As mail ballots prepare to go out, leading NC Gov candidates visit area

As mail ballots prepare to go out, leading NC Gov candidates visit area

If the court rules in a certain way, absentee votes could be sent out as early as Friday. The top candidates for governor of North Carolina went to the Charlotte area right before the election.

 

Mark Robinson, a Republican, went to four places to meet people and have meet and greets. A program for apprenticeships was shown to Attorney General Josh Stein.

 

Robinson went from table to table at Mooresville’s Famous Toastery for an hour on Thursday morning to introduce himself and take pictures.

 

Jones said, “I believe we will win this race.” “In this state, everywhere we go is different from the first time I ran.

 

Our support was spread out when I first ran. People would know where we were going and even guess where we would go. We can’t go anywhere in this state without being seen and loved.

 

Robinson is now running a new ad that says bad things about Josh Stein’s views on immigration. The General Assembly will probably meet again next week to talk about making sheriffs work with ICE. He says he is in favor of

 

“I was on the fence about that at one point,” he said. “I didn’t like it when the government said they had to make the sheriffs do something, but at this very moment in our country’s history, it is very important.” We don’t know who is coming to our country.

 

Josh Stein went on a tour of UA Local 421 about 45 minutes away. This is where future plumbers, pipefitters, and welders are trained. He says that one of his top priorities is to put money into apprenticeship programs.

 

As we see here with the plumbers and pipefitters, apprenticeship programs need to grow. He also said that our schools should offer more job and technical education. “People may want to go to college, but not everyone does. To get a good job, you shouldn’t have to go to college.”

 

He says that he will be meeting people all over the state for the next sixty days.

 

He said, “I hear the same themes everywhere I go.” “A stronger economy that helps people, better public schools, more money for teachers, safer neighborhoods, and personal freedoms like the right to choose for women.”

 

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