Tuesday, May 26, 2026

THE CASH COMMENTARY FOR MAY 28, 2026

                                                                   CASH MICHAELS

FRAIDY CATS, FRAIDY CATS!

  by Cash Michaels


Here we go again.

Just when you thought Republicans might be through screwing around with voting in North Carolina, they prove us wrong by once again proposing to shorten the early voting period across the state right before the next election. They claim there are good reasons why this is necessary, like cost-cutting and having enough personnel.

But those of us who’ve lived here for a while, know the real deal.

NC Republicans have never given up trying to cheat the rules, no matter what the courts, or the polls say.

According to Pew Research in July 2024 (before the last presidential election):

62% of Republicans and Republican leaners said [early voting, mail-in balloting, absentee balloting] should only be available to those who have a documented reason for not voting in person on Election Day.

82% of Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents say early or absentee voting should be available to any voter without the need for an excuse.

Republicans just don’t want voting to be easy, or fair, for Democrats.

And Lord knows that is especially true for this November’s midterm elections, when Dems are projected to wipe the floor with the GOP from the halls of Congress to the seats in our legislature.

LET’S BE FRANK ALERT! LET’S BE FRANK ALERT!

It was just ten years ago when a federal court ruled that the Republican-led NC General Assembly’s 2013 voter photo ID law was racially discriminatory and “..targeted Black voters with almost surgical precision.”

And it was back in 2021 when the NC Democratic Party chairperson at the time, Bobbie Richardson, did not spare the rod about what the court testimony she heard revealed about Republican partisan redistricting.

        The evidence presented demonstrates that Republicans lied to their colleagues when they promised a fair and transparent redistricting process. They cheated by using secret maps and closed door strategy sessions, then destroyed the maps they used,” Richardson recalled.

But despite that testimony, those GOP-generated maps were approved, and used for the 2022 midterms.

Years of evidence from before the 2022 midterms and since, shows that whether its redistricting or voter ID, the GOP will stop at nothing to steal an election. The way Republicans here, and across the country, have always chosen to cripple Democratic voters is to take aim at the most loyal base of the Democratic Party.

Writer Bill Yeomans for the Alliance for Justice said it best in April, 2020:

A central tenet of Republican politics for decades… has been to win elections by making it difficult for their opponents to vote — more specifically, by blocking minority access to the ballot. Through enactment of laws that disproportionately burden minority voters (e.g., laws requiring photo identification, restricting early voting, limiting registration opportunities, and purging voter rolls), Republicans have carved out of the electorate the parts that don’t support them.”

Bill also forgot racial gerrymandering disguised as partisan gerrymandering, but he’s not wrong.

TRANSLATION - Republicans have historically tried to make voting difficult in North Carolina and other states for folks who look just like me!

Why? Because despite perennial disappointments and the way it tends to consistently fail the Black community, the Democratic Party still attracts at least 90-93% of our vote, especially from Black women. 

That party loyalty, and love of early voting because of the flexibility of banking our ballots days in advance of Election Day, is seen as a major threat to Republicans. So for them, whatever it takes!

Enough of us continue to vote “D” instead of “R” in election after election because we believe that we are in the best position to wake the party up one day to finally address our issues. Simply put, there are more Black  Democratic elected officials than there are elected Black Republicans, even after the conservative-led U.S. Supreme Court’s recent disastrous Louisiana Voting Rights Act decision a few weeks ago that could cost us plenty in Black congressional and legislative representation (In a surprise move Tuesday, the Republican-led South Carolina Senate voted NOT to redraw its one majority-minority Black voting district, thus saving longtime Democratic Rep. Jim Clyburn’s political bacon, for now. Many SC Republicans were actually rushing to redraw lines while primary early voting had already gotten underway! How damn greedy was that?).

Also on Tuesday, a federal three-judge panel stopped Alabama from using a new redistricting map that would not only give Republicans an unfair advantage in congressional races in the upcoming midterms, but “intentionally discriminated based on race” by drawing only one Black- majority district, not the two that legitimately existed before.

Oh yes, Democrats have frequently proven themselves to be the Keystone Cops of politics on many an occasion (as proven by that clumsy release of the DNC 2024 election autopsy report), but guess what? As negligent as they can be, I don’t see Democrats, as a party, actively trying to hurt me or my family like Republicans have proven to be infamous for.

