Saturday, April 8, 2023

THE CASH STUFF FOR THURSDAY, APRIL 13, 2023

 

REP. TRICIA COTHAM


                                          BLACK SUPPORT- A former supporter on social media posted pictures from Cotham’s 2022 campaign to show that she did get elected with black support.

WHAT DOES REP. COTHAM’S

SWITCH MEAN FOR NC BLACKS?

By Cash Michaels

Contributing writer


State Rep. Tricia Ann Cotham could have easily changed her party affiliation from Democrat to unaffiliated, but she didn’t. She went full stop Republican, effectively giving her former party the back of her hand, sending tremors through an already dispirited North Carolina Democratic Party, and Governor Roy Cooper.

“The party that best represents me and my principles and what’s best for North Carolina is the Republican Party,” she said during a press conference at NCGOP headquarters in Raleigh last week.

Political analyst Thomas Mills wasn’t buying it in his weekly newsletter Politics North Carolina.

She embraced the party whose values she rejected just a few months ago,” he wrote. “She didn’t have an epiphany. She had a temper tantrum and pity party. She just wanted somebody to be nice to her. That’s pathetic.”

The Black Political Caucus of Mecklenburg County, which endorsed Cotham in 2022, and the Charlotte-Mecklenburg NAACP, were also not impressed.

“Regrettably, her shift in values appears to align her more closely with a political faction with a troubling history of policies and rhetoric aimed at suppressing the voices of marginalized groups, including African Americans and women,” the caucus said in a statement. “In embracing this extreme faction, Rep. Cotham has betrayed the trust we placed in her, and we fear that this decision may have severe consequences for the very people she was elected to serve.”

Black Facebook poster Cathay Dawkins lamented, “ NO SHAME! She USED Black & Brown Voters & Organizers to win her seat and has now switched parties. NOT OK! Tricia Cotham!”

Next to her post, Dawkins posted a screenshot of Cotham’s May 18, 2022 Facebook pos showing several pictures of black primary campaign workers proudly displaying “Tricia Cotham “ campaign signs and t-shirts under Cotham’s message “We did it!”

To understand the enormity of Rep. Cotham’s switch, and the scale of damage it may have done to the immediate future of North Carolina Democratic politics, particularly to African Americans, consider these facts.

Tricia Cotham took office January 1st, 2023 for her current term, representing NC House District 112, which comprises much of east Charlotte (including her hometown of Mint Hill), and borders Cabarrus and Union counties. 

Observers say it is a fast growing suburban district.

Almost nine percent of Rep. Cotham’s district is black, according to Ballotpedia

Having previously served in the state House from 2007 to 2016 , Rep. Cotham won a four-candidate primary last May 2022 by 47.81%, and her general election in November by 59.22%, so clearly black voter support played a role in her election. 

For a representative that has served five terms in the House, that…means increased accountability to Black and Brown voters at a time when racial tensions and political tensions go hand in hand,” said Advance North Carolina- a Black and progressive issues 501 (c)4 advocacy group - in a statement. 

"This is not about political vendettas, this is about the constituents," NC Democratic Party Chair Anderson Clayton said during a press conference after Cotham announced her switch last week. "This is about honesty and accountability to the people who elected her."

It’s also about being loyal to one’s party and its issues, critics say.

Gov. Cooper was hoping that the one vote advantage he enjoyed in the formally 71-49 GOP majority state House to stop a Republican supermajority vote would hold for the last two years of his term (the state Senate won a 30 to 20 supermajority in November).

But with Cotham’s long rumored switch last week, the GOP now has their required three-fifths-72-out-120-vote supermajority over the governor’s veto, and with it, the ability not only to pass any controversial bill from their current agenda, like their anti-black history teaching restrictions; ending abortion rights in North Carolina or measures targeting the LGBTQ community, but even bills Cooper vetoed in the past that now he can’t stop.

And under new rules, the GOP majority does not have to give prior notice of when veto override votes will be taken, as long as 72 House Republicans are present.

Her 2022 campaign website has now been taken down, but according to published reports, when Cotham ran last year, it said she supported raising the minimum wage, was pro-education, and “…was proud to [have sponsored] legislation to expand access to voter registration for young people, enact same-day registration, and extend early voting to include Sunday voting when many organizations conducted ‘Souls to the Polls’.”  wrote columnist Thomas Mills. “I wonder how that will sit with her new colleagues? Did she believe all that stuff or, nah, it was just what her Democratic voters wanted to hear?”

Her father was chair of the Mecklenburg Democratic Party, and her mother is a longtime Democratic commissioner on the Mecklenburg County Commission. Cothan’s ex-husband, Jerry Meek, was once chairman of the NC Democratic Party, so her “blue dog” pedigree was well known.

       In 2016, Cotham ran for the 12th Congressional District, but lost to incumbent Democrat Rep. Alma Adams. Cotham then worked in the private sector, and later became a lobbyist until she ran again in 2022 for the state House.

But the damage to black and other constituents doesn’t stop there.

Upon hearing of her former opponent’s switch, Rep. Adams issued a statement saying, “The women who will have fewer rights over their own body will be victims. Students living in fear of gun violence will be victims. Transgender people who want to live their lives as their authentic selves will be victims.”

“And most of all, the Mecklenburg County voters disenfranchised by this decision are the victims,” Adams continued.

Cotham had already gained a reputation for voting with Republicans on several occasions, like for the recently passed GOP bill to mandate county sheriffs cooperate with ICE agents tracking illegal immigrants. But at least when it counted, she could be depended on to remain in the Democratic fold. Now, with her dramatic switch fueled by charges of Democratic bullying and intimidation, Cotham’s GOP vote on a variety of veto override issues seems assured, to the chagrin of her former Democratic colleagues.

