North State Journal - Vol 1 Issue 3

Page 1

VOLUME 1 EDITION 3

SUNDAY, MARCH 13, 2016

WWW.NSJONLINE.COM

THE NORTH CAROLINA PRIMARY | EXCLUSIVE NSJ POLL Someone else 3.43% Undecided 7.74%

Donald Trump 41.66%

Immigration 10.70%

John Kasich 11.79%

Marco Rubio 12%

Healthcare 11.99%

If the Republican primary election were held today, who would you vote for?

Ted Cruz 23.5%

Education 4.83%

What issue is the most important to you in this election?

STATE

JOURNaL ELEVATE THE CONVERSATION

Are you likely to vote for or against the $2 billion bond?

‘Strong lead’ for Trump By Donna King North State Journal RALEIGH — The first North State Journal poll of the election season took a look at the competitive GOP primary in the Old North State. The poll of 1,000 likely GOP primary voters was conducted on March 3 and has a margin of error of 3 percent. The poll asked voters for their preferences on a number of contested primary races, the Connect NC bond package, and which issues matter most to voters as they head to the primary polls on Tuesday. “Trump continues to maintain a strong lead in North Carolina while Ted Cruz has

established himself as Donald Trump’s strongest challenger,” said GOP strategist Paul Shumaker. “The strength in Trump’s number is founded in solid performance with almost all voting groups where is he consistently a strong first or solid second. He is the only candidate who is most voters’ first or second choice, regardless of the voting demographic.” In other primaries across the country in past years, the highest turnout of North Carolina’s nearly 7 million registered voters was less than 40 percent for a primary election, with about 70 percent in a general election.

61% 44% 53%

See POLL, page A2

among likely Republican voters

CHRISTINE T. NGUYEN | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

Donald Trump kisses Dahlia May, 1, of Burgaw, N.C., during a campaign rally on Wednesday at Crown Coliseum in Fayetteville.

North State Journal

The last winning U.S. presidential nominee produced by a brokered convention was Franklin D. Roosevelt, in 1932.

RALEIGH — This week the presidential candidates from both parties had North Carolina soil on their shoes as voters filled venues hoping for some inspiration just days before they head to the polls. Bill and Hillary Clinton made separate appearances in four N.C. cities, while Donald Trump showed up in Concord and Fayetteville; Ted Cruz in Kannapolis and Raleigh; and Bernie Sanders in Raleigh. This is the first year that N.C. voters will vote in a March primary rather than in May. In 2013, lawmakers moved N.C.’s primary date forward in an effort to boost ad revenue and the state’s influence over the parties’ nominations. “It has certainly made our primary more important, and had we moved it up even further it would’ve been even more important,” said Republican political consultant Carter Wrenn. “If See PRESIDENTIAL, page A3

ages 18-29

ages 30-49

ages 50-64

Sen. Ted Cruz relates a story about his daughter during a Fox News interview with anchor Megyn Kelly at a rally on Tuesday at Calvary Baptist Church in Raleigh.

MADELINE GRAY | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

Hillary Clinton gets help from students to take a selfie with them after a rally at Hillside High School in Durham on Thursday.

Few endorsements among GOP governors

INSIDE

How Coach K’s aggressive four-foul strategy saved Duke

North State Journal and Reuters RALEIGH — Gov. Pat McCrory spent the week before the state’s primary election crisscrossing North Carolina highlighting job growth projects. He helped break ground on the new Bonner Bridge construction over Oregon Inlet, welcomed an expansion of the Bridgestone tire factory in Wilson County, and talked up the education funding elements in the Connect NC Bond on the March 15 ballot.

Relive the magic of Duke-UNC Sports Four generations of North Carolina farming in Johnston County the good life

5

Bond supporters by age*

CHRISTINE T. NGUYEN | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

MADELINE GRAY | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

Sen. Bernie Sanders stands with Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, who resigned from her Democratic National Committee post to endorse Sanders, on Friday in Raleigh.

N.C. voters head to the polls on Tuesday

For 53.93%

Against 31.18%

Economy and Jobs 32.08%

NORTH

Undecided 14.9%

National Security 40.40%

INFOGRAPHIC | CECE PASCUAL

In the first of a series of monthly NSJ statewide tracking polls, we spoke to likely Republican primary voters.

20177 52016 $2.00

8

McCrory’s challenger in the primary, former Rep. Robert Brawley of Mooresville, polled at slightly more than 3 percent in the NSJ poll of likely Republican primary voters, with Charles Moss in third with 2.42 percent. Brawley says he has spent the week on the road also, calling for more transparency in state government and an end to the Interstate 77 toll lane project. See GOVERNOR, page A8

North Carolina Voter Guide: A sample ballot for the March 15 primary On Murphy to Manteo, page A5


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