2018 Election Flyer

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

2018 Election Flyer PAMLICO COUNTY DEMOCRATIC PARTY Candidate Roster Tess Judge NC House, District 6 for General Election I am running because the November 6, 2018 people of our District deserve a tireless representative who will listen, and be responsive to Ginger Garner their concerns and will provide NC Senate, District 2 timely constituent services. I have the experience and passion to As a native North Carolinian be an effective voice in Raleigh. The people of Northeastern North and 20-year resident of Carteret Carolina deserve to have more educational opportunities, more County, Ms. Garner is ready to serve access to health care and more money in their pockets. For more District 2 in the North Carolina Senate information visit tessjudge.com. and initiate common sense con- versations based on moderate core Anita Earls values and bipartisan action and partnership. North NC Supreme Court Carolinians deserve a fiscally responsible government Anita Earls is a civil rights attorney committed to balancing a budget, supporting sustainable with 30 years’ experience litigating job creation, protecting our coast and fishing industry, and voting rights and other civil rights investing in education, new technology, and infrastructure cases in partnership with community to ensure a prosperous future for coastal North Carolinians based organizations. She was the in Carteret, Craven, and Pamlico counties. For more info founder and Executive Director of the visit gingergarnernc.com. Southern Coalition for Social Justice, a non-profit legal advocacy organization Sally Truitt Belangia in Durham, North Carolina. Anita previously has served on the North Carolina State Board of Board of Commissioners Elections and the North Carolina Equal Access to Justice I am a native of Pamlico County Commission. Anita has taught as an adjunct professor at the and have lived in Oriental all my University of Maryland and the University of North Carolina life. I have been employed with a law schools, and in the African and African-American Studies local bank for 39 years. I am cur- Department at Duke University. Currently she is teaching rently the branch manager. Non- attorneys in the Shriver Center’s Racial Justice Training Institute. prots and civic organizations keep In 2011 Anita received the national NAACP’s Civil Rights me busy. Member of the Rotary Club, Woman’s Club, Champion Award. In 2017 she received a “Defenders of Justice” Oriental United Methodist Church, Pamlico County Community award from the North Carolina Justice Center. For more Foundation, Dottie Gray Ambulance Fund, Pamlico County information visit earls4justice.com. Chamber and many others. I have been the Mayor of Oriental for 3 years. Graduated from Pamlico Community College with Democratic Candidates for NC Court of Appeals an Associate’s Degree in General Oce Technology, graduated (You can vote for all three) from Mount Olive College with a BS in Business Administration Judge John Arrowood (Incumbent) and got a master’s degree from the University of Phoenix in Business Management. Some of the top priorities are Education, Allegra Collins Economic Development, protecting our sound and rivers, Toby Hampson promote jobs for people of all ages, promote tourism, preserving our farm lands, and promoting team work for all Unopposed Pamlico Democratic Candidates of Pamlico County. We live in a beautiful place. I have a lot to on the November Ballot be thankful for and hope to help with all the Pamlico County Steve Hollowell - Clerk of Superior Court Board of Commissioners goals for the future. Scott Thomas - District Attorney Pamlico County Democratic Party Headquarters Carl Ollison - Board of Commissioners District 4 13626 Main St Bayboro.
Recommended publications
  • Initial Report of the NORTH CAROLINA EQUAL ACCESS to JUSTICE COMMISSION
    The Initial Report of the NORTH CAROLINA EQUAL ACCESS TO JUSTICE COMMISSION MAY 2008 Table of Contents Acknowledgements . 4 Letter from the Chief Justice . 5 Preface: Real People, Real Injustice . 6 Executive Summary . 8 I. History of the Commission . 10 II. Accomplishments of the Commission to Date . 14 III. The Equal Access to Justice Summit . 17 IV. Initiatives in Other States . 43 V. Moving Forward . 49 VI. Commission Priorities . 52 Appendix I: Members of the Original Commission . 53 Appendix II: Original Order Establishing and Charging the Commission . 54 Appendix III: Resolution of the North Carolina Equal Access to Justice Commission Regarding Essential Funding for Indigent Civil Legal Services . 58 Appendix IV: Presentation by Keynote Speaker, Gene Nichol, then President of William & Mary University and Former Dean of UNC Law School . 60 Appendix V: “Why is Access to Justice Important?”—Opening Address by Thomas Lambeth, Former Director of the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation . 64 Appendix VI: Executive Summary of the ABA Resolution on Providing Counsel as a Matter of Right at Public Expense to Certain Low-Income Persons . 67 Appendix VII: Report to the ABA House of Delegates from the Task Force on Civil Access to Justice and Others Recommending Adopting the Resolution . 68 Appendix VIII: Access to Justice Resource Links on the Web . 84 Appendix IX: Summary of North Carolina Organizations Providing Legal Assistance to Low-Income People . 85 Appendix X: Summit Agenda . 87 Notes . 88 Acknowledgements The Initial Report of the North Carolina Equal Access to Justice Commission was written by Commission members Ken Schorr, Executive Director of Legal Services of Southern Piedmont, and Carol Spruill, Senior Lecturing Fellow and Associate Dean for Public Interest and Pro Bono at Duke Law School.
