RALEIGH, N.C. — Democrats in North Carolina were celebrating big wins in the swing state after the November election, including victories in races for governor and other top statewide offices. But the political high didn't last long.
Republican lawmakers are stripping away some core powers of the newly elected officials through a series of wide-ranging changes, anticipating that the result of a yet-to-be-called state legislative race will cost them their veto-proof majority next year. Critics say the moves, which were rushed through without any chance for public comment or analysis, undermine the voters and are simply undemocratic, but they have few options for undoing them.
''Let us speak plainly: This bill is nothing more than a desperate power grab,'' said Courtney Patterson, vice president of the NAACP's North Carolina chapter.
Among the changes, which were included in a bill that also addressed Hurricane Helene relief, are stripping the incoming governor of the authority to appoint members to the state elections board and instead giving that responsibility to the state auditor — a job won by a Republican last month. The measure also weakens the ability of the governor to fill vacancies on the state court of appeals and the state supreme court. It prohibits the attorney general from taking legal positions contrary to the legislature's and weakens the powers of the state school superintendent and lieutenant governor.
Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper and Attorney General Josh Stein, who will succeed Cooper next month, have already filed a lawsuit against Republican lawmakers, saying many portions of Senate Bill 382 violate the state constitution. The Republicans' actions in North Carolina are the latest example of how majority parties in some states have tried to undermine representative democracy in recent years, using extreme gerrymandering to expand their hold on power or trying to undercut officeholders of the opposing party or ballot initiatives that passed in statewide elections.
''This is not how healthy democracies work," said Steven Greene, a political science professor at North Carolina State University. ''You don't lose and decide you're going to change the rules because you don't like that you lost. It's corrosive of the basic principles of democracy.''
Greene said he was disappointed but not surprised by the effort he describes as part of a familiar playbook. In 2016, hundreds of people protested and more than two dozen were arrested after Republicans passed a bill that stripped powers from Cooper's incoming administration during a special session.
Republicans point out that Democrats acted to weaken executive branch positions after voters elected the state's first GOP governor in the 20th century, in 1972, and the century's only GOP lieutenant governor in 1988. North Carolina Senate leader Phil Berger blamed Democrats' ''blatant partisanship'' for necessitating the changes, which came just weeks after voters chose Democrats for the top statewide positions.