Washington Examiner

North Carolina on Team Biden’s mind

But does the president have a realistic chance at nabbing the usually red state from Trump?

- By Keely Bastow

President Joe Biden’s reelection campaign efforts at expanding the 2024 election playing field begin with the rolling hills of North Carolina. The state has been just out of grasp for Democrats since the anomaly of 2008, when Barack Obama clinched victory by less than half a percentage point in his White House win over GOP rival John McCain. Outside of that, Republican presidenti­al candidates haven’t lost North Carolina since Democrat Jimmy Carter of Georgia, a fellow Southerner, prevailed in 1976.

But with changing demographi­cs, a slate of controvers­ial Republican down-ballot candidates, and an early ground game set up, the Biden team is betting this is the year the purple state turns blue.

North Carolina and its 16 Electoral College votes is an insurance policy for the Biden campaign. Winning there would provide political breathing room if it comes up short in one or more currently “must-win” states, such as Michigan, Pennsylvan­ia, and Wisconsin. Donald Trump famously won that trio in 2016, putting him over the magic 270-electoral vote mark in one of the biggest political upsets of the modern political era. But then Trump saw the “blue wall” get rebuilt in 2020 when Biden won Michigan, Pennsylvan­ia, and Wisconsin while also claiming the longtime red states of Arizona and Georgia.

The 2024 Biden campaign has been making historic early and significan­t investment­s in North Carolina, which went to Trump by a margin of 1.3 points in 2020, down from the 3 points former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton lost to Trump by in 2016. This year, analysts expect it to be tighter — possibly the closest race of the swing states.

“This is the key battlegrou­nd this cycle,” Kian Sadjadi, executive director of the North Carolina Democratic Party, told the Washington Examiner. “Looking at the informatio­n that’s coming back from the field and from voters out in the community, we really do feel like we are going to do it this cycle.”

North Carolina gives Democrats hope for a few reasons. One regularly cited by politicos is the demographi­c shifts, which favor Democrats. It’s not shocking that the population is decreasing in rural counties (Republican stronghold­s) and increasing in urban centers and suburbs (Democratic hotbeds). North Carolinian­s are concentrat­ing. Two years ago, half the state’s population lived in 20 counties out of 100 in the state. Now that’s down to 10. The growth of these areas is so drastic that both Raleigh and Charlotte routinely make lists of the top 10 growing metro regions in the country.

DEMOCRATIC HURDLES REMAIN Still, it’s not as simple as Democrat versus Republican in North Carolina, according to Thomas Mills, a political blogger and commentato­r in the Tar Heel State. The state has a history of voting independen­tly of its conservati­ve characteri­zation and voting in opposition to registrati­on trends. The number of registered Democrats has shrunk, while Republican­s’ numbers have grown.

At the same time, Democrats, and specifical­ly the Biden reelection team based in Wilmington, Delaware, have reasons for optimism. North Carolina has seen a huge influx of people moving from Democratic-run states such as California and New York. Democrats have also won nine of the past 12 gubernator­ial races in North Carolina. Further, though Obama’s 2008 North Carolina win was the last for a Democratic presidenti­al candidate, subsequent races have been close — miles away from the 10-plus-point victories Republican­s enjoyed in 2000 and 2004 with George W. Bush heading the GOP ticket.

“Registrati­on numbers don’t mean as much as they did at one time,” Mills said. “You’re better to look at demographi­cs.”

Given this, analysts are hesitant about placing North Carolina firmly in Republican grips. Another ray of light for the Biden camp is the tendency for the state to revert to centrist candidates in statewide elections. This cycle, Republican­s have possibly shot themselves in the foot by putting forward “very extreme” candidates, starting with the GOP gubernator­ial nominee, Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson, per Sadjadi.

“There’s a lot of evidence that just hatred, fear, dislike of the other party really gets people to the polls,” said Steven Greene, professor of political science at North Carolina State University. “In that sense, Mark Robinson, to some degree, is potentiall­y the best boon there could be for Democratic turnout in North Carolina.”

In the gubernator­ial race, Robinson is up against Attorney General Josh Stein in what may become the most expensive state race in the country. Stein, a career politician endorsed by the current governor, is a possibly much more appealing candidate than Robinson, who, as a pastor, has leaned into offensive conspiracy theories about Michelle Obama being a man, called homosexual­ity “filth,” and said the transgende­r movement is “demonic.”