    [Show full text]
  • Elected Officials
    FEDERAL STATE ECRETARY OF TATE PRESIDENT NC GOVERNOR NC S S Joseph R. Biden (Dem) – 2024 Roy Cooper (Dem) – 2024 Elaine Marshall (Dem) – 2024 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. 20301 Mail Service Center PO Box 29622 Washington DC 20500 Raleigh NC 27699-0301 Raleigh NC 27626-0622 (202) 456-1414 (919) 814-2000 (919) 814-5400 www.secretary.state.nc.us www.whitehouse.gov governor.nc.gov UP OF UBLIC NSTRUCTION VICE-PRESIDENT NC LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR NC S . P I Kamala Harris (Dem) – 2024 Mark Robinson (Rep) – 2024 Catherine Truitt (Rep) – 2024 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. 20401 Mail Service Center 6301 Mail Service Center Washington DC 20500 Raleigh NC 27699-0401 Raleigh, NC 27699-6301 (202) 456-1414 (919) 814-3684 (984) 236-2100 www.ncpublicschools.org www.whitehouse.gov ltgov.nc.gov REASURER NC ATTORNEY GENERAL NC T US SENATE Josh Stein (Dem) – 2024 Dale R. Folwell (Rep) – 2024 Richard Burr (Rep) – 2022 9001 Mail Service Center 3200 Atlantic Ave. 217 Russell Senate Office Building Raleigh NC 27699-9001 Raleigh, NC 27604 Washington DC 20510 (919) 716-6400 (919) 814-4000 (202) 224-3154 www.ncdoj.gov www.nctreasurer.com www.burr.senate.gov NC AUDITOR ENERAL SSEMBLY Thom Tillis (Rep) – 2026 Beth A. Wood (Dem) – 2024 NC G A 113 Dirksen Senate Office Building, 20601 Mail Service Center Legislative Building Washington DC 20510 Raleigh NC 27699-0600 16 W Jones St.. Raleigh NC 27601 (202) 224-6342 (919) 807-7500 (919) 733-4111 www.tillis.senate.gov www.ncauditor.net www.ncleg.net ENATE NC COMMISSIONER OF AGRICULTURE NC S US HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Steve Troxler (Rep) – 2024 Senate District 5 st 1 District 1001 Mail Service Center Don Davis (Dem) – 2022 G.
    [Show full text]
  • Supreme Court of the United States
    No. _______ In The Supreme Court of the United States -------------------------- ♦ --------------------------- MARGARET DICKSON, et al., Petitioners, v. ROBERT RUCHO, et al., Respondents. -------------------------- ♦ -------------------------- ON PETITION FOR WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE SUPREME COURT OF NORTH CAROLINA -------------------------- ♦ -------------------------- PETITION FOR WRIT OF CERTIORARI -------------------------- ♦ -------------------------- Walter Dellinger Anita S. Earls Danielle Gray Counsel of Record Anton Metlitsky Allison J. Riggs O’MELVENY & MEYERS LLP George Eppsteiner 1625 Eye Street, N.W. SOUTHERN COALITION Washington, D.C. 20005 FOR SOCIAL JUSTICE (202) 383-5300 1415 Highway 54, Suite 101 [email protected] Durham, North Carolina 27707 [email protected] (919) 323-3380 [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] Counsel for Petitioners Counsel for Petitioners NAACP, et al. Dated: January 16, 2015 (Counsel Continued Inside Cover) THE LEX GROUPDC ♦ 1825 K Street, N.W. ♦ Suite 103 ♦ Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 955-0001 ♦ (800) 856-4419 ♦ Fax: (202) 955-0022 ♦ www.thelexgroup.com No. _______ Edwin M. Speas, Jr. John W. O’Hale Caroline P. Mackie POYNER SPRUILL LLP Post Office Box 1801 Raleigh, North Carolina 27602 (919) 783-6400 [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] Counsel for Petitioners Dickson, et al. Adam Stein TIN FULTON WALKER & OWEN, PLLC 312 West Franklin Street Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27516 (919) 240-7089 [email protected] Counsel for Petitioners NAACP, et al. THE LEX GROUPDC ♦ 1825 K Street, N.W. ♦ Suite 103 ♦ Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 955-0001 ♦ (800) 856-4419 ♦ Fax: (202) 955-0022 ♦ www.thelexgroup.com i QUESTIONS PRESENTED It is undisputed that in drawing legislative and congressional redistricting plans in 2011, the North Carolina General Assembly employed two race-based criteria as “safe harbors” and explicitly refused to consider any alternative plan that did not meet those criteria.