Amid a group of fellow Democrats holding signs displaying one word, “RESIGN” at last week’s press conference, NCDP Chair Anderson Clayton called Cotham’s switch “…a deceit of the highest order [and] a betrayal of the people of Mecklenburg County…”

Even the White House joined the fray, denouncing Cotham’s move.

As a reward for her switch, GOP House Speaker Tim Moore  told reporters that Cotham’s Democratic district will probably be redrawn to lean more Republican this summer.

Moore added Rep. Cotham “…wasn’t the only Democrat we’ve had great conversations with.”

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                                         U.S. REP. ALMA ADAMS (D-NC-12)


ADAMS PRESSES ON, DESPITE

GOP MAJORITY’S ANTI-DEMOCRAT

AGENDA

By Cash Michaels

Contributing writer


When the 118th Congress convened on January 3rd, 2023, four-term Democratic Congresswoman Alma Adams (12-NC) knew the new Republican House majority would legislate in ways she frankly could not agree with.

But she vowed then that no matter how undemocratic they were, she would continue her service to the constituents of the 12th Congressional District on the issues that really mattered, hoping that through it all, she would be able to reach bipartisan agreement on issues to move her district, and the nation, forward.

But it hasn’t been easy..

Since Speaker Kevin McCarthy [R-CA] and the Republicans won their slim 222-213 majority in the U.S. House, their agenda has centered mainly on “culture war” issues, like investigating Democratic President Joe Biden and his family for alleged criminal activity, and defending Republican President Donald Trump against criminal charges like his recent indictment by a New York grand jury for an alleged hush money scheme, and revelations that Trump allegedly mishandled classified materials once out of office.

The GOP has also accused federal agencies like the U.S. Justice Dept. with “weaponizing” the government against perceived political enemies, and are standing firm against legislating critical gun control measures.

Still, Rep. Adams is among the House Democrats who have vowed not to allow the pervading “culture wars” politics on Capitol Hill to get in the way of getting things done.

This term, she is a  member of the committees on Agriculture; Education and Labor; and Financial Services respectively.

She is also a member of the Bipartisan Historically Black Colleges and Universities Caucus, which she founded and is co-chair; the Black Maternal Health Caucus, which she also founded and is co-chair; and the Congressional Black Caucus.

Since the 118th congressional term began, Rep. Adams has hosted panel discussions on women’s health: cosponsored the Justice for Black Farmers Act of 2023 with Sen. Cory Booker (D-NJ); and has strongly advocated for women’s reproductive rights.

“We do have some serious concerns about housing, “ Rep. Adams said during a phone interview last January, noting that she was pleased with what the 117th Democrat-majority Congress accomplished in passing much of Pres. Biden’s agenda to make critical infrastructure investments.

Still, Adams, amid whatever hope she held out for being productive while in the House minority now, expressed “concern” over the Republican agenda and the direction it was headed.

“We were elected to make things better for the American people and to work on legislation that will improve the quality of their lives, “ Rep. Adams said. “And of course [Republicans] want to investigate, [while] we want to legislate. And that’s what we intend to do, [legislate]. Hopefully the American people will be able to see through that.”

At the time of the interview, Rep. Adams had not heard that the GOP House majority was also considering expunging former Pres. Trump’s two impeachments from the record.

This past week, Rep. Jim Jordan [R-OH], chair of the House Judiciary Committee, announced that he would subpoena a former prosecutor with the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office to give testimony to undermine the case D.A. Alvin Bragg has built against Trump.

Long before that was announced, Rep. Adams said in her interview, “ They are a very vindictive group of folks, and they don’t have an agenda for the American people.”

‘They have an agenda of vengeance.”

Adams added that as House Democrats, they will introduce legislation to help the American people, and she’s happy that the U.S. Senate, at least, is still in Democratic hands, so that much of the negative legislation coming out of the Republican House goes nowhere.

Still, House Democrats are now in the minority for the next two years, and can’t get much legislatively done by themselves unless they find likeminded Republicans to vote with them.

“I don’t believe that everybody over there are MAGAs [Trump followers],” said Adams. “I think some of the issues we will be talking about and be working on…I think there will be some bipartisan successes.”

“We’ve got big issues around …not just in Charlotte and North Carolina, but across this country.”

And will Republicans attack issues and programs important to the African American community?

Just last month, Republicans introduced a bill to further restrict the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, formerly known as food stamps.

Politico reported, “ It’s the first of what is expected to be a wave of GOP efforts this year to set limits on SNAP, the country’s largest food assistance program, which grew significantly during the pandemic. But while Republicans have telegraphed their desire to curb nutrition spending, House Democrats have yet to mount a coordinated response, raising concerns in the caucus about whether they can fend off likely GOP attacks on the program during the negotiations over the debt limit, budget and 2023 farm bill. 

The NY Times reported just last week that House MAGA Republicans, “…are threatening to default and not pay their own bills, while simultaneously attacking SNAP benefits.”

Rep. Adams said Democrats will “…have to be very aggressive in our approach” to defend SNAP, because everybody in America who is hungry isn't black.

“[Republicans are] going to be out trying to destroy everything they can, but I think we’ll be able to save some things because  the American people understand that this pandemic didn’t just hurt [blacks], but hurt everyone.”

Rep. Adams concluded that whatever the Republicans do, they have two years to get it done, because in 2024, Democrats, she said,  will be “taking the Congress back.”

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