Page 6
-
Gov. Pat McCrory still thousands of votes short in North Carolina race
At last count, the antigay governor trails attorney general Roy Cooper by 5,000 votes.
-
Gov. Pat McCrory appears defeated in NC but won’t concede to Roy Cooper
Gov. McCrory is awaiting the full count of provisional ballots and could also call for a recount.
-
Will a Democrat victory in NC mean the state’s anti-LGBT law will go away?
Even if a few seats in the General Assembly flip during the election, there won’t be a sweeping turnover to assist Cooper in repealing HB2.
-
How North Carolina votes today will shape its future political identity
On both ends of the political spectrum, many voters say they’re more engaged than they’ve been in a while.
-
Chelsea Clinton met a brave bullied girl worried Trump would harm her gay dad
Chelsea Clinton said she wants kids, including her two young children, to live in a country where “Love Trumps Hate” is more than just a slogan.
-
Desperate NC Republicans try to shut down paper’s public forum on anti-LGBTQ law
Republicans filed a complaint to the elections board trying to stop a forum on their discriminatory law, which cost the state millions of dollars and thousands of jobs.
-
Charming lesbian couple of 50 years star in new North Carolina campaign ad
This couple stole our hearts with their voting and pro-Clinton ads, and now they are out with one supporting transphobic Governor McCrory’s challenger, Roy Cooper.
-
Will HB2 or a hurricane influence North Carolina’s gubernatorial race the most?
Hint: If you live in North Carolina and don’t go vote against the transphobic governor, they’ll say his response to the hurricane saved his campaign.
-
Bathroom bill fight defines close race for North Carolina governor
The gubernatorial contest is one of the nation’s most competitive, with several polls showing a statistical tie.
-
NOM debuts bathroom attack ad against North Carolina gubernatorial candidate
Roy Cooper and Gov. McCrory, who signed the bill into law, are locked in a tight gubernatorial race in North Carolina with national implications for LGBTQ rights.