VOLUME 6 ISSUE 49 |
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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2022
Beasley, Budd lead 2022 US Senate fundraising Raleigh Democrat Cheri Beasley and Republican U.S. Rep. Ted Budd topped campaign fundraising in the final three months of 2021. The campaign of Beasley, the former state Supreme Court chief justice, raised more than $2.1 million and had $2.8 million in the bank entering the new year, according to her campaign report. Budd raised more than former Gov. Pat McCrory for the first time, taking in over $968,000, while McCrory’s campaign reported $748,000. Both campaigns had comparable amounts in the bank entering January, with Budd reporting $2.2 million in cash compared to $1.95 million for McCrory. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Denmark, England lift virus restrictions Copenhagen, Denmark Denmark took the European Union lead Tuesday by scrapping most pandemic restrictions as the Scandinavian country no longer considers COVID-19 “a socially critical disease.” Officials say the reason for the Danish move is that while the omicron variant is surging in the country, it’s not placing a heavy burden on the health system and Denmark has a high vaccination rate. Last week, England lifted almost all domestic restrictions: masks are not mandatory anywhere, vaccine passes are not required for any venue and people are no longer advised to work from home. The only legal requirement is to self-isolate after a positive COVID test. Ireland has dropped most of its restrictions and the Netherlands also has been easing its lockdown, although Dutch bars and restaurants still have to close at 10 p.m. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Supreme Court shouldn’t be covered in Ivy, 2 lawmakers say Washington, D.C. Eight of the nine members of the current court went to law school at either Harvard or Yale. But it would be good if the person named to replace retiring Justice Stephen Breyer doesn’t have an Ivy League degree, according to South Carolina Rep. Jim Clyburn, a Democrat, and Sen. Lindsey Graham, a Republican. “We run the risk of creating an elite society,” said Clyburn, a graduate of South Carolina State University. “We’ve got to recognize that people come from all walks of life, and we ought not dismiss anyone because of that.” Graham, a member of the Judiciary Committee, which will hold hearings for the eventual nominee, said he’d like to see the court “have a little more balance, some common sense on it. It’s OK to go to a public university and get your law degree.” The court’s newest member, Justice Amy Coney Barrett, is the outlier. She is a graduate of Notre Dame’s law school. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
New York Times buys viral word game Wordle New York The New York Times said it has bought Wordle, the free online word game that has exploded in popularity and, for some, become a daily obsession. It listed the purchase price as being in the “low-seven figures,” but did not disclose specifics. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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MATT MERCER | NORTH STATE JOURNAL
Members of the Lumbee Tribe perform at the opening of the Republican National Committee’s community center in Pembroke on Friday, Jan. 28, 2022.
Community center brings RNC’s message to Robeson County By Matt Mercer North State Journal
Anita Earls would join short list of NC justices if picked for US Supreme Court Biden considering Earls and other black women to fill seat By David Larson North State Journal
ant member of the Congressional Black Caucus, are petitioning for South Carolina District Court Judge J. Michelle Childs. Childs, though from South Carolina and a graduate of the University of South Carolina School of Law, does have a North Carolina connection in that she earned a master of laws degree from Duke University School of Law. While Childs has become somewhat of a frontrunner, Earls’ name is still on a very short list for this highest of positions for an American jurist. If chosen, she would be only the fifth person to be nominated from the state, and if confirmed, she would join only Justices James Iredell and Alfred Moore as U.S. Supreme Court justices hailing from North Carolina. The first justice to have a strong link to the Tar Heel state was James Wilson. Wilson was born in Scotland and lived most of his life in Pennsylvania, but he died and was buried in Edenton, North Carolina, after fleeing creditors. He served from 1789 to 1798. The first justice selected from North Carolina was James Iredell, who was born in England but settled in the state. Iredell served at about the same time as Wilson (17901799) and also died in Edenton. Both men were appointed by George Washington. Iredell County was named for him. After Iredell died in 1799, President John Adams picked another North Carolinian to take his place — Alfred Moore, who served from 1800 to 1804. Moore spent his life in the state, having been born in New Hanover County and dying in Bladen County. Moore County and Moore Square in downtown Raleigh are both named for Alfred Moore. While no North Carolinian has sat on the court after these two early justices, two others from the state were nominated. George Badger was from New Bern and served in important federal positions throughout
