Keep special session to flood relief

Published December 9, 2016

Editorial by Winston-Salem Journal, December 5, 2016.

Republican Gov. Pat McCrory has called a special legislative session next week to consider a Hurricane Matthew relief package. That’s needed. But what’s not needed is for the session to take up packing the state Supreme Court.

McCrory finally and graciously conceded the governor’s race Monday to his Democratic opponent, Roy Cooper. McCrory had persisted in dragging out the race with groundless contentions of voting irregularities on the part of county boards of election ruled by his own party. Saturday, he even called on the State Bureau of Investigation to probe some voting in Bladen County, even though the GOP-dominated state-elections board had rejected a complaint made about voting there.

The last thing we needed from the governor who shamelessly signed the state’s 2013 voter suppression bill into law, most of which the Fourth Circuit of Appeals rightly struck down this past summer, was another voter-suppression push.

So his concession Monday was welcome.

Now, he can continue to salvage his legacy with the special legislative session. There is talk that, in addition to the governor’s righteous cause of flood relief, legislators may try to add two seats to the state Supreme Court to address a Democratic win that tipped that court in the Democratic favor.

Legislators would be within their state constitutional rights. But they would subvert the will of the voters.

http://www.journalnow.com/opinion/editorials/our-view-keep-special-session-to-flood-relief/article_77f16afe-0c3c-57c5-94f6-21b926833ed4.html

December 9, 2016 at 10:24 am
Richard L Bunce says:

"There is talk that" WSJ has gone #WagtheDog on this nonsense...

As for NC voter rules and #WagtheDog voter suppression dog whistle... the voting rules were well within the rules used in the other 49 States including ~14 including many Democratic Party majority States in the NE US with NO early voting days.

http://www.ncsl.org/research/elections-and-campaigns/absentee-and-early-voting.aspx

http://www.ncsl.org/research/elections-and-campaigns/same-day-registration.aspx

http://www.ncsl.org/research/elections-and-campaigns/straight-ticket-voting.aspx

http://www.ncsl.org/research/elections-and-campaigns/voter-id.aspx