    [Show full text]
  • “The Only Clear Limitation on Improper Districting Practices”: Using One
    RIGGS FINAL (DO NOT DELETE) 4/14/2017 7:41 PM “THE ONLY CLEAR LIMITATION ON IMPROPER DISTRICTING PRACTICES”: USING THE ONE- PERSON, ONE-VOTE PRINCIPLE TO COMBAT PARTISAN GERRYMANDERING ∗ ALLISON J. RIGGS ANITA S. EARLS INTRODUCTION In 2013 and 2015, the North Carolina General Assembly, controlled by a Republican supermajority, passed local bills restructuring Wake County’s Board of Education and Board of County Commissioners, respectively. These bills were passed over the loud objection of the majority of the Wake County delegation and, indeed, the vast majority of the county’s voters. Wake County, home to the capital city of Raleigh and part of the state’s Research Triangle Park, has long been a progressive bastion in the state, with Democratic registration significantly outnumbering Republican registration in the county, and Democratic candidates regularly outperforming Republican candidates. With carefully manipulated district lines, those local bills would have ensured Republican control of both boards, despite the strong Democratic leaning in the county. Critically, in such a heavily Democratic county, the only way that the General Assembly could achieve such a drastic partisan skew was to overpopulate the Democratic-leaning districts and underpopulate the Republican-leaning districts, right up to what the legislature treated as a ten percent total deviation safe harbor. But the Supreme Court’s Copyright © 2017 Allison J. Riggs and Anita S. Earls. ∗ Anita Earls is the Executive Director of the Southern Coalition for Social Justice in Durham, North Carolina. Allison Riggs is a senior attorney at the Southern Coalition for Social Justice, specializing in voting rights. The authors of this article served as counsel for the organizational and individual plaintiffs in the Wake County cases discussed in this article.
    [Show full text]
  • Plaintiff-Appellants' Response to Motion
    No. 417P19 TENTH DISTRICT SUPREME COURT OF NORTH CAROLINA ******************************************** COMMON CAUSE, et al., Plaintiffs, v. DAVID LEWIS, IN HIS OFFICIAL From Wake County CAPACITY AS SENIOR CHAIRMAN 18 CVS 014001 OF THE HOUSE SELECT COMMITTEE ON REDISTRICTING, et al., Defendants. ******************************************** PLAINTIFFS-APPELLANTS’ RESPONSE TO LEGISLATIVE DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO RECUSE JUSTICE ANITA EARLS ******************************************** - i - INDEX TABLE OF AUTHORITIES .......................................................... ii ARGUMENT .................................................................................. 1 I. There Is No Overlap Between This Appeal and any Litigation in Which Justice Earls Served as an Attorney ............................................................................... 2 II. The North Carolina Democratic Party’s Financial Support for Justice Earls Does Not Warrant Recusal ................................................................................ 7 CONCLUSION ............................................................................ 10 CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE ..................................................... 13 - ii - TABLE OF AUTHORITIES Cases Page(s) Caperton v. A.T. Massey Coal Co., 556 U.S. 868 (2009) .............................................................. 2, 9 Cheney v. U.S. Dist. Court for D.C., 541 U.S. 913 (2004) .......................................................... 2, 3, 7 Common Cause v. Lewis, No. 18 CVS 014001, 2019 WL 4569584
