Sat. Dec 28th, 2024

flooding and destroyed buildings

An aerial view of people standing near destroyed and damaged buildings in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene flooding on Oct. 8, 2024 in Bat Cave, North Carolina. (Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images)

When it came to important stories for North Carolina politics and government, this year rarely let up.

So as 2024 comes to a close, we wanted to look back at some of those that stuck out the most — in particular, those that will continue to impact North Carolinians into the new year and beyond.

We’ll continue to cover government, politics and policy in 2025 — with a long legislative session, a new executive branch and more.

Hurricane Helene — and how a new administration will respond

The most deadly and damaging storm in state history left much of western North Carolina in tatters. Recovery is underway — and will continue for years.

State and federal officials mobilized resources to respond to a region not prepared for widespread flooding, while private groups and nonprofits also swarmed to provide aid. Lawmakers convened to approve more than $900 million in aid.

Now, a new governor and his administration will be tasked with overseeing western North Carolina’s rebuild.

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Governor-elect Josh Stein has indicated it will be his Number One priority. He’s retained key cabinet officials that have been involved in relief efforts, and has hired staff specifically assigned to Helene recovery.

But it won’t be without challenges. Republicans in the legislature have signaled they are open to working with Stein — but haven’t been afraid to blast Gov. Roy Cooper for what they view as failures in his response.

And Stein will continue to look toward Capitol Hill, pushing for federal aid.

2024’s election — and the first moves of the midterm cycle

This past election cycle brought North Carolina an expensive and controversial governor’s race; constant visits by presidential candidates; and a Supreme Court contest that is still technically ongoing as of late December.

Like it or not, the modern election calendar is almost constant. That means sooner rather than later, we’ll begin seeing the first signs of midterm politicking. What are we watching for?

Riggs and Griffin
Democratic incumbent Supreme Court Justice Allison Riggs and her Republican challenger, Judge Jefferson Griffin. (Courtesy photos)

Senate Bill 382 — and how it fares in court

Republicans touted it as a measured step in their Helene response — and some needed fixes to government. Democrats and opponents decried it as a “power grab.”

Senate Bill 382 — branded as aid for Helene survivors but most prominently a law that shifts executive power — is now in court. How it fares there will have major implications for state government.

Senator Phil Berger and House Speaker Tim Moore at a press conference.
Legislative leaders were able to flip three GOP votes in the House — a trio of members from western North Carolina who initially objected to the bill’s branding as Hurricane Helene relief. (Photo: Galen Bacharier)

The law redirects existing authority from offices soon to be held by Democrats, including Stein, to those that will be held by Republicans. It strips the governor of appointment power for the Board of Elections; curbs the powers of the attorney general; and makes a bevy of changes to election deadlines.

Stein and Cooper have already sued over the law’s provision that makes the Highway Patrol an independent department, as well as the section moving Board of Elections oversight to the Republican auditor’s office.

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