REPUBLICANS ON STATE
BOARD OF ELECTIONS
INTENT ON STOPPING
SUNDAY VOTING
By Cash Michaels
Contributing writer
When the five-member State Board of Elections met for it’s first session of 2026 last Tuesday, it was clear that the Republican majority was still intent on eliminating Sunday early voting in counties across the state.
It did. By a party-line vote, the GOP-led board voted to eliminate Sunday voting for the upcoming March primaries in those counties where the issue has not been decided, in addition to eliminating on-campus early voting sites at NC A&T State University and other Guilford County campuses.
Students from NC A&T demonstrated with protest signs at the meeting even before the controversial decision was made.
When it came to Sunday voting, it was also clear that African-American voters who looked forward to what has become known over the years as “Souls to the Polls,” where black churches would load up their church vans with congregants after service, and take them to the nearest early voting site so that they could cast their ballots en masse, were intent on protecting what they see is their right to legally vote on the day of their closing.
But because most black voters are Democrats, Republican lawmakers have tried to kill Sunday voting.
During the SBOE meeting Tuesday, early voting plans for the March primaries were being reviewed when Sunday voting, once again was raised. Republicans have tried to eliminate Sunday voting in the past because of its popularity in black churches, but their efforts to stop the practice were always stymied by court orders that determined those efforts to be racially biased and unconstitutional.
Republicans, in turn, have tried to argue that poll workers deserve a day of rest given an already mandated six-day early voting schedule. But advocates, like SBOE Board members Jeff Carmon and Sioban Miller - both Democrats - countered that the right to vote to African-Americans, especially in the South, was precious, and should be maintained, especially on Sundays if that allows black citizens to execute their right.
"My father, a Vietnam vet, fought for this country — and, he reminded me last night, came home to a country where he still was treated as a second-class citizen," Carmon told his fellow board members. "So he charged me to come in here today and fight."
Carmon then challenged the SBOE Republican chairman.
"At our first meeting with you as chair, you stated you want to have a fair election, make voting easy and make sure the law is followed and make sure that there is trust in the election system,”Carmon told SBOE Chairman Francis De Luca. De Luca didn’t respond.
But fellow Republican SBOE member Stacy Eggers IV then answered Carmon, saying, "I agree with your sentiments, but we reached a different conclusion.”
The SBOE’s the Democratic member, Siobhan Miller, then made lear that per her personal knowledge, the public has accepted Sunday voting, so why should Republicans want to end it.
"I got 222 emails just yesterday, and I've gotten over 1,000 in the last couple of weeks, and I didn't hear from anyone that said we shouldn't have more voting sites, we shouldn't have Sundays," Millen said. "Every single one, from people that reached out and used their First Amendment right to petition their government, wanted to keep college voting, wanted to keep Sunday voting."
But in the end, when the vote was taken, Sunday voting was defeated.
Spectators at the SBOE meeting also knew that on-campus early voting sites would also be voted down, and loudly let Republicans on the board hear their displeasure. They were warned by SBOE Chairman DeLuca to quiet down, but Democrat Carmon spoke up in their defense.
"I think they should be able to hold their signs up, as long as it's not blocking someone's view," Carmon said. 'We don't have public comment. And they are here, and they want us to know why."
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FORMER ST. AUG. BOARD
CHAIRS NO LONGER
SERVING, ACCORDING TO
REPORT
By Cash Michaels
Contributing writer
A Raleigh television station has reported that two former chairmen of beleaguered St. Augustine’s University (SAU) in Raleigh are no longer members of the trustees board of the small historically black Episcopalian institution, as a condition of a loan agreement to cover its outstanding debts.
WRAL-TV reports that as of January 7th, both former St. Aug. Trustee Board chairmen James Perry and Brian Boulware were “ousted” from continued trustee board membership “…as part of a deal with an investment group providing a financial lifeline…. that also offers protection to the school’s valuable Raleigh property against debt claims.”
That investment group is reportedly Self-Help Venture Fund, which, according to WRAL-TV, agreed just within the last two weeks to “…to take over millions of dollars in debt owed by the university, which has been grappling with falling enrollment amid a battle over its accreditation and findings of weak controls over financial reporting."
This reporter confirmed that both Perry and Boulware were no longer listed on the school’s trustee board webpage. WRAL reports that change was made “as of Wednesday (January 7th).” The webpage did not indicate why they were no longer listed, or when they were removed.
The removals are notable because both Perry and Boulware led the university’s trustee board during a controversial period when SAU fell into serious financial and management difficulties, resulting in millions of dollars in lawsuits and failure to pay numerous obligations, including federal back taxes, that made for unpleasant headlines, and led to SAU losing its permanent academic accreditation twice, along with an 81% reduction in campus enrollment by the beginning of its 2025-26 school year.
SAU has had to employ remote learning online in order to cut costs and maintain any student enrollment, after having a graduation class last May of just 25 students. The school also had to win a court injunction to hold onto its academic accreditation while it fights in court to permanently retain it.
