New: The Story Behind the No Good, Horrible, Very Bad Day North Carolina Democrats Had

AP Photo/Makiya Seminera

As my colleague Ward Clark reported earlier, it was a big day for the Republican-controlled General Assembly in North Carolina, with the House and Senate overriding Democrat Gov. Josh Stein's veto of HB 805, a bill that, among other things, codifies the definition of man and woman in state law.

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What's especially interesting here is that, unlike in the Senate, which has a veto-proof supermajority, the House is short one vote courtesy of the 2024 elections. But one House Democrat, Rep. Nasif Majeed, voted along with Republicans to override the veto, saying afterwards, "I had some moral issues about that and I had to lean on my values."

Unfortunately for House and Senate Democrats, seven more of Stein's 14 vetoes were overridden Tuesday (the six others presumably will be tried at a later point) with the help of some of their fellow Democrats, including one that allows for private school teachers to be armed and another that calls for better cooperation between sheriffs' offices and ICE:

The GOP has achieved success with one gun-related override. House Bill 193 is now law, allowing private schools to permit teachers, parents or volunteers to carry guns on campus and essentially function as security guards.

[...]

House Bill 318 is now law and requires local sheriff's offices to cooperate more closely with the federal government's mass deportation effort. The bill also requires sheriffs to detain accused illegal immigrants for up to 48 hours after they would have normally been released — a measure Stein says is unconstitutional. 

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The lone House Democrat who voted to override the veto of HB 318, Rep. Carla Cunningham, went off in a speech on the House floor, at some points sounding like a pro-border security Republican in the process.

This led to members of the gallery attempting to shut her up, and at least one House Democrat, Deb Butler, tried to do the same. But House Speaker Destin Hall (R) cleared the way for Cunningham to continue:

Read excerpts from her speech below (it went on for roughly six minutes):

The full speech can be read here.

Predictably, some of her colleagues are already insinuating that Cunningham is a racist, but she's used to it, having voted with Republicans on illegal immigration-related bills before.

All in all, it was a normal one for North Carolina Democrats on the whole who, this time around, have their colleagues - and not Republicans - to blame for losing. Again:

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Bless their hearts.

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