Robinson won't appear at Trump's North Carolina rally after report on
online posts, AP sources say
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[September 21, 2024]
By GARY D. ROBERTSON and MICHELLE L. PRICE
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — North Carolina Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson will not
appear at former President Donald Trump ’s rally on Saturday in the
battleground state following a CNN report about Robinson’s alleged
disturbing online posts, an absence that illustrates the liability the
gubernatorial candidate poses for Trump and downballot GOP candidates.
Robinson is not expected to attend the event in Wilmington, according to
a person on the Trump campaign and a second person familiar with the
matter who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss internal planning.
Robinson has been a frequent presence at Trump's North Carolina campaign
stops. The Republican nominee has referred to Robinson, who is Black, as
“Martin Luther King on steroids" and long praised him. But in the wake
of Thursday's CNN report, the Trump campaign issued a statement that
didn't mention Robinson and instead spoke generally about how North
Carolina was key to the campaign's efforts.
Robinson's campaign didn't respond to a text Friday seeking confirmation
on his Saturday plans. The deadline in state law for Robinson to
withdraw as the Republican candidate for governor passed late Thursday.
State Republican leaders could have picked a replacement had a
withdrawal occurred.
Robinson has denied writing the posts, which include racial and sexual
comments. He said he wouldn't be forced out of the race by “salacious
tabloid lies.” While Robinson won his GOP gubernatorial primary in
March, he's been trailing in several recent polls to Democratic nominee
Josh Stein, the state's attorney general.
“Let me reassure you the things that you will see in that story — those
are not the words of Mark Robinson,” he told supporters in a video
released Thursday by his campaign. “You know my words. You know my
character.”
State law says a gubernatorial nominee had until the day before the
first absentee ballots requested by military and overseas voters are
distributed to withdraw. They were distributed starting Friday.
Robinson has a history of inflammatory comments that Stein has said made
him too extreme to lead North Carolina. They already have contributed to
the prospect that campaign struggles for Robinson could help Democratic
Vice President Kamala Harris win the state’s 16 electoral votes.
Democrats jumped on Robinson and other Republicans after the report
aired, showing on social media photos of Robinson with Trump or with
other GOP candidates, attempting to tarnish them by association. Losing
swing district races for a congressional seat and the General Assembly
would endanger the GOP’s control of the U.S. House and retaining
veto-proof majorities at the legislature.
“The fallout is going to be huge,” Chris Cooper, a political science
professor at Western Carolina University, said Friday. “The Democrats
are counting on this ... having a big effect.” But Cooper said
Republicans could limit problems to the governor's race only if upward
ticket-splitting trends among voters continue.
Harris' campaign rolled out a new ad Friday it calls the first to link
Trump to a down-ballot candidate. The commercial alternates between
Trump’s praise for Robinson and the lieutenant governor’s comments which
his critics have argued show his support for a statewide abortion ban
without exceptions. Robinson's campaign have said that's not true.
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North Carolina Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson speaks before Republican
presidential nominee former President Donald Trump at a campaign
rally in Asheville, N.C., Aug. 14, 2024. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke,
File)
The Democratic National Committee is also running billboards in
three major North Carolina cities showing a photo of Robinson and
Trump and comments Trump has said about him. And a fundraising
appeal Friday by Jeff Jackson, Democratic attorney general
candidate, also includes a past video showing Republican opponent
Dan Bishop saying he endorsed Robinson.
“Every North Carolinian when they go to vote ought to look at
whether a candidate has done that, because that sends a strong
message about who you are as a candidate,” Democratic Gov. Roy
Cooper, a top Harris surrogate, said at a Friday news conference.
CNN's story, which describes a series of comments that it said
Robinson posted on the message board more than a decade ago, sent
tremors through the state’s political class, particularly
Republicans.
While the state Republican Party came to Robinson’s defense late
Thursday pointing out he's “categorically denied the allegations,”
party Chairman Jason Simmons put out his own statement Friday
calling them “deeply troubling” and that Robinson "needs to explain
them to the people of North Carolina.”
U.S. Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., who endorsed a Robinson rival in the
primary, said on X that Thursday “was a tough day, but we must stay
focused on the races we can win.” He didn't mention the governor's
race.
U.S. Rep. Richard Hudson of North Carolina, chairman of House
Republicans' campaign arm, discounted Robinson’s impact in North
Carolina congressional races.
CNN reported that Robinson, who would be North Carolina’s first
Black governor, attacked on the message board civil rights leader
Martin Luther King Jr. in searing terms and once referred to himself
as a “black NAZI.” CNN also reported that Robinson wrote of being
aroused by a memory of “peeping” women in gym showers when he was 14
along with an appreciation of transgender pornography. Robinson at
one point referred to himself as a “perv,” according to CNN.
The Associated Press has not independently confirmed that Robinson
wrote and posted the messages. CNN said it matched details of the
account on the pornographic website forum to other online accounts
held by Robinson by comparing usernames, a known email address and
his full name.
CNN reported that details discussed by the account holder matched
Robinson’s age, length of marriage and other biographical
information. It also compared figures of speech that came up
frequently in his public Twitter profile that appeared in
discussions by the account on the pornographic website.
___
Price reported from New York. Associated Press writers Kevin Freking
in Washington, Meg Kinnard in Chapin, South Carolina and Makiya
Seminera in Raleigh contributed to this report.
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