Moral Mondays march, Raleigh, NC. Credit: Susan Melkisethian.

Our state government can no longer be classified as a full democracy. When it comes to the integrity of the voting district boundaries no country has ever received as low a score as the 7/100 North Carolina received.

By measures of electoral integrity, North Carolina rates only as partly-free, alongside authoritarian states like Cuba, Indonesia, and Sierra Leone.
↩︎ Raleigh News & Observer
Dec 24, 2016

Brazen power grab in North Carolina displays depth of partisan divide

The special session called by the North Carolina legislature last Wednesday began innocently enough, under the pretext of passing emergency disaster relief. But the ruse was quickly abandoned, and the Republican legislature, which will serve under a Democratic governor starting next month, passed a raft of hyper-partisan legislation.

The grab bag of GOP candy included everything from structural changes to the division of powers—putting power over the university system under the legislature, for example, and instituting party primaries for judicial elections—to eliminating requirements for vehicle emissions testing.

Overall, incoming Democratic governor Roy Cooper will have restricted powers compared to his predecessor. His saucy reply: “Major changes in the way state government operates should be done deliberately, with input from all parties, particuarly something as important as elections and making sure people have the opportunity to vote. They shouldn’t be pushed through in the dark of night.
 

Dec 19, 2016

North Carolina has learned plenty these last four years the damage that can be done when one party—any party—accumulates too much power.

A plea for outgoing Governor McCrory to show some moderation and reverse his crap legacy by vetoing the special session's bills.
↩︎ Charlotte Observer
Dec 19, 2016

Gerrymandering appears to be the cause and effect of Republicans in Raleigh

One subject of the power grab: Republicans are trying to cement their power over county election boards statewide by divvying up control between parties.

These boards have been the vehicle of the party’s craven grand strategy: North Carolina is frequently referred to as the archetypal case of modern GOP gerrymandering. In August, a court found that the lines were drawn to segregate voters racially. Next year the state will be required to hold special elections in 28 districts that must be redrawn.

Some believed that homogenous districting would sink the GOP nationally this year. Clearly it didn't, but the 2020 census offers an opportunity for Democrats to reverse their fortunes in Congress—an opportunity that Obama and Holder believe in sufficiently to campaign for.

Dec 19, 2016

Behind the coup, a broader strategy at work

If the Carolina Coup is only an incident isolated to a legislature embittered by a close gubernatorial loss and emboldened by extreme gerrymandering, it's sufficiently horrible. But if it's echoed elsewhere, watch out.

As Jamelle Bouie put it, the last time the state "used the power of the state to protect itself from the voters of the stats," white tribalism became a de facto strategy throughout the South. The Week argues that Republicans nationwide seem to be aiming for a sort of partial tyranny, in which they can suppress voters they don't like, draw districts favorably, and overturn elections that don't go their way.

Dec 19, 2016
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