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瓜神app Politics

The 瓜神app Politics Podcast is a free-flowing discussion of what we're hearing in the back hallways of the General Assembly and on the campaign trail across North Carolina. 

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  • Budget season at the state legislature has officially kicked off with the release of Gov. Josh Stein鈥檚 budget recommendations. He鈥檚 calling on lawmakers to pause scheduled corporate and personal income tax cuts to avoid projected revenue shortfalls starting next year. He says those revenue drops will make it difficult to fund teacher raises and other major investments in state government, but Republican legislative leaders aren鈥檛 eager to change course on tax cuts. Kristin Walker is the state budget director, overseeing the economists who develop the revenue forecast. She joined 瓜神app's Colin Campbell to discuss the details of those projections, and some of the other highlights from the governor's budget recommendations, including public safety funding and free community college tuition.
  • As North Carolina schools face staffing shortages, both Republicans and Democrats are pushing for bigger raises for starting teacher pay -- but the proposals could face tough odds in a tight budget year.Gov. Josh Stein鈥檚 proposal to increase starting teacher pay above $50,000 is similar to one filed recently by Republicans in the state House. Rep. Erin Par茅, R-Wake and sponsor of that bill, was appointed this year to help lead the budget process. She spoke with Colin Campbell about the teacher pay plan and its prospects in the legislature. Par茅 also discussed her bills to offer tax exemptions on tips and gambling losses, as well as a salary transparency measure for school district administrators.
  • It鈥檚 been more than 50 years since North Carolina used a racist, Jim Crow-era 鈥渓iteracy test鈥 that was designed to prevent Black people from registering to vote. But that requirement remains in the state鈥檚 constitution, unenforced.Rep. Terry Brown, D-Mecklenburg, is making another attempt this year to get the language removed. He鈥檒l have to persuade both the House and Senate to put the repeal on the November 2026 ballot. Brown spoke with 瓜神app's Colin Campbell about the proposal. He also talked about his new role as chief Democratic whip, a difficult role for House Democrats as they seek to sustain Gov. Josh Stein鈥檚 vetoes this year with narrow margins.
  • N.C. Sen. Benton Sawrey, R-Johnston, landed an influential role in his second term this session as co-chair of the Senate鈥檚 committees on healthcare. He joined 瓜神app's Colin Campbell to talk about efforts to address the unusually high costs of healthcare in North Carolina, including a recent bill to limit insurance coverage mandates and some other proposals in the works for later this year. Sawrey also discussed the prospects of federal Medicaid cuts, the upcoming state budget process and a new sports caucus.
  • After a decade of being led by longtime Sen. Dan Blue, Democrats in the state Senate decided to elect a new leader this year. Sen. Sydney Batch became Senate minority leader last month. She鈥檚 a family law attorney who represents western Wake County since she was first elected to the House in 2018.Batch joined the 瓜神app Politics Podcast to talk about her approach to the leadership role, the potential for Democrats to impact legislation, and the upcoming budget process.
  • As state lawmakers debate how much money is needed for the latest Helene recovery package, Gov. Josh Stein鈥檚 administration is making the case for $1.07 billion to help western North Carolina rebuild. Matt Calabria, director of the newly created Governor鈥檚 Recovery Office for Western North Carolina (GROW NC), spoke with 瓜神app's Colin Campbell about Stein鈥檚 Helene funding proposal, the state of federal recovery funding, and the biggest needs five months after the storm. Calabria also explained how his new organization will differ from the state's sluggish hurricane recovery programs from past storms.
  • Raleigh-based Republican consultant Carter Wrenn has had a front-row seat to decades of political history. He鈥檚 worked for the campaigns of U.S. Sen. Jesse Helms and Ronald Reagan starting in the 1970s.He鈥檚 now written a book on his experience that offers an inside look at some key moments and controversial figures in politics. He spoke with 瓜神app's Colin Campbell about the book, 鈥淭he Trail of the Serpent: Stories from the Smoke-Filled Rooms of Politics,鈥 and on some aspects of his political work that he鈥檚 come to regret.
  • This is the fifth episode in a new season of our Main Street NC series. We're visiting communities across the state to hear from local leaders about the positives going on in their towns, and the challenges they face.Midway is one of North Carolina's newer towns formed to avoid becoming part of a neighboring city. The town in Davidson County that borders Winston-Salem boasts one of the lowest property tax rates in the state, while using its planning and zoning powers to limit suburban sprawl. That strategy has so far avoided the development controversies that impacted the similar town of Summerfield, but Midway offers a case study in how to form a town to cautiously manage growth. 瓜神app spoke with Mayor John Byrum about how the town was created in 2006 and what's happened there since.
  • This is the fourth episode in a new season of our Main Street NC series. In the coming months, we鈥檒l be visiting communities across the state to hear from local leaders about the positives going on in their towns, and the challenges they face.The Beaufort County town of Aurora, population 450, is one of a number of rural communities staking their economic futures on industrial park developments designed to attract employers. Longtime Mayor Clif Williams has been working for years on a 25-acre industrial park that will bring more jobs and a community college campus to the town that's seen a declining population 鈥 despite a thriving phosphate mine nearby that employs hundreds of people.瓜神app spoke with Williams about the project, and other initiatives to bring growth to Aurora.
  • This is the third in a new season of our Main Street NC series. We're visiting communities across the state to hear from local leaders about the positives going on in their towns, and the challenges they face.Historically Black neighborhoods in southeast Raleigh are rapidly changing, as older homes get torn down to make way for pricey new houses -- and many longtime residents are being pushed out by gentrification. 瓜神app visits southeast Raleigh to look at the shift and the city's efforts to create affordable housing and manage the growth pressures. Colin Campbell visits a barbershop and new restaurant and spoke with community activist Octavia Rainey and City Councilman Corey Branch.