    [Show full text]
  • DISTRICT COURT JUDGES: 4 Year Terms
    FEDERAL ELECTED OFFICIALS U.S. SENATE TERM 6 YEARS Thom Tillis (R) Term ends 2020 185 Dirksen Senate Office Bldg. Washington, DC 20510 (202) 224-6342 fax (202) 228-2563 Website: www.tillis.senate.gov 1840 Eastchester Drive, Suite 200 High Point, NC 27265 (336) 885-0685 fax (336)885-0692 Richard Burr (R) Terms ends 2022 217 Russell Senate Office Building Washington, DC 20510 (202) 224-3154 fax (202) 228-2981 Website: www.burr.senate.gov 2000 W First Street, Suite 508 Winston Salem, NC 27104 800-685-8916 (toll free) (336) 631-5125 U.S. CONGRESS (10th District) TERM 2 YEARS Patrick McHenry (R) Term ends 2020 2004 Rayburn House Office Building Washington, DC 20515 (202) 225-2576 fax (202) 225-0316 Website: https://mchenry.house.gov 1990 Main Avenue SE, PO Box 1830 Hickory, NC 28603 (800) 477-2576 / (828) 327-6100 fax (828) 327-8311 1/10/2020 NC STATE OFFICES 4 year Terms ending 2020 GOVERNOR Roy Cooper (D) Office of the Governor 20301 Mail Service Center Raleigh, NC 27699-0301 (919) 814-2000 website: http://governor.nc.gov LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR Dan Forest (R) 20401 Mail Service Center Raleigh, NC 27699-0401 (919) 814-3680 fax (919) 733-6595 website: http://ltgov.nc.gov SECRETARY OF STATE Elaine F. Marshall (D) P. O. Box 29622 Raleigh, NC 27626-0622 (919) 807-2000 website: www.sosnc.gov STATE AUDITOR Beth A. Wood (D) 20601 Mail Service Center Raleigh, NC 27699-0600 (919) 807-7500 fax (919) 807-7647 website: www.ncauditor.net STATE TREASURER Dale R.
    [Show full text]
  • Election 2020 TIMELINE: the Rise and Fall of Separation Lawsuits, Ballot Challenges, Statewide Races, of Powers in North Carolina
    The rise, fall of separate but equal government A crumbling republic? Election 2020 TIMELINE: The rise and fall of separation Lawsuits, ballot challenges, statewide races, of powers in North Carolina. much more! Check updates daily at: PAGE 12 carolinajournal.com FOR DAILY UPDATES VISIT CAROLINAJOURNAL.COM AN AWARD-WINNING JOURNAL OF NEWS, ANALYSIS, AND OPINION FROM THE JOHN LOCKE FOUNDATION CAROLINAJOURNAL.COM VOL. 29 • NO. 10 • OCTOBER 2020 • STATEWIDE EDITION PAYOUTCOME OF N.C. SUPREME ATTENTION! COURT RACES COULD ALTER POLITICAL LANDSCAPE FOR YEARS ing alley reopening lawsuit olinians in the years ahead, — that they’re likely to side says Jon Guze, director of le- with Cooper. gal studies at the John Locke But on Nov. 3, the pow- Foundation. er dynamics might shift. “Voters need to remem- KARI TRAVIS Three seats on the N.C. Su- ber that the North Carolina ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR preme Court are in conten- Supreme Court has become a tion, and three Republicans superlegislature,” Guze said. are jostling with Democrats “As a result of judicial doc- he most important for a place on the bench. GOP trines adopted in the second elections in North Car- candidates are a team, and half of the 20th century, the olina are the races for they’re running under one court now has the power to the N.C. Supreme Court. brand. uphold facially unconstitu- TSo pay attention! Conservatism. tional laws if a majority of Judges are easily forgot- Supreme Court Justice the justices approve of them ten amid presidential cam- Paul Newby, the only remain- on policy grounds, to strike paigns and Washington an- ing Republican on the court, down facially constitution- tics.
