From the category archives:

Election 2008

Add two politicians to the list of the disgruntled after last night’s 101-87 loss to UNC.

Durham mayor Bill Bell has to sport a Carolina blue sweatshirt at Monday’s City Council meeting and make the trip down Tobacco road for dinner at the Lantern Restaurant  hosted by Chapel Hill mayor Kevin Foy, as per the agreed upon terms of a friendly wager.  Foy would have had to don Duke blue and attended a show at the Durham Performing Arts Center had the Blue Devils come out on top. But alas, it was not meant to be.

More surprisingly, President Barack Obama had the Blue Devils on his mind Wednesday in a meeting with 16 North Carolina reporters about issues that will impact the state in the coming year. The N&O reported:

“Duke-North Carolina. Duke-North Carolina. Duke-North Carolina,” Obama interjected [in a question about what was on North Carolinian's minds that day].

ON BASKETBALL: “Let me start with the most interesting question. Look, obviously Duke is coming off of one of the worst losses it’s had in several years, and just squeaking by Miami, is looking a little vulnerable. But North Carolina has shown to have a few flaws as well, so it depends on how hard Coach K was running the players this week and how they respond.”

Unfortunately for Duke, Obama didn’t offer any clear plan on how to contain Ty Lawson. Maybe next year if the economic crisis is solved.

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Photo Credit: The Associated Press

Photo Credit: The Associated Press

There’s nothing more exciting than a snow day—especially when it happens to coincide with an historic presidential inauguration.

Nielsen ratings show that more than 51 percent of households in the Raleigh-Durham television market tuned in to watch the inauguration of President Barack Obama Jan. 20. In comparison, the overall ratings for the country were around 30 percent. The Triangle ratings were the highest concentration of viewers in the country—higher even than Obama’s hometown of Chicago.

As the (Raleigh) News & Observer reported:

Local stations were thrilled with the “Snowbama effect.”

John Idler, general manger of WTVD, said the ABC station’s numbers — 15.9 percent of households — were higher than expected. He attributed that to the fact that people had “more time to watch.” WRAL had the highest rating in the market — 17.9 percent — during the noon to 12:15 p.m. period when Obama took the oath. (A ratings point equals about 10,800 homes.)

Steve Hammel, general manager of the CBS affiliate, said such viewership is higher than on most Super Bowl Sundays.

Duke students, however, weren’t quite as lucky as Wake County and Durham County public school kids: the University operated on a regular class schedule for Inauguration Day.

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Updated 6:35 p.m., January 27

Former President Bill Clinton returned to North Carolina this morning for the first time since the now-mythic primary battle between his wife/current Secretary of State Hilary Clinton and President Barack Obama.

Shawn Rocco/The N&O
Shawn Rocco/The N&O

The (Raleigh) News and Observer reported this morning:

The last time Raleigh saw Bill Clinton, he was standing in the bed of an antique Ford pickup, wrapping up a furious 11-city barnstorm.

Gesturing with his fist, he insisted that North Carolina voters would start an earthquake that would send Hillary Rodham Clinton to the White House — a trick he suggested President Barack Obama couldn’t pull off.

Luckily, however, the former president, who got himself into hot water in the midst of the campaign for overstepping his bounds, seems to have let go of his past beef with the former Illinois Senator and changed his tone. Speaking in front a packed audience at North Carolina State University as part of the NCSU’s Millennium Lecture Series, organized by N.C.’s former first lady, Mary Easley, Clinton lauded the ascendency of the nation’s first black president.

The N&O reported:

“The number one fact of life in the modern world and the most important thing about the election of President Obama,” he said, is a sense of “communitarianism” that requires people to get along because their futures are bound together.

“It is possible to escape the burden of our history, because this is not a biracial country anymore, and we don’t see ourselves that way anymore,” he said. “We are we multi-racial, multi-ethnic, multi-religious. … We haven’t exactly moved to the left so much as we’ve moved forward together.”

For those who didn’t make it to the 10:30 event, the speech is being broadcast on UNC-TV tonight at 9 p.m.

