North Carolina
Related: About this forumRural NC counties are shrinking. Republican policies aren't helping at all.
OPINION
Rural NC counties are shrinking. Republican policies arent helping at all.
BY NED BARNETT
AUGUST 22, 2021 04:30 AM
The General Assemblys Republican majority overwhelmingly represents rural North Carolina, but rural North Carolina has little to show for it.
Snip...Actually, it has less to show for it. Of the states 100 counties, 51 mostly rural counties lost population in a census report issued this month, even as booming urban areas increased the states population by 9.5 percent. Rebecca Tippett, the director of Carolina Demography at UNC-Chapel Hill, said, More counties than expected lost population and the losses were larger than expected.
Snip...
Norris Tolson, a former Democratic state legislator and former state secretary of transportation and secretary of commerce, now leads Carolinas Gateway Partnership, a group trying to boost economic development in Tolsons native Edgecombe County. Snip...said. People are moving to where they think the jobs are.
Republicans have hurt the very people who elected them. Consider what the majority has done:
Blocked Medicaid expansion for seven years. That has left hundreds of thousands of working poor without medical insurance and denied the state billions of dollars in federal aid. The impact has fallen hardest on rural hospitals. Since 2010, five of North Carolinas 50 rural hospitals have closed and another nine are considered at risk of closing, according to a report from the Chartis Center for Rural Health.
Slowed spending on public schools. Public schools are the main employer in 59 counties. Starving them for operating and capital funds stymies the local economy. Urban counties have raised property taxes to compensate. Rural counties dont have the tax base to do that.
Cut income taxes in ways that give the biggest breaks to large corporations and higher earners. The reductions mostly benefit white-collar urban workers even as they reduce the states ability to invest in rural areas.
Opposed state borrowing. Republican leaders prefer a pay-as-you-go approach over approving state bond issues. What rural governments need most is money for roads, water and sewer, but the legislature has not supported the level of borrowing needed to fund major rural infrastructure projects.
Bungled broadband expansion. In 2011, the legislature, kowtowing to telecommunications companies, blocked municipalities from operating their own broadband networks. Ten years later, access to high-speed internet an essential tool for businesses, remote work, virtual schooling and telemedicine is still unavailable or of poor quality in much of rural North Carolina.
Targeted undocumented immigrants. Hispanic immigrants are a key part of the rural workforce in meatpacking and agriculture and their share of the rural population is growing. In Duplin, Sampson and Lee counties, for instance, 20 percent of the population is Hispanic, and thats likely an undercount. Rather than helping the undocumented among the Hispanic population gain legal status, Republicans have encouraged their arrest and deportation.
Snip...
Ten years ago, rural voters put their faith in Republican promises to lift their communities. Now, feeling the effects of those broken promises, rural residents are increasingly voting with their feet.
https://www.newsobserver.com/opinion/article253635373.html
TheRealNorth
(9,629 posts)These same counties produced more votes for Trump and the Republicans in 2020.
Oh, there is voter fraud all right....
FoxNewsSucks
(10,788 posts)Never underestimate the level of gullible stupidity
littlemissmartypants
(25,483 posts)When I worked as an election judge, voters would come in with cards they got from church or through the mail, telling them who to vote for. The same cards over and over. I was only a deputy judge and when I asked my higher up if we should allow those cards to be passed around from voter to voter, because it was clearly electioneering, I was told to let it go. It happens every election. It literally makes me sick to my stomach. But what can I do?