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(06/03/22 12:24am)
House Bill 755, Parent’s Bill of Rights, passed in the N.C. Senate with an amendment on Wednesday. Before moving to the state Senate, the bill passed its hearing in the Senate Rules Committee on Tuesday.
(05/10/22 12:14am)
In an intolerable betrayal of abortion rights, the Supreme Court voted to strike down the landmark Roe v. Wade decision, according to a leaked initial draft majority opinion written by Justice Samuel Alito. The shock of this vote is being felt across the country as abortion rights, the pillar of reproductive autonomy, are being unjustly pulled out from underneath us.
(05/05/22 10:28pm)
UNC students and community members gathered outside the Chapel Hill Courthouse on Franklin Street Tuesday to protest the possible overturning of the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark Roe v. Wade decision.
(04/27/22 3:23pm)
After taking over $165,000 from the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, an organization that donated to 37 Republicans who voted to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election, N.C. Sen. Valerie Foushee, D-Chatham, Orange, lost an endorsement from a progressive group in her race for the fourth congressional U.S. House district.
(04/26/22 11:06pm)
The debate on abortion rights is an ever-changing topic in the U.S., with every change in legislation impacting people's lives dramatically. Access to abortion has far reaching impacts, including patient physical health, economic stability and individual freedoms.
(04/12/22 7:16pm)
This year's primary election will happen in May, after many students leave Chapel Hill to return to their hometowns or embark on summer travels.
(04/04/22 8:39pm)
Last week, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed the “Parental Rights in Education” bill into law. The inconspicuously named legislation bars public school teachers from discussing sexual orientation or gender identity in kindergarten through third-grade classrooms.
(03/29/22 6:32pm)
Have you or anyone you know engaged in self-censorship? A glance at headlines related to the topic suggests yes.
(03/24/22 10:06pm)
Content warning: This article includes mentions of death.
(03/07/22 12:58am)
Last week, filing ended in the state for candidates hoping to represent North Carolinians in Congress. Since the process began on Feb. 41, more than 100 individuals filed for candidacy.
(02/28/22 1:05am)
The rise of far-right politics across the country is hard to ignore. From both the national and state level, we are seeing extreme and pervasive conservative ideas challenge individual rights on every front, from abortion policy to LGBTQ+ protections to economic equality.
(02/20/22 7:54pm)
Advocacy groups and North Carolina residents gathered to call for fairness in mapmaking in a press conference outside the N.C. General Assembly on Tuesday.
(02/07/22 1:40am)
Members of the North Carolina General Assembly make $13,951 per year, plus a $104 per diem while the legislature is in session.
(01/21/22 2:30am)
On Wednesday, Republican state legislators voted to advance House Bill 605, which would further delay the 2022 primary elections — pushing the date back an additional three weeks to June 7.
(01/20/22 12:43am)
On Jan. 12, Gov. Roy Cooper endorsed Cheri Beasley's U.S. Senate campaign, which recently fundraised over $2.1 million in donations.
(12/16/21 4:17pm)
N.C. Sen. Jeff Jackson, D-Mecklenburg, is dropping out of the race for U.S. Senate and will endorse former state Supreme Court Chief Justice Cheri Beasley, according to a Thursday press release.
(12/08/21 11:02pm)
The N.C. Supreme Court ruled on Wednesday that the state must delay the date of all primary elections for public offices as part of an ongoing legal battle over the state’s congressional maps.
(12/01/21 2:21am)
From the implementation of a Climate Action Plan to the approval of the Greene Tract resolution after decades of discussion and local businesses bouncing back to pre-pandemic levels, 2021 was a formative year for the Town of Chapel Hill.
(11/29/21 10:37pm)
The link between politics and higher education is hard to ignore. Campus life — in and outside of the classroom — is shrouded with rigorous debate over ongoing social and political issues and how these issues touch the lives of students.
(11/23/21 4:19am)
N.C. House Rep. Graig Meyer, D-Caswell, Orange, announced last week that he will be running for a seat on the state senate in 2022.