    [Show full text]
  • Advisory Committee
    Racial Justice Institute Advisory Committee The Racial Justice Institute Advisory Committee helps shape and guide the develop- ment of course curriculum, selection of cohort members, and evaluation of the Institute as well as its expanding alumni network. Aneel Chablani is Advocacy Director at Chicago Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights. In this role, Aneel works with Project Directors to ad- vance the mission and strategic direction of Chicago Lawyers’ Committee through systemic advocacy and impact litigation. Aneel began his legal career with the LAF in Chicago working in the areas of housing and consumer rights. Aneel also serves as faculty and team coach for the Institute. He is a graduate of Loyola University Chicago School of Law and the University of Notre Dame. Read more here. Anita Earls is the founding Executive Director of the Southern Coalition for Social Justice, a non-profit organization in Durham, North Carolina. A civil rights attorney with over 25 years’ experience, her work has involved addressing structural racism, protecting minority voting rights and furthering community empowerment. Caitlin Borgmann is the Executive Director of the ACLU of Montana, where she leads the organiza- tion’s legal, policy, communications, fund- raising, and administrative operations and programs. Before joining the ACLU-MT, Caitlin was a law professor at CUNY School of Law from 2004-2015 and a Senior Fel- low at the Columbia University Center for Gender & Sexuality Law from 2012-2013. Caitlin’s scholarship has focused on the respective roles and authority of the courts and the legislatures in protecting constitu- tional rights and about the role of fact-find- ing in constitutional rights cases.
    [Show full text]
  • Durham County Elected Officials
    Durham County Elected Officials Office Type Contest Name First Name Party Years Re-Election COUNTY DURHAM COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS HEIDI CARTER DEM 4 2020 COUNTY DURHAM COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS JAMES HILL DEM 4 2020 COUNTY DURHAM COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS BRENDA HOWERTON DEM 4 2020 COUNTY DURHAM COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS WENDY JACOBS DEM 4 2020 COUNTY DURHAM COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS ELLEN RECKHOW DEM 4 2020 COUNTY DURHAM COUNTY CLERK OF SUPERIOR COURT ARCHIE SMITH DEM 4 2022 COUNTY DURHAM COUNTY REGISTER OF DEEDS SHARON DAVIS DEM 4 2020 COUNTY DURHAM COUNTY SHERIFF CLARENCE BIRKHEAD DEM 4 2022 Office Type Contest Name First Name Party Years Re-Election DISTRICT DISTRICT ATTORNEY DISTRICT 14 SATANA DEBERRY DEM 4 2022 DISTRICT DURHAM SOIL AND WATER SUPERVISOR DAVID HARRIS 4 2022 DISTRICT DURHAM SOIL AND WATER SUPERVISOR NATALIE MURDOCK 4 2022 DISTRICT DURHAM SOIL AND WATER SUPERVISOR DANIELLE ADAMS 4 2020 DISTRICT NC DISTRICT COURT JUDGE DISTRICT 14 PATRICIA EVANS DEM 4 2022 DISTRICT NC DISTRICT COURT JUDGE DISTRICT 14 DAVE HALL DEM 4 2022 DISTRICT NC DISTRICT COURT JUDGE DISTRICT 14 CLAYTON JONES DEM 4 2022 DISTRICT NC DISTRICT COURT JUDGE DISTRICT 14 AMANDA MARIS DEM 4 2022 DISTRICT NC DISTRICT COURT JUDGE DISTRICT 14 SHAMIEKA RHINEHART DEM 4 2020 DISTRICT NC DISTRICT COURT JUDGE DISTRICT 14 DORETTA WALKER DEM 4 2022 Monday, December 23, 2019 1:26:27 AM Durham County Elected Officials DISTRICT NC DISTRICT COURT JUDGE DISTRICT 14 BRIAN WILKS DEM 4 2022 DISTRICT NC HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES DISTRICT 29 MARYANN BLACK
    [Show full text]
  • League of Women Voters of North Carolina: Litigation As a Tool for Action, 2011-2020
    League of Women Voters of North Carolina: Litigation as a Tool for Action, 2011-2020 INTRODUCTION Democracy wins today. Voters win today. This decision is the latest in a string of major federal rulings that send a clear message: Politicians have no business standing in the way of our right to vote. -- Mary Klenz, co-president of LWVNC, 7/29/2016 July 29, 2016 was a good day for the League of Women Voters and North Carolina, as a federal appeals court struck down North Carolina’s Voter Identification law saying its provisions, “target African-Americans with almost surgical precision”.1 As Klenz implied, this outcome was years in the making but, the League of Women Voters has proven to be a persistent advocate no matter how long it takes. The woman suffrage movement struggled and fought for seventy-two years before women won the right to vote through the Nineteenth Amendment to the US Constitution in 1920. To maintain the momentum of the woman suffrage movement, Carrie Catt launched the League of Women Voters (LWV) at the final convention of the National American Woman Suffrage Association on February 14, 1920, six months before the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment. On that day in Chicago, Illinois, Catt described her vision: “The League of Women Voters is not to dissolve any present organization but to unite all existing organizations of women who believe in its principles. It is not to lure women from partisanship but to combine them in an effort for legislation which will protect coming movements, which we cannot even foretell, from suffering the untoward conditions which have hindered for so long the coming of equal suffrage.
