Sun. Nov 17th, 2024

temporary bridge in Bat Cave

People walk across a makeshift bridge in Bat Cave, North Carolina as repair work contrinues following Hurricane Helene flooding. (Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images)

Josh Stein faces a tall first task as governor: Rebuilding western NC after Helene

Josh Stein speaking at a podium
Gov.-elect Josh Stein addresses supporters in Raleigh on Nov. 5, 2024. (Photo: Galen Bacharier/NC Newsline)

By Galen Bacharier 

Gov.-elect views recovery in west as ‘top priority’ entering administration. Here’s what he’s said about his approach.

When Attorney General Josh Stein is sworn in as governor in January, he’ll inherit the largest disaster recovery effort in the history of North Carolina.

Efforts to rebuild communities in the mountains following Hurricane Helene are underway — and will continue in the coming months as billions of state and federal dollars flow into the west. A spokesperson for Stein’s transition team said hurricane response was a “top priority” for the governor-elect. [Read more...]

 

Western NC officials set to visit White House, Capitol Hill to push for federal aid post-Helene

Helene destruction
The Rocky Broad River flows into Lake Lure and overflows the town with debris from Chimney Rock, North Carolina, after heavy rains from Hurricane Helene on Sept. 28, 2024, in Lake Lure. (Photo by Melissa Sue Gerrits/Getty Images)

By Galen Bacharier 

A group of western North Carolina officials will travel to Washington next week to meet with White House staff and the state’s congressional delegation, where they will request further federal aid to help the region recover from Hurricane Helene.

Esther Manheimer, the mayor of Asheville, told NC Newsline in an interview Friday that she and other local government leaders, as well as Gov. Roy Cooper, would visit the nation’s capital on Wednesday and Thursday, November 20 and 21. [Read more…]

U.S. Supreme Court rejects former Rep. Mark Meadows’ bid to move election case to federal court

Mark Meadows gesturing angrily
The U.S. Supreme Court has rejected the motion of former North Carolina congressman and White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows to have his Georgia state court criminal prosecution for allegedly seeking to subvert the 2020 election moved to federal court. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

By: Brandon Kingdollar 

Former North Carolina U.S. Rep. Mark Meadows will have to try his election subversion case in Georgia after the Supreme Court rejected a bid to remove it to federal court Tuesday.

Meadows, who was charged with racketeering and a slew of other felonies for participating in then-President Donald Trump’s scheme to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election, sought to move the case to federal court on the grounds that he was acting in his official capacity as Trump’s White House Chief of Staff. [Read more…]

Trump cabinet picks draw mixed reviews from NC congressional delegation

Matt Gaetz
U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz is photographed inside the Rayburn House Office Building Feb. 27, 2019.  (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

By Christine Zhu 

Sen. Thom Tillis delivers a “wait and see” take on controversial nomination of Matt Gaetz as Attorney General

The latest frenzy in Washington is over President-elect Donald Trump’s cabinet appointments.

The transition effort began with “relatively orthodox choices,” CNN reported, like campaign co-chair Susie Wiles as White House chief of staff.

Other choices — namely Fox News host Pete Hegseth as defense secretary and just-resigned Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz as attorney general — have the political world scratching their heads. [Read more…]

Bonus reads:

* Trump picks Fox News host to run Pentagon; Tulsi Gabbard to head national intelligence

* Meet the North Carolina members of the U.S. House

* Here’s a look at the new North Carolina Council of State

Hundreds of Wake ballots arrive too late to count as NC counties work to finalize election tallies

Wake County Board of Elections officials
Wake County Board of Elections member Angela Hawkins and Board Chairwoman Erica Porter confer. (Photo: Lynn Bonner)

By: Lynn Bonner

Dozens of late-arriving ballots were sent by express mail.

Red and yellow containers sat at the end edge of the Wake County Board of Elections meeting table on Wednesday as members prepared to sift through their contents as part of the painstaking work of reviewing voter information that accompanied absentee ballots.

Thousands of ballots had no problems and were approved in bulk. But some absentee ballots arrived initially without a voter signature. Some were sent without all the witness information included. Some didn’t have the proper notary seals. [Read more...]

Republican control in Washington could mean trouble for expanded Medicaid in North Carolina

A registered nurse hangs an I.V. bag
Washington politicians seeking to cut health insurance costs could put NC’s Medicaid expansion in danger. (Photo: JoeRaedle/Getty Images)

By Lynn Bonner  

A reduction in federal funding would jeopardize health insurance coverage for more than a half-million NC residents

Health insurance coverage on which millions of Americans rely — Medicaid and plans purchased through the Affordable Care Act — were scarcely mentioned during the presidential campaign but may face extensive changes in President-elect Donald Trump’s second term.

At a campaign stop in Pennsylvania last month, House Speaker Mike Johnson promised “massive” changes to health care in a second Trump administration. [Read more...]

 

Winston-Salem public housing residents want representation on housing authority board

a view of the outside of an apartment building and a bus stop
Crystal Tower (Photo: Courtesy of Crystal Towers United)
By: Greg Childress

Michael Douglas, a public housing tenant in Winston-Salem, says he has grown tired of waiting to be represented on the Housing Authority’s board of commissioners.

Without a representative on the nine-member board, Douglas said his concerns and those of other public housing residents aren’t being addressed.

“They give us enough to shut us up and to make us go sit down,” said Douglas, who lives in Crystal Towers, a 201-unit public housing high rise near downtown that houses low-income residents. [Read more…]

What’s next for Republicans defeated in NC? Vying for federal jobs and fighting GOP battles

From left to right: Michele Morrow, Mark Robinson, and Dan Bishop. (Morrow photo: Galen Bacharier/NC Newsline. Robinson and Bishop photos: Getty Images)

By: Galen Bacharier

Michele Morrow seeks Trump administration job, while Mark Robinson fires more broadsides and Dan Bishop hints at possible return to D.C.

Some of North Carolina’s most prominent Republicans lost their races last week. But with a second Trump administration in the offing and party jockeying in progress in Washington, some of them appear primed to stay in the mix.

Michele Morrow, who ran for superintendent of public instruction and lost to Democrat Mo Green, is the object of an anonymous “nomination” to serve in the Department of Education. In social media posts this week, she linked supporters to an online form — part of an open-source effort by Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. and his allies to staff executive branch positions.[Read more]

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