Current:Home > reviewsRobinson unveils public safety plan in race for North Carolina governor -TradeCircle
Robinson unveils public safety plan in race for North Carolina governor
View
Date:2025-04-11 21:03:23
STATESVILLE, N.C. (AP) — North Carolina Republican gubernatorial nominee Mark Robinson announced on Wednesday a public safety plan should he be elected billed as focusing on building up police, fighting violence and drugs and keeping criminals behind bars.
Robinson’s campaign said 30 sheriffs stood with the lieutenant governor at a Statesville news conference as he unveiled his proposal.
“We stand behind law enforcement and law and order in this state,” Robinson said, WSOC-TV reported.
The plan in part attempts to fight what Robinson labels left-leaning efforts to scale back police funding and reduce cash bail for people accused of violent crime so they can more easily be released while awaiting trial.
Robinson said in a news release that he rejects such proposals and links a “pro-criminal, anti-law-enforcement agenda” to Democratic rival Josh Stein and party presidential nominee Kamala Harris.
A Stein campaign spokesperson told The Charlotte Observer recently that Stein, the attorney general, hasn’t supported “defunding the police” and has sought more spending for law enforcement.
In May, Stein released a series of legislative proposals that in part would seek to help fill vacancies in police departments and jails. They would include pay bonuses for law enforcement training program graduates and financial benefits to attract out-of-state or military police.
Robinson’s proposal says he would “prioritize raises for law enforcement officers in state budgets” and “reinstate the death penalty for those that kill police and corrections officers.”
The death penalty remains a potential punishment for people convicted of first-degree murder in North Carolina. An execution hasn’t been carried out since 2006, however, as legal challenges over the use of lethal injection drugs and a doctor’s presence at executions have in part delayed action.
Robinson campaign spokesperson Mike Lonergan said Wednesday that it’s “hard to say the death penalty hasn’t gone away when it’s in fact been de facto gone since 2006.”
Robinson also wants to work with the General Assembly to enact a measure that would require law enforcement to cooperate with federal immigration authorities and honor their requests to hold jail inmates thought to be in the country unlawfully.
Current Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper, who is term-limited from running for reelection, successfully vetoed two measures ordering such cooperation in 2019 and 2022.
The House and Senate has been unable this year to hammer out a compromise on a similar measure. Cooper has questioned the constitutionality of such a bill and said a past measure was “only about scoring political points” by the GOP on immigration.
Speaking Wednesday to reporters in Goldsboro, Stein didn’t respond directly to questions about his views on the immigration bill. He said local authorities are seeking help hiring and keeping officers.
“I talk to law enforcement about what they want in their communities,” Stein said. “And I trust them to be able to determine what’s going to be the most effective way for them to keep their members of the community safe.”
Robinson said in the news release that it was Stein and Harris who have made North Carolina and the U.S. “a magnet for violent crime and dangerous drugs.” But Stein said on Wednesday that Robinson “makes us less safe” by his previous comments that the attorney general argues promote political violence.
veryGood! (5744)
Related
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- 400-pound stingray caught in Long Island Sound in relatively rare sighting
- Kansas guard Arterio Morris charged with rape, dismissed from men’s basketball team
- NFL's new gambling policy includes possibility of lifetime ban
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- Photographs documented US Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s groundbreaking career in politics
- Video provides first clear views of WWII aircraft carriers lost in the pivotal Battle of Midway
- What is 'Brotox'? Why men are going all in on Botox
- Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
- Britney Spears Grateful for Her Amazing Friends Amid Divorce From Sam Asghari
Ranking
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- A Baltimore man is charged in the fatal shooting of an off-duty sheriff’s deputy, police say
- Almost all of Nagorno-Karabakh’s people have left, Armenia’s government says
- Disney, DeSantis legal fights ratchet up as company demands documents from Florida governor
- NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
- All Onewheel e-skateboards are recalled after reported deaths
- Ryder Cup getting chippy as Team USA tip their caps to Patrick Cantlay, taunting European fans
- Bob and Erin Odenkirk talk poetry and debate the who's funniest member of the family
Recommendation
Sam Taylor
'Saw Patrol' is on a roll! Are the 'Paw Patrol' sequel and 'Saw X' the new 'Barbenheimer'?
Prosecutors may extend 'offers' to 2 defendants in Georgia election case
Rewatching 'Gilmore Girls' or 'The West Wing'? Here's what your comfort show says about you
Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
Republicans begin impeachment inquiry against Biden, Teachers on TikTok: 5 Things podcast
California man arrested, accused of killing mother by poisoning her with fentanyl
Judges maintain bans on gender-affirming care for youth in Tennessee and Kentucky