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North Carolina at a Crossroads — Entering 2026 with Opportunity, Tension, and Unfinished Work
As North Carolina closes out a consequential 2025, the state moves into 2026 navigating a complex convergence of political, social, economic, and institutional pressures. Beneath the surface of a growing economy and vibrant communities lies a deeper story: one of systems under strain, households navigating rising costs, and an electorate confronting trust-shaking challenges. The year’s events reveal a state at a pivotal moment, where policy decisions made now will reverbera

Virgil L. Smith, Carolina Commentary
Jan 34 min read


Don’t Use the Military as an Extension of Law Enforcement
Presidents have called in National Guard troops for domestic missions at least ten times since World War II, starting in 1794, when Western Pennsylvanians’ protests on federal liquor taxes prompted Secretary of War Henry Knox to ask governors of Virginia, Maryland, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania for troops. The Trump administration’s dispatch of troops to the Democratic cities of Los Angeles, Washington, D.C., and Memphis have, for now, been stopped by lawsuits over sending Gua

Betty Joyce Nash, Carolina Commentary
Nov 17, 20254 min read


Disenfranchising voters
On Thursday, Republican-led North Carolina lawmakers unveiled a new congressional district map that, if approved, would likely give the GOP 11 of the state’s 14 districts. In a state with more Democrats than Republicans and more unaffiliated voters than either party, Republicans currently hold 10 of 14 Congressional seats thanks to a map that surgically carves up voters to give the advantage to the GOP. A fairer map, used in 2022, resulted in an even 7-7 split between the

Joy Franklin, Carolina Commentary
Oct 17, 20254 min read
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