RALEIGH — During President Joe Biden’s campaign, he pledged to put a black woman on the Supreme Court if he had the chance to make a nomination, and with Associate Justice Stephen Breyer’s announced retirement, North Carolina Supreme Court Justice Anita Earls is on the short list of those being considered. In comments to multiple media outlets, Earls said she was “honored” to be among those being considered, but also made clear she takes her current position on the state’s highest court seriously. Earls was raised in Seattle and received her law degree from Yale Law School, but she has spent much of her legal career in North Carolina and has been a professor at Duke University and UNC Chapel Hill. Earls has been hammered with regular press releases over the last couple weeks from North Carolina GOP leaders, who say she is not impartial enough to rule on the state’s new congressional and legislative districts. They argue that because Eric Holder’s National Democratic Redistricting Committee is a top campaign donor, she will not be able to be fair in a case where the group is a plaintiff against their maps. Former North Carolina Supreme Court Chief Justice Cheri Beasley, who is now running for the U.S. Senate as a Democrat, was also on various lists of black women likely being considered. Beasley told ABC11, though, that she is “committed to running for Senate,” apparently removing herself from consideration. Powerful black North Carolina Democrat Congressman G.K. Butterfield, however, has another person in mind, telling the Washington Post that he and South Carolina Democrat Jim Clyburn, another import- See EARLS page A3
PEMBROKE — A near standing-room only crowd came to downtown Pembroke to open the Republican National Committee’s newest community center for minority engagement. The office, one of 21 nationwide, is part of a multi-million dollar effort dedicated to continuing to improve the GOP’s standing among non-white voters. The office is the first in the nation dedicated to reaching Native Americans, focusing on the region’s Lumbee Tribe. In attendance at the event were NCGOP chairman Michael Whatley, Robeson County’s current U.S. Rep. Dan Bishop, potential new congressman U.S. Rep. David Rouzer, and RNC national spokesman Paris Dennard. Whatley gave remarks to open the event and thanked the com-
munity for showing up on a night when snow and ice was expected to fall across the area. “We want to go into communities that matter. Robeson County is at the top of the list,” Whatley said. “The metric for success of this office is the relationships. We want to show that your issues matter, not just a few weeks before an election.” Speaking after Whatley was Jarrod Lowery, a well-known Republican who is seeking a state House seat in 2022. He is also the younger brother of the Tribe’s current chairman. Lowery said the fact that Republicans are coming to them and genuinely wanting to hear from them is important to the Tribe. A list of upcoming events shows the office will be a busy one – four days a week, staff will host phone banking and voter registration drives. See RNC, page A2
Report documents permeation, high cost of Critical Social Justice in UNC System James G. Martin Center report outlines progressive activism bent, millions in spending By A.P. Dillon North State Journal RALEIGH — A new report from the James G. Martin Center details the threat of Critical Social Justice to academic freedom in the UNC System. “Academics and administrators are no longer merely pushing progressive politics but transforming universities into institutions dedicated to political activism and indoctrinating students into a hateful ideology. We call this ideological bent Critical Social Justice,” the report reads. The report says Critical Social Justice (CSJ) can encompass topics such as Critical Race Theory, Critical Theory, Multiculturalism, and Identity Politics and that the UNC System promotes CSJ policies “under the seemingly innocuous rubric of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI).” The James G. Martin Center’s Director of Outreach Jenna Robinson tells North State Journal the report tries to catalog as systematically as possible all of the See CRT, page A2