State for Sale
A conservative multimillionaire has taken control in North Carolina, one of 2012’s top battlegrounds.
by Jane Mayer,
October 10, 2011
In the spring of 2010, the conservative political strategist Ed
Gillespie flew from Washington, D.C., to Raleigh, North Carolina, to
spend a day laying the groundwork for REDMAP, a new
project aimed at engineering a Republican takeover of state
legislatures. Gillespie hoped to help his party get control of
statehouses where congressional redistricting was pending, thereby
leveraging victories in cheap local races into a means of shifting the
balance of power in Washington. It was an ingenious plan, and Gillespie
is a skilled tactician—he once ran the Republican National Committee—but
REDMAP seemed like a long shot in North Carolina. Barack
Obama carried the state in 2008 and remained popular. The Republicans
hadn’t controlled both houses of the North Carolina General Assembly for
more than a century. (“Not since General Sherman,” a state politico
joked to me.) That day in Raleigh, though, Gillespie had lunch with an
ideal ally: James Arthur (Art) Pope, the chairman and C.E.O. of Variety
Wholesalers, a discount-store conglomerate. The Raleigh News and Observer had called Pope, a conservative multimillionaire, the Knight of the Right. The REDMAP project offered Pope a new way to spend his money.
No comments:
Post a Comment