Democrat Roy Cooper needs to defy North Carolina history to keep winning streak alive in Senate race

North Carolina does not mind electing Democrats as Governor, but it is a different matter when it comes to sending them to the U.S. Senate.

Roy Cooper, who led the state for two terms, is trying to change that with a campaign that could reshape power in Washington.

Standing in his way is Michael Whatley, who has Donald Trump’s full backing after previously serving as the president’s chosen Republican National Committee chairman.

Both Cooper and Whatley easily won their party’s Primaries this week, solidifying one of this year’s marquee Senate races. The campaign will draw hundreds of millions in spending because North Carolina is critical to Democratic efforts to pick up the four seats necessary to win a Senate majority.

Republicans want to frame Cooper as too far left for a state that Trump won three times. That tried-and-true tactic echoes past victories over Democrats they cast as out-of-step rubber stamps for liberal leaders, and it will test Cooper’s bond with voters established across four decades of winning campaigns as a state lawmaker, Attorney General and Governor.

Cooper wants to turn that narrative on its head, charging his Republican opponent with being a tool of “well-connected friends in Washington” who cannot effectively represent the state.

“Look, I’m going to be a strong, independent Senator for North Carolina,” Cooper said Wednesday. He said he would work with Trump when it made sense.

Whatley does not shrink from his alliance with the President.

“His leadership has changed our country, and I am proud to stand with him in the fight to secure our border, to strengthen our economy and put America first,” Whatley said.




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