I don’t see Democrats sinisterly trying to take my right to vote away; or threatening to send federal troops or ICE agents to voting precincts in Black communities to intimidate voters; or seizing the cast ballots of people of color in an effort to substantiate baseless accusations of cheating; or sending GOP operatives to polls in Black neighborhoods to intimate voters on Election Day so they will leave long voting lines in frustration; or sending out so-called “ballot-security” postcards to Black Democrats falsely warning them that they may face criminal charges if they’re caught voting in the wrong precinct; or actually sending out fliers throughout the Black community, or making robo-calls, deliberately giving Black voters the wrong information about Election Day, hoping that enough people who don’t always pay attention, will get confused and not vote at all.

I could go on, but you get the idea. 

And of course, I would never vote for a political party that was the home of the infamous Jesse Helms and his racist “white hands” ad he ran against Charlotte Mayor Harvey Gantt in the 1990 US Senate race, or today, in the age of Trump, has a candidate for the U.S. Senate in Kentucky named Andy Barr, who last week won his Republican primary with a campaign ad that had him looking directly into the camera and declaring, “It’s not a sin to be white…”

Something profoundly evil about a political party that allows racial campaigning and messaging like that today, let alone ever. So I can’t see myself stepping foot anywhere near voting for a Republican.

Simply put, Republicans, unlike Democrats today, are masters of racial politics, and have always targeted the loyal base of the Democratic Party with all sorts of unsavory shenanigans around election time, because Republicans, quite frankly, are afraid to honestly compete for the Black vote. 

Fraidy cat Republicans who are scared to come into the Black community and put their ideas for a better, more universally prosperous America to the test.

HELL NO, I don’t want anything to do with the Republican Party, especially now that, but for a handful, they’re willingly licking the boots of a confirmed criminal racist-in-chief who is using them like cheap checkers from a five-and dime store.

        As UNC Law Professor Gene Nichols, a man I deeply admire and respect, recently wrote about the NC Republican Party "not escaping their racial agenda" in the News and Observer op-ed: "I’m not sure much could be more horrifying than to take instruction on racial justice from the present president of the United States."

        But to be clear, Republicans have been targeting Black Democratic voters long before Donald Trump came on the political scene, with all sorts of voter suppression schemes here in North Carolina, including taking away early voting on Sundays in order to stop “Souls to the Polls” balloting, where Black churches would load up their church vans right after services, and take properly registered congregants to the nearest early voting site to cast their ballots.

Back in the day, Republicans had the nerve and gall to say that all voters should only be in church on Sundays worshipping the Lord. When enough folks cussed those ignorant GOP lawmakers out (Black churchgoers always voted after service, NOT during, Einstein), then Republicans came back with it was too expensive for county election boards to have early voting sites open seven days a week, and gave those local boards permission to close on Sundays. 

That scam has worked in some counties. 

But now there’s the prospect of  House Bill 66, sponsored by 22-year-old Republican Rep. Wyatt Gable of Onslow County, which if it becomes law, would immediately cut the current 17-day early voting period to just 13.

HB 66 states:

Not earlier than the second Monday before an election in which a voter seeks to vote and not later than 3:00 P.M. on the last Saturday before that election (which would be Monday, October 19 to Saturday, October 31st), the voter may appear in person only at the office of the county board of elections….,” is the language of the proposed state House legislation. “A county board of elections shall conduct early voting on the last Saturday before the election from 8:00 A.M. until 3:00 P.M." 

That bill, if made law, would automatically cut out one Sunday as an early voting option, giving folks only thirteen days of early balloting.

Then there’s Sen. Warren Daniel’s Senate Bill 1084, which if ratified, states:

          Not earlier than the second Thursday (October 22) before an election in which a voter seeks to vote and not later than 3:00 P.M. on the last Saturday (October 31) before that election, the voter may appear in person only at the office of the county board. A county board shall conduct early voting on the last Saturday before the election from 8:00 A.M. until 3:00 P.M." 

 He’d give us just ten days to cast our early ballots, with at least one Sunday for Souls to the Polls balloting.

