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North Carolina News You Can Use

VOTERHUB 2024

Opinion: Why North Carolina doctors are afraid of another Trump term

As a health care provider, I vividly remember what it was like when Donald Trump was president. He worked to dismantle the progress we had made in eliminating discrimination based on preexisting conditions, tried to take away preventive care coverage like lifesaving mammograms and colonoscopies, and railed against health care coverage for millions of Americans. 

VOTERHUB 2024 - Cardinal & Pine
Josh Stein

Josh Stein’s goal for North Carolina? ‘Make this a great state for everyone.’

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Stein sat on his front porch with Cardinal & Pine to lay out his priorities as he runs for governor of a state with challenges as real as its charms.  In his bid to move from North Carolina’s attorney general to its governor, Josh Stein has traveled the state with a message that many here […]
Woman mailing in her ballot

Mail-in voting made simple: What NC voters need to know

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Voting by mail in North Carolina is easy, but making sure your vote counts requires knowing the rules. Here’s a rundown of what you need to know, with answers to some of the most common questions.
VOTERHUB 2024 - Cardinal & Pine

Opinion: As a rural Ohioan, I see J.D. Vance for who he is

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Vance’s career has been built on a phony image of him as a product of and de facto spokesperson for poor, rural Appalachians, despite the fact that he was raised in a middle-class family in Middletown, Ohio – a city of about 50,000 people situated between Cincinnati and Dayton.
Social Media Misinformation

Social media misinformation is breaking Americans. Here’s how to spot it and stamp it out.

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AI, broken media, and negligent social media companies have made it easier than ever to reach millions of people with a big, fat lie. Don’t play into it. Here’s how to spot the misinformation.
VOTERHUB 2024 - Cardinal & Pine

The future of education in NC could be decided by the state Supreme Court

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If the past is any precedent, Justice Allison Riggs or Judge Jefferson Griffin will likely have a say over future decisions about the state’s public education system.