For months, we’ve struggled with how to rate North Carolina in
the 2012 race between President Obama and former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney.
In our first electoral map predictions,
we put it into the “toss up” category but the longer we looked at the
states with which it shared that rating, the more it looked like the one
state that didn’t belong. And so, we are moving North Carolina from
“toss up” to “lean Romney” today.
Here’s why.
President
Obama was the first Democrat since 1976 — and the first non-Southerner
since 1960 — to win the Tarheel State at the presidential level.
And
he won it by .3 points or roughly 14,000 votes (out of more than 4
million cast). That narrow victory was in spite of the fact that Obama
heavily outspent Sen. John McCain (Ariz.) in the state —
as he did in virtually every swing state — and rode one of the best
Democratic years in North Carolina ever. (In 2008, Democrats won the
governorship and ousted GOP Sen. Elizabeth Dole.)
Four years later, North Carolina looks likely to revert to its past support for Republican nominees. (Between Jimmy Carter’s
win in North Carolina in 1976 and Obama’s in 2008, the Democratic
presidential nominee averaged a measly 42.9 percent in the Tarheel
State.)
For starters, the state’s unemployment rate (as of May) stood at 9.4 percent — more than a point higher than the national average and 48th nationally.
Then
there is the alleged sexual harassment scandal surrounding the North
Carolina Democratic Party that has led to the resignation — and
unresignation — of the party’s chairman. (Not kidding. That happened.) And then there is the indictment of three aides to retiring Gov. Bev Perdue’s (D) campaign. And the ongoing
tensions between organized labor and the Obama campaign for the
decision to put the Democratic National Convention in a right-to-work
state. (Continues here)
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