Will Governor Pat need to carry his birth certificate to use the “head”, because with those classy glasses, he might be mistaken for a transman. Following in the tradition of Birthers and Truthers, Is Pat a “Dicker” or a “Cocker”?
His inability to proudly declare himself a cisgendered man might give the electorate pause with the proclivity of GOP public officials to adopt former Idaho Senator Larry Craig’s “wide stance” in other states like Idaho and/or Minnesota.
As long as stunts seem de rigeur for the election season, perhaps both anti-statist Libertarian Party Candidates will put their ideology where their genitals reside and make an arrest of Pat McCrory when he next hear’s Nature's Call to visit the tea (room) party’s best CPAC Grnder location.
Maybe opponent Roy Cooper should consider promising “a chicken(hawk) in every pot” to piss in, but Pat is a Republican after all, and the HB2 measure was more about a much larger effort to discriminate against Carolinians.
There should more than a few extra Marco Rubio water bottles in NC to use and NC probably doesn’t want for outhouses equipped without TSA full-body screening devices.
The state level races in North Carolina start out tight pretty much across the board. The Governor's race continues to look like it will go right down to the wire- Pat McCrory's at 42% to 40% for Roy Cooper and 6% for Libertarian Lon Cecil. McCrory continues to be unpopular, with only 40% of voters approving of the job he's doing to 49% who disapprove. But Cooper is still pretty unknown with a 39% plurality of voters having no opinion about him one way or the other. The race may end up being determined by whether voters- who are open to replacing McCrory based on his approval numbers- find Cooper to be a better alternative.
Democrats have narrow leads for the other three offices we tested. For Lieutenant Governor Linda Coleman's at 36% to 33% for incumbent Dan Forest, and 6% for Libertarian J.J. Summerell. In the open seat for State Treasurer, Dan Blue III starts out with a 39/36 lead over Dale Folwell. And in the open contest for Attorney General, Josh Stein's at 38% to 37% for Buck Newton. Across the board it looks like we are headed for a close election in North Carolina this fall.