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A trial over a federal lawsuit challenging North Carolina’s photo voter identification law has started. The trial began in Winston-Salem on Monday, more than five years after the NAACP sued over the voter ID law enacted by the Republican-dominated General Assembly.
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The NAACP alleges that North Carolina's photo ID requirement disproportionally impacts minority voters.
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Ahead of Japanese prime minister's visit, pharmaceutical company announces 680 jobs in Holly SpringsThe Japanese company FujiFilm Diosynth Biotechnologies announced Thursday that it's adding 680 jobs to a pharmaceutical manufacturing facility in Holly Springs.
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The high court will determine whether lawyers behind false claims of voter fraud can be sued for defamation.
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NC House Speaker Tim Moore says the legislature should add $300 million to the state's private school voucher program to address higher-than-expected demand for help paying tuition.
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Two of the Republican Party's biggest donors are hosting a fundraiser for Superintendent of Public Instruction candidate Michele Morrow.
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U.S. Reps. Kathy Manning of Greensboro and Valerie Foushee of Orange County spent several days in Israel last week. The trip was sponsored and paid for by the American Israel Education Foundation, an affiliate of AIPAC, which has funneled large campaign contributions to Manning, Foushee and most of North Carolina’s congressional delegation.
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A nonprofit run by Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson’s wife is winding down its primary operations.
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A federal judge says two lawsuits challenging how North Carolina legislators recently tightened same-day voter registration can proceed.
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Vice President Kamala Harris will open a campaign field office in uptown Charlotte Thursday.
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The N.C. Democratic party has raised $5.26 million for its state and federal campaign accounts. The state Republican Party, meanwhile, has raised over $3.34 million across its accounts.
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And propelled him into the Republican nomination for President for a third time. But not all Christians in the U.S. have such a positive view of the former President. Most Black Protestants have an unfavorable view of Trump (80%). And similar majorities in other religious groups, including atheists, agnostics, and Jews, also view him unfavorably.