According to WRAL-TV, the new financial loan agreement reached between SAU and Self-Help Venture Fund, “…is expected to help address immediate financial obligations and help pay employees, according to messages from university leaders obtained by WRAL. As a condition of the deal, the lender asked for the removal of former Board of Trustees chairmen who were still serving on the board in emeritus roles, according to financial proposals obtained by WRAL”
Reportedly, James Perry told the TV station that he’s no longer serving on the SAU Trustee Board because his term had expired. Brian Boulware said that “…he hasn’t been notified of any removal and was trying to get answers himself.”
SAU’s current trustee board leadership consists of Chair Sophie Gibson of Atlanta, Ga., (the first female chair in the school’s 157 year history) and Vice Chair V. Lynette Mitchell of Williamstown, NJ, the first woman to ever serve in that capacity. Both were elected to board leadership in August 2025.
The school is still fighting to permanently retain its academic accreditation membership in Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges.
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HOW BLACKS IN NC
LOST GROUND IN
2025 (PART 2)
By Cash Michaels
Contributing writer
As 2026 proceeds, this is Part 2 of a look back at 2025 that raises important questions for African-Americans in North Carolina about how much social and political capital was lost last year, and whether much, if any, can be regained in the coming year.
According to a new study from UNC researchers, one-in-four Black middle school students have had thoughts of suicide, 1-in-6 “made plans to take their own lives, and 1-in-10” actually made a suicide attempt.
In 2025, the Trump Administration moved to permanently close the U.S. Dept. of Education. Maurice “Mo” Green, Democratic state superintendent of NC Dept. of Public Instruction, issued a statement on X saying, “Dismantling the U.S. Department of Education raises significant concerns for our state’s schools, as federal funding represents nearly 11% of our education budget and supports over 14,000 public school positions.These funds are critical for all of our students, particularly our most vulnerable such as those with disabilities and from low-income families.”
On May 3rd, a class of only 25 students at embattled St. Augustine’s University (SAU) in Raleigh received their diplomas, amid controversy over lost accreditation, and a long expected lawsuit filed by a former president Meanwhile the outstanding debt at the small HBCU continued to mount, forcing SAU to start the 2025 semester totally with remote classes on online. Its interim president left, and questions about SAU’s future grew.
Now that President Trump’s so-called “One Big Beautiful Bill” has been passed by Congress and signed into law, political observers, even here in North Carolina, say those living on the margins, especially in the black community, will suffer most because of the largest spending cuts ever, approximately $1 trillion, to the nation’s social safety net.
Dr. Charity Oyedeji, a black Duke University School of Medicine sickle cell anemia hematology researcher, told media outlets across the nation that she received a letter from the federal National Institutes of Health on June 16th, informing her that her $750,000 grant was being slashed. That was bad enough, but the language used in the missive as to why, citing diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI), was “racist.”
In 2025, the world lost several black notables whose contributions to American life were undeniable.
Black Mountain, NC Grammy Award winning singer Roberta flack passed away at the age of 88. She ill forever be known for the classic ballads “Killing Me Softly with His Song” and “The First Time Ever I Saw His Face.”
Noted Charlotte defense Attorney James E. “Fergie” Ferguson II, who co-founded North Carolina’s first integrated law firm, worked to successfully desegregate public schools in Charlotte and across the nation, and served as defense attorney for the later exonerated Wilmington Ten, among other noteworthy accomplishments, died at the age of 82.
He was an inspiration to many young black civil rights attorneys, like Democratic NC Supreme Court Associate justice Anita Earls, who was sadly diagnosed with breast cancer as 2025 ended, but announced that she will continue her reelection bid in 2026.
Another important figure in North Carolina history was U.S. Air Force Major Gen. (Retired) Joseph McNeil of Wilmington at age 83. McNeil, along with three other students at NC A&T University in Greensboro, jumpstarted the stalled civil rights movement in 1961 by violating racial segregation laws by having lunch at an all-white lunch counter in Greensboro in February 1961.
Black voters in North Carolina’s northeastern “Black Belt” counties lost their case against being racially gerrymandered by the NC General Assembly, and with it, the First Congressional District when the Republican-led state legislature redistricted to create a majority GOP district to give Pres. Trump a solid majority in Congress.
The NY Times reports reports that black joblessness rises for the first time in two years because of Trump Administration anti-DEI policies. Black unemployment also rises because the 43 day federal government shutdown.
During that shutdown, millions of poor people suffered when their federal SNAP benefits are cut.
State Rep. Cecil Brockman is forced to resign from the NC General Assembly because of child sex crimes allegations. He is replaced by a white High Point city councilwoman, cost the NC Legislative Black Caucus one member, diminishing its power.
Republican-led county boards of election across the state vote to do away with Sunday early voting that is popular with black “souls to the polls” voters. In Greensboro, the county BOE also votes to do away with early voting sites on the campus of HBCU NC A&T State University.
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