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by Ryan Brown

They came from all over the United States: from Durham to Denver to Detroit, from George Bush’s Texas and Barack Obama’s Illinois, from every precinct and campaign office and state party headquarters. Many traveled for days by bus or train; others walked from as far away as Virginia and Maryland. All waited in line for hours Tuesday morning as the temperatures plunged below freezing in the nation’s capitol.

But for many would-be attendees of the 56th Presidential Inauguration, this tenacity would not be enough. While more than a million people flooded the National Mall for Barack Obama’s first speech as U.S. President, an unknown logistical snafu left tens of thousands of others stranded outside the Capital gates.

I was among the ticketed guests who never made it to the actual events, and witnessed the chaotic crowd mismanagement firsthand.

Like most Inauguration-goers, my day began early. I was on the Metro by 6 a.m., but it was already packed to standing-room only. As the train clattered toward downtown from the Maryland suburbs, a man near me yelled out “this train is headed for the promised land!” The car dissolved in laughter, but there was also a strange seriousness to the moment. We were, we all knew, about to witness history.

Well, that was my plan.

After getting off the train at Union Station, I followed the heavy crowds making for the National Mall. In my hand was a purple ticket–the coveted pass that put me among the 240,000 attendees granted access to the grassy area just beyond the Capital steps. As I got closer, I followed signs for purple ticket holders, but it wasn’t long before I was caught in a crush of people all after the same thing as me–a place to line up and wait.

We soon realized there was no such place. But it was no matter. All around me, throngs of the warmly dressed and over-caffeinated milled excitedly. We all had tickets. We had all been waiting since sunrise. The situation might look chaotic, but it would sort itself out.

So we thought. As minutes turned to hours, the crowd never moved, and it certainly never became the line we all thought it would. Instead, I watched nervously as 9 a.m.—the supposed opening time for the ticketed gates—passed, then 10, and finally 11. Four hours after getting in line, I finally hit the eject button and made for the exit. On my way out, I passed block after block of ticket-holders, some chanting “Barack Obama 2008, let us in the purple gate!”; others waving their unused tickets above their heads angrily.

Around noon, The Washington Post quoted Police Chief Phillip Morse saying, “There’s nobody that didn’t get to see the inauguration today who had a ticket.” Morse has since reversed his prognosis, but there is yet no official word on what went wrong this morning. As for me, I’m staying inside and out of the crowds for the rest of the day.

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North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper would be a strong candidate to face Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.) in the 2010 U.S. Senate election, according to a poll conducted by Research 2000. Cooper, a Democrat who was recently reelected to his third term, is best known on campus for dismissing the charges against the three indicted members of the 2005-2006 men’s lacrosse team. He declared the players innocent at an April 2007 press conference. Cooper touted his dismissal of the lacrosse charges in a television advertisement during his most recent campaign.

The Research 2000 poll, which was published on the liberal blog Daily Kos, predicts that Burr could be in for a close race. He leads against Cooper 45% to 43%. The poll also predicts a tight contest if former state treasurer Richard Moore is nominated by the Democrats.

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President-elect Barack Obama won the Tar Heel state by a 14,912 vote margin, according to the (Raleigh) News & Observer. The final tally by the State Board of Elections showed that he received 49.7 percent of the vote against Sen. John McCain’s 49.38 percent. All provisional votes have been counted and the results will become offical after the State Board of Elections meets Tuesday in Raleigh.

14,912 votes.

To put that number in perspective, consider that Duke has approximately 6,400 total undergraduates and 74.8 percent of those students indicated that they supported Obama in The Chronicle’s Undergraduate Survey. Duke voters didn’t decide the election, but they certainly made an impact in North Carolina.

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Obama may pick up another electoral vote

November 12, 2008

President-elect Barack Obama may add one more electoral vote to his tally, raising the total to 365, once the counting concludes in Nebraska, the New York Times reports. Though Sen. John McCain won the state with 57% of the vote, Obama is currently leading in the area around Omaha. Nebraska, like New Hampshire, allocates its [...]

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Who will the Republicans nominate in 2012?

November 10, 2008

This was a topic of significant discussion at the N.C. GOP Victory 2008 Election Night Party in Raleigh after an Obama victory began to look inevitable. Some of the names that were thrown around:
1. Gov. Sarah Palin, Alaska —The conservative base loves her. McCain called her “one of the best campaigners I’ve ever seen” in [...]

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