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There, Republican Rep. Tricia Cotham kept her seat about 18 months after defecting from North Carolina Democrats. Holding a majority wasn't truly in question. The razor thin supermajority
Republicans currently hold 72 of 120 seats in the North Carolina House, a supermajority by just one vote, and 30 of 50 seats in the North Carolina Senate, which is a supermajority.
One seat. That’s all North Carolina Democrats need to end the Republican supermajority in either the House or Senate. As it stands now, Republicans have the numbers to override Democratic Gov ...
North Carolina sent seven members from each major party to the Beltway. On Nov. 5, 10 Republicans and four Democrats were winners. A 7-7 split in the state this time would have
Members of the North Carolina Senate and the North Carolina House of Representatives were elected on November 6, 2012, when the Republican Party increased the size of its majorities in both the North Carolina Senate and House of Representative to exceed the three-fifths number of elected members required for a super-majority. [1] [2] [3] [4]
The vote to override the veto passed, along party lines, with a Republican supermajority in control of the Senate. The move was called “a disgrace” by North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper.
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SB 382 was approved by the Republican-controlled North Carolina General Assembly following the victories of Democrats Josh Stein and Jeff Jackson in the governor and attorney general races ...