Republican candidate for governor of North Carolina Mark Robinson has been embroiled in a scandal from lewd comments he’s made in the past. North Carolina Democratic Party State Chair Anderson Clayton joins Alex Witt to discuss the nominee who,
Trump will be campaigning in Wilmington without Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson following a CNN report about his alleged posts on a pornography website’s message board.
CNN senior data reporter Harry Enten breaks down the importance of the state of North Carolina in the upcoming presidential election.
Robinson, the lieutenant governor of North Carolina, allegedly posted inflammatory comments on the message board of a pornography website years ago, CNN reported.
The former president did not mention Mr. Robinson, the state’s embattled Republican nominee for governor, whom he once called “Martin Luther King on steroids.”
North Carolina's Republican candidate for governor is at the center of a national news story. That's because of the salacious nature of a series of posts by Mark Robinson, unearthed by CNN, from a pornography web site's discussion board.
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump will not be joined by his party's embattled pick for North Carolina governor when he visits the critical electoral state on Saturday, the Trump campaign said.
At a Trump rally in Wilmington, N.C., many said they would still vote for the embattled Republican nominee for governor.
Trump did not mention Robinson − his party's nominee for governor of a key state − before or during an airport rally in Wilmington, North Carolina, two days after a bombshell news report about Robinson's online habits threatened Trump's chances in a key battleground.
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump traveled to North Carolina for a rally Saturday amid fallout from that state's GOP gubernatorial candidate calling himself a "Black Nazi" on a pornography website.
Here in 2024, polls suggest Black voters in North Carolina remain about 5 points more Democratic-leaning than Black voters nationally. Eighty-three percent of Black voters in North Carolina support Harris, while 78 percent of Black voters nationally do, according to a straight average of crosstabs of Black support in polls conducted since Aug. 19.*