Black Democrats like Sen. Natalie Murdock of Durham, said of Republican efforts to cripple Democratic early voting, “It is clear that if they don’t think folks are going to vote for them, they want to make it more difficult for them to vote.” 

Of course, Republican legislative leaders like Sen. Phil Berger and House Speaker Destin Hall are all for messing with Democratic voting as much as possible, especially for this midterm election.

But again, like his young colleague in the House, Sen. Daniel wants all of this to impact our upcoming early voting period for the November midterms. Which is odd, considering that in 2024 after years of not doing so, Trump and the GOP actually encouraged their voters, after seeing Democrats’ early voting success, to bank their votes early as well. Of the 4,223,734 total early votes cast statewide (5.7 million North Carolinians voted overall) that election, the NC GOP change in strategy garnered over 62,000 more early voters than Democrats.

As writer Ed Kilgore put it in his June 2023 piece for The Intelligencer:

The idea is to exploit convenience voting wherever Republicans can’t stop it or roll it back. This two-track strategy is striking; GOP politicians are still treating anything other than in-person Election Day voting as corrupt, while urging their party and their voters to eagerly adopt those same allegedly corrupt practices for their own benefit.”

The GOP are truly a bunch of evil wusses, I’m telling you.

Instead of winning with the strength of their ideas, they prefer winning with the stench of their schemes. 

Whether it’s messing with redistricting voting lines to make sure that mostly Democratic-leaning Black voters are drawn out of competitive districts (take what Republicans have done to Don Davis’ First Congressional District, for example); or making voter photo ID mandatory, insisting that the level of voter “fraud” was intolerable (if one or two out of over 5 million voters is “intolerable,” then so is my sunny bleached-blonde hair).

But as I said, it really is a shame and a disgrace that Republicans feel they have to resort to tricks and voter suppression, instead of an honest debate of the issues, to win elections.

How do we answer their shenanigans?

By voting our -sses off come this November!!! That’s how!

        Get registered, double-check that registration, and then VOTE!

Any questions?!!!

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Sunday, May 24, 2026

THE CASH STUFF FOR MAY 28, 2026

    EDITORS/PUBLISHERS: the criminal case numbers given to me DO NOT match the Cecil Brockman case at all, so I'M CANCELING THAT STORY UNTIL I GET STRAIGHT ANSWERS. I woke with a spokesman for the Guilford DA's Office, and he looked the case number up per the four charges Brockman faces, but when I entered them in the court system search, one was a blank, the other three for other people, so I'M IMMEDIATELY PULLING THE STORY UNTIL I FIGURE OUT WHAT'S WHAT. DON'T RUN THE BROCKMAN STORY I SENT YOU!!!

 REPUBLICANS FILE BILLS 

TO REDUCE EARLY 

VOTING FROM 17 DAYS

THIS ELECTION

By Cash Michaels

Contributing writer


Knowing that by all projections, November’s midterm general election is expected to be a windfall for Democrats nationally and here in North Carolina, Republicans have filed two bills in the NC General Assembly that, if ratified by both chambers, would slice the number of early voting days from the current 17, to just 13-10 days before the November 3rd Election Day.

One bill (HB66) would cut early voting from 17 to 13 days, and cut out on at least one Sunday, which is historically popular for African-Americans who normally vote “Souls to the Polls” after attending church in their communities across the state in many counties.

Not earlier than the second Monday before an election in which a voter seeks to vote and not later than 3:00 P.M. on the last Saturday before that election (which would be Monday, October 26 to Saturday, October 31st), the voter may appear in person only at the office of the county board of elections….,” is the language of the proposed state House legislation. “A county board of elections shall conduct early voting on the last Saturday before the election from 8:00 A.M. until 3:00 P.M."

Sponsored by 22-year-old Republican State House Rep. Wyatt Gable (R-Onslow), an East Carolina University student and the youngest state representative in history, HB 66, filed in February 2025 but in the Rules Committee ever since, would become law immediately upon passage, meaning that it would immediately drastically cut the in-person early voting period for the upcoming November general elections.

