Friday, December 16, 2016

North Carolina Rep Governor Signs Law Limiting Power Of His Dem Successor



December 16, 20164:47 PM ET
Rebecca Hersher

Pat McCrory, North Carolina's outgoing Republican governor, has signed a law stripping executive powers from his successor, Democrat Roy Cooper.

The law removes the State Board of Elections from the governor's control by reducing the number of members on the board from five — three of whom could be from the governor's party — to four members, evenly split between the parties.

As we have reported, the change could have ripple effects, since the state body appoints members to county election boards across the state.

Three of North Carolina's county election boards faced a legal challenge in November after they attempted to revoke the voting rights of thousands of registered voters shortly before Election Day. A federal judge blocked the move.

The new law also increases the power of the state's appellate court and requires the party affiliations of judicial candidates to be printed on ballots.

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WUNC reported Cooper said the moves by state Republicans would have wide-ranging impacts in education, tax policy and health care, saying "They knew for weeks what they were going to do and they didn't tell the public. That's wrong. They need to put these issues out on the table so that the people know about them so that there's time to debate them."

On Friday, the Legislature also passed a second bill that would further curb the powers of the incoming administration. That bill, if McCrory signs it, would require Cooper's cabinet secretaries to receive Senate confirmation, would significantly reduce the number of administrative positions in the executive branch, would strip the governor of his right to appoint trustees to the University of North Carolina and would take away some of the governor's power to oversee schools in the state.

Republicans hold large majorities in both chambers of the state Legislature and will continue to do so when the new session begins in January.

Cooper, the state's current attorney general, beat McCrory by a slim margin in the November election, and McCrory initially refused to concede until a vote recount proved he had lost by about 10,000 votes.

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