This column was published in the Wilson Times Sept.
7, 2019.
North Carolina Democrats are
entitled to feel good about themselves after two successful elections. In 2016,
their gubernatorial candidate, Roy Cooper, won the governor’s seat, but his
effectiveness was stymied by powerful personalities in the state legislature,
who held a veto-proof majority and used a lame-duck session in December 2016 to
pare away powers traditionally wielded by the state’s chief executive, leaving
Cooper as a governor with relatively few executive powers.
In 2018, Democrats set their
sights on taking enough legislative seats away from the Republicans to make the
Democratic governor’s veto power an actual power. Democrats succeeded in what
has been called a “wave election,” and Cooper soon made it clear that he wouldn’t
be shy about vetoing legislation he didn’t like. Democrats won nine previously
GOP seats in the House and six formerly GOP seats in the Senate, enough to
prevent overrides of his vetoes.
But Democratic officials
have made some strategic errors since last year’s election. Gov. Cooper
misjudged the tenacity of the GOP legislative leaders. As usual this year, the
legislature’s budget and the governor’s budget did not match. Among other
expenditures that they disagreed on were teacher salaries and expansion of
Medicaid.
Cooper found the
legislators’ budget unacceptable, so he vetoed it. He called for negotiations
with the GOP leadership. Speaker of the House Tim Moore and Senate Majority
Leader Phil Berger have essentially told Cooper, “Go negotiate yourself.”
Republicans have done all
they can to minimize gubernatorial powers, and Cooper’s adamant demand for
negotiations on the budget is going nowhere, adding to the GOP’s aim to make
the governor appear irrelevant. That perception won’t help Cooper win
re-election next year.
GOP leaders displayed their shrewdness
and strategic thinking by introducing individual parts of the legislature’s
vetoed budget and bringing these individual bills up for a vote. Piecemeal is a
poor way to plan spending, but it can have some political effectiveness. Among
the popular bills passed while this stalemate continues is one giving raises to
state employees — raises that had been on hold because of Cooper’s budget veto.
Cooper is likely headed for
a difficult re-election bid in 2020. President Trump carried North Carolina in
2016, with Cooper’s success (thanks to then-Gov. Pat McCrory taking a more
conservative turn after taking office, having campaigned as a pragmatic
moderate in 2012). Being out-played by legislative leaders is not Cooper’s only
political problem in 2020.
As Hurricane Dorian aims for
the N.C. coast, the Cooper administration has spent only seven percent of
Federal Emergency Management Agency block grants to aid recovery from last
year’s Hurricane Florence. Cooper says the problem is that the feds have not issued
rules and standards for spending block grants to help Florence victims. That
may be true, but the Cooper administration has done a poor job of explaining
exactly what the problem is and how the governor aims to fix it.
Cooper may also come to regret
another veto he issued, this one on a bill requiring North Carolina sheriffs to
cooperate with Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention requests. Some
newly elected Democratic sheriffs, including sheriffs in urban counties have
announced they will not do ICE’s work for them, but in a generally conservative
state that has been dramatically changed by hundreds of thousands of
immigrants, many of them undocumented, cooperation with ICE doesn’t sound so
bad to many voters. Expect this issue to be discussed in the 2020 election for
governor.
Cooper has found himself
outfoxed by a strategic-thinking GOP while he has focused on playing to the
Democratic base.
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