    [Show full text]
  • Elected Officials Guide
    RANDOLPH COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA Federal, State and Local Elected Officials Federal Offices ........................................................ 2 State Offices ............................................................ 3 Judges ...................................................................... 5 Randolph County Offices ........................................ 7 Municipal Offices .................................................. 11 Political Parties ...................................................... 20 North Carolina State Board of Elections Karen Brinson Bell, Executive Director P.O. Box 27255, Raleigh, NC 27611-7255 [email protected] Phone: 919-814-0700 Toll free: 866-522-4723 www.ncsbe.gov Randolph County Board of Elections Melissa T. Johnson, Director [email protected] 1457 N. Fayetteville St., Asheboro, NC 27203 Phone: 336-318-6900 Fax: 336-318-6903 [email protected] randolphcountync.gov/elections Randolph County Board Members 2 Year Appointment (2019-2021) Margaret Megerian - Chair Tiffany T. Alston - Secretary 175 E. Salisbury St. Asheboro, NC 27203 P.O. Box 4757, Archdale, NC 27263 336-625-1436 336-434-4303 [email protected] [email protected] Mary Joan Pugh Pierre “Pete” Oldham 668 Maple Ave. Asheboro, NC 2720 547 Shannon Rd., Asheboro, NC 27203 336-963-2715 336-629-4289 [email protected] Darren Allen 305 Dublin Rd., Asheboro, NC 27203 336-308-0083 [email protected] 1 FEDERAL OFFICES President 4 Year Term Joseph R Biden, JR (D) (2024) The White House 1600 Pennsylvania Ave NW, Washington, DC 20500 202-456-1414 whitehouse.gov Vice President 4 Year Term Kamala D Harris (D) (2024) The White House 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20500 202-456-1414 whitehouse.gov U.S. Senate 6 Year Term Thom Tillis (R) (2026) 521 Dirksen Senate Office Building, Washington, DC 20510 202-224-6342 310 New Bern Ave., Suite 122, Raleigh, NC 27601 919-856-4630 tillis.senate.gov Richard Burr (R) (2022) 217 Russell Senate Office Building, Washington, DC 20510 202-224-3154 2000 W.
    [Show full text]
  • In the United States District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina
    IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA ) NAACP-GREENSBORO BRANCH, ) MYRA ANN SLONE, and ) R. STEVE BOWDEN, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) 1:12CV111 ) THE GUILFORD COUNTY BOARD ) OF ELECTIONS, THOM TILLIS in ) his official capacity as ) Speaker of the North Carolina ) House of Representatives; ) PHILIP E. BERGER in his ) official capacity as ) President Pro Tempore of ) the North Carolina Senate; ) and THE STATE OF NORTH ) CAROLINA, ) ) Defendants. ) MEMORANDUM OPINION On February 7, 2012, Plaintiffs filed a Motion for a Preliminary Injunction (Doc. 12), seeking an interim remedy for alleged constitutional infirmities in North Carolina Session Law 2011-407 (“SL 2011-407”). Plaintiffs filed a brief in support of this motion (Doc. 13), Defendants filed a brief in opposition (Doc. 20), and Plaintiffs filed a reply brief (Doc. 23). The parties appeared before this court on February 17, 2012, to present oral argument. At that hearing, the parties fully addressed the merits of Plaintiffs’ Motion for a Preliminary Injunction (Doc. 12), and this court granted Plaintiffs’ motion Case 1:12-cv-00111-WO-JEP Document 39 Filed 03/14/12 Page 1 of 35 and stated that a memorandum opinion was forthcoming. This memorandum opinion sets forth the court’s reasoning for granting Plaintiffs’ Motion for a Preliminary Injunction. On February 24, 2012, this court entered an order (Doc. 36) setting forth an interim remedy, which is also described below.1 I. Background On July 28, 2011, the North Carolina General Assembly passed SL 2011-407, reducing the Guilford County Board of Commissioners from eleven to nine members and redrawing the district lines of Guilford County.
    [Show full text]