News

Tens of thousands of North Carolina voters are expected to receive letters from the state elections board in the coming weeks asking them to prove they are who they say they are. People who don’t respond will have their voter registration canceled — preventing them from voting again in future elections unless they re-register by the proper
Today’s round of questions, my smart-aleck replies and the real answers: Question: This is not a timely question, but I think a lot of people want to know the answer. Can you contact Chris Cooper at Western Carolina University to ask him if he has an explanation on why in the fall 2024 election North
Speakers at the NAACP’s national convention in Charlotte say Medicaid cuts will hurt workers and rural hospitals in North Carolina.
Advocacy groups and individual voters suing GOP state lawmakers in federal court claim Republican legislators drew racially discriminatory district maps.
The federal trial on North Carolina's legislative districts has ended. On Wednesday, a senior election analyst and three expert witnesses, including a political science professor at NC State, took the stand. The case is centered on whether lawmakers drew lines to favor one party over another.
The biggest thing on the ballot come November is the sales tax increase for transit. After Matthews Mayor John Higdon filed for re-election, he reiterated his opposition to the measure. But he says he won’t campaign against it.
More than two dozen municipalities will hold local races this fall, including Greensboro, where four city council seats and the mayor’s office are up for election.
Jen Psaki breaks down the North Carolina GOP's "frantic scramble" following their state-level losses in the 2024 elections — and what Trump's attacks on Sen. Thom Tillis could mean for the state's national leaders in the upcoming midterms.
In this local elections cycle, there are several elected roles for Chapel Hill, Carrboro, Hillsborough and Pittsboro on the ballot.
Some former local GOP board members say they lost their seats because they weren't devoted enough to the Republican Party.
Saying it created “more opportunity for dark money in our politics,” North Carolina first-term Democratic Gov. Josh Stein on Wednesday vetoed legislation tied to decisions on the First Amendment, transparency and privacy in donations to nonprofits.