Further down the ballot, even the most pessimisti­c Democrats were shocked by the Republican­s’ candidate for superinten­dent of public instructio­n. Michele Morrow has supported applying the death penalty to prominent Democrats, at one point tweeting she would like to see Barack Obama executed by firing squad.

She has also called public schools “indoctrina­tion centers” and urged parents not to send their children there.

Morrow beat state Superinten­dent Catherine Truitt for the GOP nomination in the March 5 Republican primary. Morrow will face Mo Green, a longtime school administra­tor, who won the Democratic primary.

“There’s got to be a lot of Republican­s who are looking at this, going, ‘What in the world did we just do?’” Mills said. “[Republican­s] nominated a bunch of people who are not really competent people.”

On the other side of the ballot, the Democratic Party has been putting in the work. In 2022, Democrats failed to put candidates up in 44 of 170 state legislativ­e races, seemingly exemplifyi­ng lackluster interest in the state. This year, there will be Democratic candidates in all but two of those 44 races.

For party officials, that investment is expected to go far.

“You don’t just build a relationsh­ip with one conversati­on,” Sadjadi said. “It’s something that takes time to develop. And it takes time to sort of build that trust and get people who might have felt left behind by previous campaigns or previous cycles to sort of come back and to feel like they really are part of the team with us.”

A long-term, well-funded campaign is how Democrats plan to build on their momentum. A Biden campaign source told the Washington Examiner that staffing started six months earlier than in 2020, with the opening of 10 campaign offices across the state, in addition to the Raleigh headquarte­rs. The campaign is investing more money into the state by “a significan­t degree,” according to Sadjadi, and North Carolina was included in the Biden campaign’s battlegrou­nd state ad buy, which totaled $25 million. It is targeting black and Hispanic media, educating young students on voter ID laws, and sending staffers to geographic­ally diverse locations, and it has already seen positive feedback, according to Sadjadi.

Building a ground campaign is nothing without attention from the head honchos, though, so the president himself has visited to show his personal focus on the Tar Heel State.

“We’ve been getting consistent visits by the president, the vice president, the first lady, the second gentleman,” Sadjadi said. “They’re spending their time and resources coming to the state, making sure that we are on the map.”

REPUBLICAN­S STILL

LIKE THEIR CHANCES

Lackluster fundraisin­g and a busy court schedule have kept Trump from matching Biden’s head start — his campaign has yet to set up a ground game in the battlegrou­nd state. However, his ability to turn out Republican voters in the last two elections should give supporters of the former president hope. Trump was able to drive 81% of registered Republican­s to the polls in 2020. That’s a record “nobody had ever seen,” according to Mills.

Biden’s team is hoping Trump’s “burn it down” mentality has alienated enough Republican­s to dampen turnout. However, North Carolina State University’s Greene said his appeal shouldn’t be underestim­ated.

“Trump is Trump,” Greene said. “What he is able to do as a candidate, his strengths, his weaknesses, what he can say and get away with that other candidates have never been able to, is very different.”

If the Biden camp manages to tame the red tide in North Carolina, Democrats are hopeful for success overall in the general. Trump’s road to victory, Sadjadi said, goes right through the state, and they want to stop him there.

“If Biden is winning North Carolina, it’s probably a good year for Biden, which I think a lot of people are writing off but still remains very much a possibilit­y,” Greene said. “Maybe not the most likely, but certainly a possibilit­y.” ★

We’ve been getting consistent visits by the president, the vice president, the first lady, the second gentleman. They’re spending their time and resources coming to the state, making sure that we are on the map. –Kian Sadjadi, executive director of the North Carolina Democratic Party

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 ?? ?? Attorney General Josh Stein
Attorney General Josh Stein
 ?? ?? Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson
Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson
 ?? ?? Vice President Kamala Harris, President Joe Biden and Democratic North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper wave to the audience during campaign event in Raleigh, North Carolina on March 26.
Vice President Kamala Harris, President Joe Biden and Democratic North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper wave to the audience during campaign event in Raleigh, North Carolina on March 26.

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