Under current state law, this year's early voting period begins on the third Thursday of October (Oct. 15), and doesn’t end until the last Saturday (Oct. 31st) before the first Tuesday of November, which is normally when the general election takes place.

That was also the early voting timeline in 2024 when, according to the North Carolina Board of Elections, out of the 5.7 million North Carolinians who voted then, 4,223,734 voted early statewide, with 62,000 more registered Republicans than Democrats casting early ballots.

As of May 16th, there were 7,768, 375 registered voters in North Carolina, according to the NC State Board of Elections.

The second measure seeking to cut early voting days is Senate Bill 1084, sponsored by Sen. Warren Daniel (R-Morganton), chair of the Senate Elections Committee.

The language of Sen. Daniel’s legislature states, “Not earlier than the second Thursday (October 22) before an election in which a voter seeks to vote and not later than 3:00 P.M. on the last Saturday (October 31) before that election, the voter may appear in person only at the office of the county board. A county board shall conduct early voting on the last Saturday before the election from 8:00 A.M. until 3:00 P.M." 

Daniel’s bill would allow one Sunday of early voting before the general election.

As per Rep. Gable’s HB 66, Sen. Daniel’s SB 1084, “is effective when it becomes law and applies to elections held on or after that date.” 

Republican legislative leadership is fully in support of the measures seeking to reduce early voting.

Outgoing Senate Majority Leader Phil Berger said, “I hear a lot of complaints from both Republicans and Democrats about the number, particularly those that have to work the elections. Hopefully we can get some consensus around that for the primaries. I think we need to reduce the number of days in the general as well, but obviously it’s likely to face even more opposition.” 

Republican House Speaker Destin Hall also expressed his support.

Not so with Sen. Natalie Murdock (D-Durham), who told reporters last week that the bills target African-Americans.

“It is clear that if they don’t think folks are going to vote for them, they want to make it more difficult for them to vote,” she said.

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                                            NCCU CHANCELLOR DR. KARRIE G. DIXON

REPORT SAYS NCCU

IS NOT “FINANCIALLY

HEALTHY,” BUT IMPROVING

By Cash Michaels

Contributing writer


According to its own, most recent financial assessment report, North Carolina Central University (NCCU) in Durham is the only UNC System school in the state that is not considered “financially healthy.” That determination was made by the Composite Financial Index (CFI), which is used by the 16-campus system to measure a school’s institutional financial viability.

How a UNC System school measures its finial health is based on the following questions:

- how much does the institution have in reserve?

- can the institution cover its financial obligations?

- Is the institution’s financial strength improving?

- is the institution operating within its means?

While other UNC System schools were able to answer each of those basic questions positively, NCCU, an historically Black university, was not.

Published reports note that for 2024 and 2025, NCCU’s CFI was below the minimum threshold for financial viability, which proved to be problematic because NCCU was also enjoying historic levels of student enrollment. For instance, in 2025, NCCU reported more than 9,100 students enrolled, its highest student population ever. But even that accomplishment could not help the HBCU in gaining financial parity with other UNC System campuses.

Improving the financial health of NCCU is now one of the top priorities of Chancellor Karrie Dixon, who took over leadership of the institution in 2024 after what many consider to be a stellar tenure at Elizabeth City State University, another UNC System HBCU that had been in dire straits prior to her management.

In a statement to The News and Observer, Dr. Dixon pledged to institute the same corrective measures she oversaw at ECSU to bring it back from the brink.

“My first priority upon arriving at NCCU in 2024 was to strengthen the university’s financial position,” Dr Dixon told the N&O. “We made difficult but necessary decisions to reduce costs and improve financial management. At the same time, we recognized enrollment growth as a key driver of financial health. Together, those efforts have helped improve our CFI score from 2024 to 2025.”

Despite a low CFI, NCCU is definitely showing signs of improvement. In fact, an analysis shows that much has improved since the last official CFI assessment months ago. According to a statement from the school, “Recent actions, including spending controls, cautious hiring, operational realignment and expanded academic initiatives through Project Kitty Hawk, support a broader strategy for long-term sustainability.” 

Plus now that the NC General Assembly has finally announced agreement on a state budget framework after not passing a budget in 2024, NCCU is requesting $159 million for both 2024 and 2025 to help the school reach its goals.

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