VOLUME 7 ISSUE 10
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WWW.NSJONLINE.COM
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 4, 2022
Budd takes 20-point lead as McCrory craters in new poll Raleigh U.S. Rep. Ted Budd continued to stretch out his lead in the upcoming May 17 Republican U.S. Senate primary, according to a new poll released Monday. In the poll, released Monday afternoon by the Club for Growth, Budd earned 43% of the vote among likely Republican primary voters, compared to 23% for former Gov. Pat McCrory. The 20-point gap is the largest of any publicly-available poll in the race to secure the Republican nomination for the seat for the retiring Richard Burr. Former U.S. Rep. Mark Walker took 9% of the vote and combat veteran Marjorie K. Eastman earned 4%, which around 20% undecided. “North Carolina voters understand that Ted Budd is the true conservative in this race and will fight for them in Washington,” said Club for Growth PAC President David McIntosh.
AP PHOTO
Demonstrators protest outside of the Supreme Court Tuesday, May 3, 2022, in Washington, D.C.
Supreme Court draft suggests Roe could be overturned
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Depp libel suit moves ahead against Heard after resting case Falls Church, Va. A judge is letting Johnny Depp move forward with his libel suit against his exwife, Amber Heard, after the former “Pirates of the Caribbean” star rested his case in a Virginia courtroom. Heard’s lawyers asked the judge Tuesday to dismiss the lawsuit, arguing no reasonable jury could find in his favor based on the evidence he put forward. But the judge said the standard for dismissing a case at this point in a trial is exceedingly high, and that the case should be allowed to move forward if Depp has provided even a “scintilla” of evidence backing up his claims. Heard’s team will now to present its case. Depp is suing Heard over an op-ed piece she wrote referring to herself as a victim of domestic abuse. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
CDC restates recommendation for masks on planes, trains New York U.S. health officials on Tuesday restated their recommendation that Americans wear masks on planes, trains and buses, despite a court ruling last month that struck down a national mask mandate on public transportation. Americans age 2 and older should wear a wellfitting masks while on public transportation, including in airports and train stations, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended, citing the current spread of coronavirus and projections of future COVID-19 trends. The government had repeatedly extended the mandate, and the latest one had been set to expire May 3. But a federal judge struck down the rule on April 18. The same day, the TSA said it would no longer enforce the mandate. The CDC asked the Justice Department to appeal the decision, which the department did.
By Mark Sherman The Associated Press
13th Congressional District: Hines’ ambition meets crowded field By Matt Mercer North State Journal RALEIGH — Bo Hines, one of eight candidates seeking the Republican nomination in the state’s 13th Congressional District, talked frequently about making politics his career. Spending one year as a wide receiver for NC State’s football team, he made statements to several media outlets about running for office, saying he has aspirations of being governor and eventually president. In December 2014, Hines announced that he was leaving NC State and transferring to Yale. “This has been a very tough decision for me. I love NC State and the people I have had the privilege of getting to know there. ... My goal is to pursue a specific career path in law and politics, and I believe that transferring to an Ivy League institution will help me reach that goal,” Hines was quoted as saying in a WRAL report at that time. hree years later, Hines was quoted in a Hartford Courant story saying he went to Yale for reasons beyond football. He said he “loved the school and staff in Raleigh. ... but, ultimately I knew I wanted to have a political career and I felt like Yale would give me the best opportunity to do that one day.” The story said Hines originally wanted to be the 9th District Representative in Congress.
“I’d run as a Republican, but I’m not a social conservative,” Hines said. “I call myself a social libertarian, I guess. I’m a lot more liberal on certain social issues. I think it’s part of our generation. I’m hoping the Republican Party in the future will not be so bogged down by the 80-year-olds sitting in Congress who want to regulate how people live their lives,” he said to the paper. A few months later, citing repeated injuries, Hines announced he was retiring from football. He told the Yale Daily News he made the decision to protect his long-term health. That story, published in August 2017, again references his decision to attend Yale “because of the political opportunities an Ivy League degree would open for him.” During 2017, Hines also said that the Ivy League football players were “a lot smart smarter, so you’re not going to have blown coverages, busted coverages, you have to be on top of your game. Timing is very important because what they might not have in speed they make up for in intelligence.” A 2015 profile of Hines in the Raleigh News & Observer quoted him saying his big political dreams would be “governor of North Carolina and the ultimate goal would be president.” In a 2021 interview with the See HINES, page A2
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
CHRIS SEWARD | AP PHOTO
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Republican candidate for U.S. House of Representatives Bo Hines, of North Carolina, speaks to the crowd before former President Donald Trump takes the stage at a rally Saturday, April 9, 2022, in Selma.
WASHINGTON, D.C. — A leaked draft opinion suggests the U.S. Supreme Court could be poised to overturn the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade case that legalized abortion nationwide, according to a Politico report. A decision to overrule Roe would lead to abortion bans in roughly half the states and could have huge ramifications for this year’s elections. But it’s unclear if the draft represents the court’s final word on the matter — opinions often change in ways big and small in the drafting process. President Joe Biden said Tuesday that the “basic fairness and the stability of our law demand” that the court not overturn Roe. While emphasizing
that he couldn’t speak to the authenticity of the draft, Biden said his administration is preparing for all eventualities for when the court ultimate rules in its decision. “If the court does overturn Roe, it will fall on our nation’s elected officials at all levels of government to protect a woman’s right to choose,” Biden said. “And it will fall on voters to elect pro-choice officials this November. At the federal level, we will need more pro-choice Senators and a pro-choice majority in the House to adopt legislation that codifies Roe, which I will work to pass and sign into law.” Whatever the outcome, the Politico report late Monday represented an extremely rare breach of the court’s secretive See SCOTUS, page A2
State’s top Republicans unite behind GOP primary judicial slate By Matt Mercer North State Journal THE THREE statewide Republican judicial primaries that will be decided on May 17 have seen attention placed on them from some surprising corners. Republicans in both the General Assembly and on the Supreme Court and Court of Appeals have actively backed a slate of three candidates: Trey Allen for the Supreme Court, and Beth Freshwater Smith and Michael Stading for the Court of Appeals. Allen faces two candidates for the Supreme Court nomination: current Court of Appeals judge April Wood and Davidson County attorney Victoria Prince. Stading faces former N.C. Industrial Commission chair Charlton Allen and Freshwater Smith is taking on two-term incumbent Donna Stroud, who is currently the chief judge of the 15-member appellate court. A new 527 organization called True Conservative Judges produced mailers to Republican-leaning voters backing the three candidates. The treasurer of the group, Mecklenburg County attorney Larry Sheheen, told North State Journal its aim was to educate primary voters on the best choices in the race. “We feel strongly that judges should remember they are governed by the Constitution, they don’t govern the Constitution. This is nothing negative against anyone, but we feel strongly that these judges would be the best choices,” he said in an interview. Sheheen added that the group
would make enough of an impact to see the three prevail. Allen and Wood have been actively campaigning for the Supreme Court seat for over a year. Allen, who currently serves as general counsel for the N.C. Administrative Office of Courts, See GOP PRIMARY, page A3