Tide is turning in Tar Heel politics.

AuthorMooneyham, Scott
PositionCAPITALGOODS - North Carolina politics

When Gov. Beverly Perdue spoke to some of the state's top business leaders at the North Carolina Chamber's annual meeting in March, she should have been at ease. After all, she's cut from the same cloth as the pro-business Democrats--think former Gov. Jim Hunt or recently retired Senate leader Marc Basnight--who dominated state government for decades, their political fortunes intertwined with the economic ones of so many represented in that room.

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But Perdue appeared anything but comfortable. At times, she chided her audience, questioning its commitment to improving education to produce a strong workforce. At times, she seemed hesitant and unsure what to say. Her performance might be dismissed as that of a politician shaken by declining approval ratings, so shaken that she had decided two months earlier not to seek a second term. I saw it as something else: another sign of how the tide has turned--particularly among the movers and shakers who are major campaign donors--in North Carolina politics.

That shift is shaping the race to replace Perdue. You can hear it in the rhetoric. You can see--and count--it in the money. Former Charlotte Mayor Pat McCrory, the Republican candidate, has raised more than twice that of Lt. Gov. Walter Dalton, his Democratic opponent. Yes, he got a head start. He has basically been running for governor since he lost to Perdue in 2008. Dalton only entered the race after learning she wouldn't run (though he was already raising money for the less-expensive race for lieutenant governor). Even so, during the April 21-June 30 reporting period, McCrory raised $2.2 million, compared with Dalton's $1 million.

Some might explain away those numbers as simply McCrory's access to the Charlotte business community's deep pockets. But didn't he have those same ties four years ago, when Perdue was the one cleaning up in the money chase? A better explanation is that money follows power. McCrory benefits from being the front-runner--even when folks figured he was going up against an incumbent--and from the fact that Republicans, with their control of the legislature, hold power in Raleigh. What Carter Wrenn, the longtime campaign aide to Jesse Helms, calls the "easy money"--contributions from those seeking access to power--mostly has slipped away from Dalton...

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