North Carolina set to become key 2024 battleground state for Democrats  

Source:The Hill

As we inch closer to 2024, North Carolina is emerging as a key battleground for the upcoming elections. With an ever-changing demographic, and the possibility of another round of Republican-leaning congressional maps, North Carolina has become one of the most competitive battleground states. 

According to The Hill, Democrats are viewing the state as a potential opportunity to flip in the presidential election. For years, North Carolina has hosted some of the closest races up and down the ballot, particularly with presidential, gubernatorial and senatorial candidates winning by small margins. 

2020 marked the biggest example of candidates winning by small margins, as Biden lost the Tar Heel state to Donald Trump by just 1.4 percent. With such a close race, Democrats and Biden are hoping to invest in the state and develop an effective campaign structure. 

“President Biden and Vice President Harris have a strong record that resonates with North Carolinians and will mobilize the voters we need to win in 2024, including creating thousands of jobs, lowering costs for families, and fighting against MAGA extremist abortion bans,” Kevin Munoz, President Biden’s campaign spokesperson, told Politico. “We fully expect North Carolina to be competitive, and plan to run an aggressive and winning campaign that builds on our significant investments throughout the state.”

Advocates and candidates have already shared advice for political observers looking into North Carolina, stating that the presidential race needs to invest not only in the urban cities, but the rural parts of the state. 

“There are a lot of disengaged voters who are not showing up at the polls who could change the outcome of slim 1-to-3-percentage-margin victories,” Cynthia Wallace, the co-founder of a nonprofit called the New Rural Project, told The Hill. “You cannot change the trajectory of who gets elected without changing the trajectory of rural North Carolina.” 

Since launching their campaign, President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris have made several appearances in the state, including visiting Rocky Mount and Fort Liberty to discuss job opportunities and initiatives to help service members.

Last month, VP Harris visited North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University, America’s largest HBCU, to uplift reproductive freedom, student loans, and discuss young North Carolinians voting power

Share:

More Posts

Cómo la Casa Blanca ignoró la orden de un juez para dar vuelta los vuelos de deportación

La administración Trump dijo que ignoró una orden judicial para dar vuelta dos aviones con supuestos miembros de pandillas venezolanas porque los vuelos estaban sobre aguas internacionales. La decisión de la administración de desafiar la orden de un juez federal es extremadamente rara y altamente controvertida. “La orden judicial fue desobedecida. El primero de muchos, como he estado advirtiendo, y el comienzo de una verdadera crisis constitucional”, escribió el abogado de seguridad nacional Mark S. Zaid, crítico de Trump, en X, añadiendo que Trump podría ser finalmente destituido. La Casa Blanca da la bienvenida a esa lucha. “Esto llegará a la Corte Suprema. Y vamos a ganar”, dijo un alto funcionario de la Casa Blanca a Axios.

House Democrats try to move North Carolina’s minimum wage closer to a living wage

Democrats in the North Carolina legislature are attempting to raise the state’s minimum wage which has not been increased in over 15 years. Representatives Allison Dahl (D-District 11), Aisha Dew (D-District 111), Bryan Cohn (D-District 32), and Marcia Morey (D-District 30) filed House Bill 353, titled the “Fair Minimum Wage Act”, would not just raise the minimum wage once but continue to raise it as time goes on. 

“Dooming a lot of us to early deaths”: North Carolinians Fear Republicans’ Proposed Medicaid Cuts

About 3 million North Carolina residents — one in four —  receive health coverage through Medicaid, a figure that includes the more than 640,000 people who received coverage through the state’s Medicaid expansion program starting in Dec. 2023. Under state law, North Carolina’s Medicaid expansion program would end should federal funding for the program drop below 90%, cutting off access to the 640,000 North Carolinians who’ve gotten coverage under the expansion.