weapons.

Congress should support H.R.1478, the Gun Violence Research Act, which repeals the Dickey Amendment, and allows the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to research the causes of gun violence and identify methods to reduce gun-related fatalities and injuries. The NRA has backed the “Dickey Rider” since 1996, in an effort to suppress such needed research.

Representative Foxx, Senators Burr and Tillis, you must take action. Thoughts and prayers are no longer enough. Voting for “Guns Over People” is no longer acceptable, nor will it be tolerated in the future. Your constituents are waiting and watching to see you act on behalf of common sense legislation to curb gun violence, to make our schools and public gathering places safer for all. Please hear our voices.

~ Kathryn Charles
​Purlear, NC

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2018 Century Club Dinner - a Night of Revival

2/5/2018

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Above L to R: Charlin Wallin, 5th District Democrats Chair; Brandon Anderson, 45th District Senate Candidate and Wilkes Party Chair; Reverand Ray McKinnon, DNC member and social warrior; and Wayne Goodwin, NC Democratic Party Chair.
Saturday, February 3rd heard some impassioned orators in the town of Wilkesboro for the Wilkes Democrats' Annual Century Club Dinner. Wayne Goodwin reminded us, that to create the blue wave we need in the midterm elections we are ALL going to have to do all we can - and then some - to make history happen, and that the Governor and state party are working to support rural areas like ours in our challenges.

Then Rev. Ray McKinnon of Charlotte took the stage and gave us some truths. In a reference to our current Congresswoman, Virginia Foxx, he said,“We do NOT say ‘pull yourself up by your bootstraps’ to people never even had BOOTS!” referencing her philosophy that the programs that once helped her achieve are coddling North Carolinians. 

McKinnon then spoke about his time as a pastor in rural Caldwell 
county,...he knows that it's hard being a Democrat in a red county. “We must organize and energize our rural counties! What you are doing IS righteous,” and  “Stand up, speak up, and speak out. Speak out abt injustice. Speak out abt unfairness. And be proud & know you ARE NOT ALONE.” 

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Below, clockwise from Upper Left : Jenny Marshall, 5th District Congressional Candidate; Gretchen Barelski, Wilkes Democrat; Drew Christy, Governor's Office Western Region; DD Adams, 5th District Congressional Candidate; Overview of 1/2 the crowd from February 3rd's dinner; Wilkes Democrats Ann Willardson and 1st Vice Chair, Sandy Forrest being honored for organizing this annual event.
Our favorite part of the night was when Rev McKinnon brought up an old saying that seemed particularly appropriate for the evening, “The best way to eat an elephant,...is one bite at a time!"

Thank you to all the people that worked so hard to made the 2018 Century Club dinner a success. And thank you to all our Century Club members who are the lifeblood of the party in Wilkes. Thank you for your support. 
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NC - The Poster Child For Political Shenanigans

1/12/2018

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Every North Carolina district just happens to look like a monster.
The Raleigh News and Observer broke the news and stated that "a panel of federal judges struck down North Carolina’s election districts for U.S. Congress on Tuesday as unconstitutional partisan gerrymanders and gave lawmakers until January 29 to bring them new maps to correct the problem."  Here we go again with appeals, court documents, time and money. 

"The judges were unanimous that North Carolina lawmakers under Republican leadership violated the U.S. Constitution’s equal-protection clause when they drew maps explicitly to favor their party." 

Rep. David Lewis, a Harnett County Republican who has shepherded the state’s recent redistricting efforts, stated “I propose that we draw the maps to give a partisan advantage to ten Republicans and three Democrats because I do not believe it’s possible to draw a map with eleven Republicans and two Democrats.”   

Just before Christmas, the NC General Assembly was again required to pay $1.4 million dollars to the attorneys that filed the original law suit for their successful challenge of unfair racial gerrymandering actions taken by our Republican controlled General Assembly. 

This action brings the cost to around $7 million dollars not counting the wasted time and efforts for this detrimental act of governance. 

Can our elected Representatives not find more productive and better use of their time than trying to "stack the deck" so they can remain in control of North Carolina State government? 

However, our General Assembly has brought recognition to North Carolina.  When ranked for electoral fairness by the Electoral Integrity Project which evaluated districts in all 50 states, North Carolina is absolutely last!  NC scored 7 out of a possible 100 points!  Somehow, I am not proud of North Carolina being the "poster child" for unfair political shenanigans.
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