March 8th, 2022. Gov. Roy Cooper stirred the turgid waters of political insiderdom by injecting himself publicly in a Democratic primary for a Cumberland County Senate seat. District 19 was held by Democrat Kirk deViere, who'd been elected in the Blue Wave of 2018 and who was suddenly in 2022 facing two primary opponents, one of whom -- Val Applewhite -- Roy Cooper endorsed and praised. (The primary in 2022 was on May 17th.) It was obvious to every Democratic operative everywhere that Cooper wanted shed of deViere.
And he succeeded in shedding him. Kirk deViere lost his primary that May. Val Applewhite went on to win the Nov. 2022 election and was recently reelected.
What did Cooper have against deViere? Went back in the archives and found what I wrote at the time:
A sitting Democratic governor gets himself publicly involved in a Democratic primary by sticking a stiletto between the ribs of a sitting Democratic state senator. I know this sort of thing goes on all the time behind the scenes, but Cooper decided to go public. Val Applewhite was only too happy to publish the endorsement on her Twitter feed.
Dawn Baumgartner Vaughan attempts to unpack the politics behind this surprise development (posted to the News and Observer last night). The implications point to deViere's willingness to agree with Senate Republicans on some budget issues, particularly on expanding Medicaid and school funding, and those are precisely the two issues Cooper highlighted in his endorsement of Applewhite: "I need legislators who will expand Medicaid [and] pay teachers more...." DeViere's appointment to the Republican budget conference committee, which put him in direct negotiation with the governor's office, may have triggered the governor's spite.
December 3, 2024. Kirk deViere was back in my newsfeed for staging a pretty gutsy coup and taking over the Cumberland County Commission and getting to be Chair right off the bat and instantly. DeViere just won his seat on the Commission (top vote-getter) last month. (He had previously served one term on the Fayetteville City Council and had run twice unsuccessfully for Mayor of Fayetteville.) He ran this year in a field of 6. The top three take seats. DeViere is a Democrat, but No. 2 behind him was Pavan Patel and No. 3 was Henry Tyson -- both Republicans -- who were already probably teamed with deViere to recruit one additional vote (eventually from Democrat Veronica Jones) to overturn the dictatorship of an Old Guard of powerful, long-serving Democrats. (Among those pushed to the curb was a former chair -- a Black woman -- and a Latino organizer and activist.) The election seems to have hinged on pro-growth and pro-business policies, The insurgents are all young, bright-eyed enthusiasts for opening all doors and cupboards to commercial investment. They were running against a Commission grown unresponsive and sluggish. Previously serving Republicans complained that their severe minority status on the Board rendered them totally powerless to redirect resources and grants to "economic development" (a slippery term that implies deals of all sorts and deal-making not necessarily in the full light of day). The sole two Republican incumbents on the Board opted out of running again in 2024, so frustrated had they become by Democratic inertia. The old Democratic power seemed slow or uninterested.
Dec. 3rd, when he became Chair of the Cumerland County Commission |
The deViere insurgency was apparently no small surprise to Cumberland County. Cumberland has been a dependable Democratic stronghold, anchored by Fayetteville and Fayetteville State University, with pretty much a Democratic monopoly on local government. DeViere had the sparkle of bright prospects in his pitch to voters -- of government wide open for business. His website is pretty explicit: "I will work to streamline regulations, provide incentives for small businesses, and ensure adequate resources are available, fostering a robust business climate...." I consider that the confession of a deal-maker.
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