CHARLOTTE, N.C. — There's an unlikely star in Kamala Harris ' push to win North Carolina: Mark Robinson.
The state's embattled Republican candidate for governor, Robinson is featured in conversations this week with Harris volunteers and voters on the phone and at their doorways. Democrats wave signs warning of Trump-Robinson extremism at their press conferences. Billboard trucks circulate in key cities warning that Robinson, also the state's lieutenant governor, is ''unhinged.'' And Harris is running a new television advertising campaign highlighting Donald Trump's history of lavishing Robinson with flowery praise.
No Democrat has carried this Southern state since former President Barack Obama in 2008, whose victory stands as the only Democratic win on the presidential level here in a half-century. But Trump held North Carolina by just 1.3 percentage points four years ago, and it is again emerging as one of the most competitive states in the final weeks before Election Day.
Democrats are betting the weight of Robinson's extraordinary baggage can give Harris the edge she needs to make history.
Both sides concede that a Harris victory in North Carolina would make Trump's path to the presidency dramatically more difficult. The Republican presidential nominee acknowledged the high stakes during a campaign stop on Wednesday.
''We won North Carolina twice, and we gotta win it one more time,'' Trump told a cheering audience at a Charlotte-area manufacturing plant. ''We win North Carolina, we're going all the way.''
Trump has stopped mentioning Robinson
Yet Trump made no mention of Robinson at the event as he introduced several VIPs, his second in-state snub of his hand-picked candidate for governor in the span of five days.