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Greetings from Yadkinville

01 Nov 2008, Posted by Ryan Brown in News, election 2008, 2 Comments


Outside Yadkinville - Zachary Tracer/The Chronicle

Outside Yadkinville - Zachary Tracer/The Chronicle

There’s a lot to separate Durham and Yadkinville, North Carolina–a hundred miles of highway, a few hundred thousand person population difference, and, oh yeah, a 180 degree shift in politics.

Durham County, where Duke is located, was the most democratic county in state in the 2004 presidential election, casting more than two-thirds of its ballots for Sen. John Kerry even as the Democrat suffered an overwhelming 13% loss in the state as a whole.

And then there was Yadkin. This rural county in western North Carolina went for Bush by a margin of 4-to-1 in ’04, logging a larger percentage of its votes for the Republican than any other place in NC.

So it should come as no surprise that this Friday when photographer Zachary Tracer and I visited Yadkin County, we expected to find a place very different than the county where our school is–one where the presence of the Republican party was immediate, obvious and overwhelming.

Instead, things in Yadkinville, the county seat, looked shockingly normal. Our drive into the town took us past a textile mill, a Taco Bell, and a couple of Conoco gas stations. There were more pumpkin decorations than political signs in people’s windows, and the only substantial difference I could find from Durham was the fact that our alternative rock radio station had somehow morphed into one that played exclusively country ballads.

And then, as I talked to residents of Yadkin County–in line to vote, sitting outside barber shops, in stores and the newspaper office–it clicked.

Waiting - Zachary Tracer/The Chronicle

Waiting - Zachary Tracer/The Chronicle

This is not a place where conservative politics take center-stage simply because they’ve never had to. Yadkin County is a place settled in its conservatism, where voting Republican is unspoken and expected. In the office of the Yadkin Ripple, a secretary named Kara Ball told me that she was voting for McCain for one reason. “He’s the Republican,” she said. On the wall behind her was a yellowed copy of the paper from November 1972. NIXON IN A LANDSLIDE, the headline announced. Below it, a chart showed the breakdown of votes in the county–6871 for Nixon, 1591 for McGovern.

Republican Party Office - Zachary Tracer/The Chronicle

Republican Party Office - Zachary Tracer/The Chronicle

And if my experience in Yadkin is any indication, don’t expect anything different this time around. In the nearly four decades that have passed since Nixon’s election, a lot has changed in the county and the country, but Yadkin’s politics haven’t budged. Come Tuesday, their votes will add a few more notches to McCain’s tally.

There won’t be much fanfare about it though. That’s simply not Yadkin’s style.

Dairy Freeze - Zachary Tracer/The Chronicle

Dairy Freeze - Zachary Tracer/The Chronicle

Local Halloween costumes stray from politics

01 Nov 2008, Posted by Ben Cohen in News, election 2008, 0 Comments


Spotted last night in my travels around Durham: two Bristol Palins (but no Levi Johnstons) and one Sarah Palin (but no Todd Palin).

And that’s it. No love for Sen. Barack Obama (or Michelle!) or Sen. John McCain (or Cindy!).

Alas, no love for any of the state’s senator or governor candidates, either. A Mike Munger costume would have been killer.

Gov. Palin to rally in Raleigh

01 Nov 2008, Posted by Zachary Tracer in News, election 2008, 0 Comments


Sarah Palin - Maya Robinson/The Chronicle

Alaska Governor Sarah Palin, the Republican vice-presidential candidate, will hold a rally in Raleigh this evening as part of the McCain campaign’s Road to Victory Tour.  Palin has visited the usually Republican-leaning state several times, as the McCain campaign works to win N.C.  The most recent Public Policy Polling Poll shows Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama with a one-point lead in N.C.

Palin is scheduled to speak at 7:00 PM.  Both the Raleigh News and Observer and news station WRAL will cover the visit.

(Photo: Maya Robinson/The Chronicle)

As time goes by

31 Oct 2008, Posted by Ben Cohen in News, election 2008, 1 Comments


About a year ago, I was invited to a dinner party at Pop’s Restaurant, where the conversation inevitably turned to politics. Fond of good wine and better conversation, the host initiated a roundtable discussion of the presidential election, which was still 12 months away and had not yet even made it to the primaries.

The questions were simple: Who will be the nominees, and who will win?

Regardless of age, sex or party affiliation, there was an overwhelming (and perhaps unanimous) consensus. Of course, if the election had obeyed our predictions, Sen. Barack Obama and Sen. John McCain (and their running mates) would not be barnstorming North Carolina because they wouldn’t have accepted the nominations at their parties’ conventions and partly because the Tar Heel State might not even be a key battleground state.

After all, all eight students at that dinner anticipated a matchup between Sen. Hillary Clinton and Mitt Romney, the former Massachusetts governor.

McCain? Barely mentioned just months after his campaign was left for dead. Not yet identified as a maverick.

Obama? Appealing, but too inexperienced to top the Clinton machine. Not yet hailed as an inspirational tour de force.

(For the record, the brief discussion of vice presidential candidates prompted two references to Bill Richardson and Obama himself. Even the most politically-savvy Duke students hadn’t heard of a certain hockey mom from Alaska last November.)

And while none of these musings qualify for breaking news in any sense, it does underscore one lesson we’ve all learned from this grueling race: Opinions change and perspectives shift every day. Because as long as five days seem now, imagine how long these last 12 months feel.

The McCain-Palin Tradition

28 Oct 2008, Posted by Naureen Khan in News, election 2008, 0 Comments


Check out the Raleigh News and Observer’s video footage of Hank Williams Jr., legendary country crooner, singing his ode to the Republican ticket at the Tuesday rally.