Daily Press

Expensive, closely watched and probably a tight race

Focus on the state as sharply contrastin­g candidates fight for Tuesday primary

- The New York Times

DURHAM, N.C. — One of the country’s most closely watched elections this year will be in North Carolina, where the race for governor will be a test of Democratic strength in a state whose narrowly divided electorate includes a crush of newcomers.

After today’s primaries, North Carolinian­s will likely have two sharply contrastin­g candidates to choose from: the mild-mannered state attorney general, Josh Stein, a Democrat whose political rise has followed a traditiona­l path, and Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson, a firebrand Republican who catapulted into politics after comments he made defending gun rights in 2018 went viral.

“If you went to a candidate factory and said, ‘Create me the two most different candidates possible,’ I don’t think you could do any better,” said Christophe­r A. Cooper, a political science professor at Western Carolina University. “They’re just radically different in demeanor, in ideology.”

Both men would break ground if elected: Robinson, 55, would be the first Black governor of North Carolina if elected, while Stein, 57, would be the state’s first Jewish governor.

The race will be closely watched in part because of the potential national implicatio­ns: Both candidates are planning to portray each other in politicall­y extreme terms, which could boost turnout not only for their elections, but also for the presidenti­al race in the hotly contested state.

Stein, like the current term-limited Democratic governor, Roy Cooper, has tried to avoid culture war issues.

Robinson appears eager to dive into many of them, disparagin­g LGBTQ+ people, posting comments that were widely perceived as antisemiti­c and calling Michelle Obama a man.

He has also quoted Adolf Hitler on Facebook and embraced former President Donald Trump’s false claims about election fraud in 2020.

Stein supports access to abortion and has been endorsed by abortion rights groups, which are mobilized after the Republican­s used their new supermajor­ity in the Legislatur­e last year to ban most abortions after 12 weeks of pregnancy. Robinson supports a so-called heartbeat law, which would ban the procedure after about six weeks of pregnancy, when many women have yet to realize they are pregnant.

His campaign spokespers­on said Robinson supports exceptions for rape, incest or when the life of the mother is in danger, but he did not specify at how many weeks those protection­s would apply.

Robinson has dismissed the criticisms, casting them as smear jobs orchestrat­ed by liberals and the news media. He has also insisted to reporters that he has never been antisemiti­c, pointing to a trip he took last fall to Israel and outreach he has made to Jewish organizati­ons as evidence.

Even as Democrats have won seven of the last eight elections for governor in North Carolina, they have consistent­ly lost federal races: The only Democrat that the state has picked for president in almost 50 years was Barack Obama in 2008.

At a rally in Greensboro, North Carolina, on Saturday, Trump said that Robinson — who worked in furniture manufactur­ing before turning to politics — had his “complete and total endorsemen­t.” Polls have consistent­ly shown Robinson far ahead of his Republican primary rivals, Dale Folwell, the state treasurer, and Bill Graham, a personal injury and wrongful death lawyer.

Stein is leading four other Democratic primary candidates in polling, including Michael Morgan, a former North Carolina Supreme Court justice.

Robinson has painted

Stein as a boring, Bidenalign­ed political insider who is out of touch with the general public.

Stein has pointed to Robinson’s numerous statements around culture war topics as evidence that the lieutenant governor is focused on polarizing social issues instead of challenges that most voters care about, like improving education.

With North Carolina being a key swing state this year, the race will likely draw millions of dollars in fundraisin­g, especially if polls continue to show the candidates neck and neck.

Michael Bitzer, a political science professor at Catawba College in Salisbury, North Carolina, said that outside the presidenti­al election, the North Carolina governor’s race will probably be the most expensive and most divisive in the country. And Robinson, he added, could drive much of that attention.

“Robinson is very much willing to say what he thinks, and at times he kind of tries to tiptoe around his past comments,” Bitzer said. “But he is very much in the vein of Trump-style politics and the fact of resentment — an ‘us versus them’ mentality.”

Trump won the state in 2020 by 1.3 percentage points, while Cooper beat his Republican opponent that year by more than 4 percentage points.

Stein’s victory for attorney general in 2020 was more tenuous, with 50.1% of the vote, a margin of 13,000 votes.

Still, Democrats are counting on Robinson’s past comments and polarizing approach to motivate voters who want to defeat him.

The question that some Republican­s have is whether Robinson’s style will be too extreme for swing voters, who make up 3% to 5% of the electorate.

They could include many of the several hundred thousand people who have moved to North Carolina since 2020, many of whom settled in the suburbs and exurbs of Charlotte and Raleigh, the state’s largest cities. President Joe Biden won the counties that contain those cities but lost many of the surroundin­g areas.

Jonathan Felts, a Republican strategist running a super political action committee supporting Robinson’s campaign, said the candidate’s image as a “conservati­ve fighter” and political outsider would appeal to the working-class Trump base that dominates conservati­ve North Carolina, much of which is rural.

Morgan Jackson, a Democratic strategist who advises both Stein and Cooper, said that residents have historical­ly shown they like a balance in their government, with a Democratic governor who will keep the Republican Legislatur­e in check.

Jackson said Stein will let his experience speak for itself and will talk on the campaign trail about his work fighting the fentanyl crisis, putting child predators in jail and keeping communitie­s safer.

Both Stein and Robinson have prioritize­d education issues in their campaigns.

Some Republican­s, like Robinson’s rivals in the party’s primary, have worried that Robinson’s rhetoric could cost conservati­ves the executive mansion.

Paul Shumaker, a Republican consultant in the state and chief strategist for Graham, said he believes Robinson “will become a liability” for Trump. In a memo Shumaker sent to other consultant­s this year, he wrote that Robinson would “create a toxic red tide for Republican­s” that could have repercussi­ons down the ballot.

At the 2024 Conservati­ve Political Action Conference, Robinson spoke about how his name was always mentioned “in conjunctio­n with social issues.”

“According to them, I hate everybody,” he said, before adding that what he was doing was not about hate. “We should be operating because of what we love.”

Stein recently told The News & Observer that Robinson’s beliefs were not those that “a leader of a thriving, growing, diverse state can hold.”

 ?? CHRIS SEWARD/AP ?? North Carolina Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson, a Republican candidate for governor, greets the crowd as he arrives to speak at a rally Jan. 26, in Roxboro, North Carolina.
CHRIS SEWARD/AP North Carolina Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson, a Republican candidate for governor, greets the crowd as he arrives to speak at a rally Jan. 26, in Roxboro, North Carolina.
 ?? KARL B DEBLAKER/AP ?? Democratic gubernator­ial candidate Josh Stein speaks at rally at Shaw University in Raleigh, North Carolina, on Oct. 10.
KARL B DEBLAKER/AP Democratic gubernator­ial candidate Josh Stein speaks at rally at Shaw University in Raleigh, North Carolina, on Oct. 10.

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