THE
State Employees Association of North Carolina, SEIU Local 2008 P.O. Drawer 27727, Raleigh, NC • www.seanc.org 800-222-2758 • 919-833-6436 • Circulation 55,000
June 2012
• Vol. 30, Issue 7
SEANC, Coleman make history by
Toni Davis
SEANC-ENDORSED PRIMARY WINNERS
Wearing SEANC blue at her victory party on May 8, Linda Coleman joined a festive crowd that included her state employee family to celebrate her landslide victory for the Democratic nomination for lieutenant governor. Coleman’s victory was not just a 56 to 44 percent landslide win over primary challenger and state Sen. Eric Mansfield (D-Cumberland). She earned herself a place in North Carolina’s history books as the first African-American woman to be the nominee for lieutenant governor. SEANC members should stand proud that they helped win this civil rights victory. In her acceptance speech, Coleman thanked SEANC saying, “We stand for working families, and I will never back away from that as one of my core values!” SEANC decided early in the primary process to support Linda Coleman, who in 2005 single-handedly held up the state budget in support of vital public services and the people who provide them. As director of the state personnel office, she led implementation of Executive Order 45, which provides a partnership between managers and employees to produce cost-efficiencies, improve morale and strengthen communication in state agencies. Her door has always been open for state employees because she is a champion of those who need one — the working families who make up the 99 percent. SEANC and the Service Employees International Union spent more than $300,000 on TV and radio commercials,
PHOTO BY TONI DAVIS
SEANC Communications Director
SEANC Executive Director Dana Cope, left, and SEANC President Charles Johnson, right, celebrate Lieutenant Governor candidate Linda Coleman’s primary victory on May 8.
yard signs and direct mail pieces in support of the Coleman campaign. Several reports in the media credited SEANC’s support for Coleman as the key to her victory, while her opponent failed to gain traction with his meanspirited attacks. Coleman will have to wait until this summer to learn who her opponent will be in the November election for lieutenant governor. None of the Republican challengers met the 40 percent threshold to win the GOP nomination.
SEANC Candidates Win Big Coleman wasn’t the only winner on primary night that was endorsed by SEANC’s nonpartisan Employee Political Action Committee (EMPAC). As of press time, 21 of the 27 SEANCendorsed General Assembly candidates won their primary battles.
N.C. House of Representatives Jimmy Dixon (R-Duplin) District 4 Annie Mobley (D-Hertford) * District 5 Angela Bryant (D-Nash) * District 7 Michael Wray (D-Northampton) District 27 Rosa Gill (D-Wake) * District 33 Yvonne Holley (D-Wake) * District 38 Darren Jackson (D-Wake) * District 39 Valerie Foushee (D-Orange) District 50 Marcus Brandon (D-Guilford) * District 60 Ed Hanes (D-Forsyth) District 72 Robert Brawley (R-Iredell) * District 95 Chuck McGrady (R-Henderson) * District 117 N.C. Senate Don Davis (D-Greene) * Brent Jackson (R-Sampson) * Mike Woodard (D-Durham) Gene McLaurin (D-Richmond) Phil Berger (R-Rockingham) Earline Parmon (D-Forsyth) Stan Bingham (R-Davidson) * Dan Soucek (R-Watauga) Tom Apodaca (R-Henderson) *
District 5 District 10 District 22 District 25 District 26 District 32 District 33 District 45 District 48
*SEANC congratulates these candidates, who won election outright on May 8 and do not face an opponent in the November general election.
A number of the candidates such as state Reps. Rosa Gill and Yvonne Holley (both D-Wake) are on their way to the General Assembly having no opposed candidates in the general election. President Charles Johnson was thrilled to watch the EMPAC wins come in over the television. Johnson said, “Having champions of workers elected is a huge step forward for North Carolina.”
tdavis@seanc.org