NCGA: Tim Moore makes his case for Speaker | Eastern North Carolina Now

    Publisher's note: Brant Clifton keeps a light on the Speaker's race in his "bare knuckles" Conservative online publication known as The Daily Haymaker.

    Next weekend, state House Republicans will be huddling to ID their picks for House and caucus leadership positions for the upcoming legislative session. With the departure of Thom Tillis for DC, all eyes are on the race for speaker. A crowd of legislators has big dreams about being the next speaker. But insiders tell me the race for speaker really boils down to two candidates: Leo Daughtry of Johnston County and Tim Moore of Cleveland County.

    Daughtry – a former Republican caucus leader with decades of experience in the General Assembly — offers a clear contrast to that of the much younger Moore — an attorney and current Rules Committee chairman with a dozen years of experience in the House. Daughtry is comfortable as a wheeler-dealer who doesn't mind crossing the aisle to work deals with Democrats. Daughtry has been very generous with campaign cash for his colleagues during recent election cycles. Moore has been, too — but also got out in the field and provided some sweat equity toward his colleagues' campaigns.

    Moore has put together a glossy, full-color brochure making his case to his Republican colleagues for being elected speaker of the House. The document has been distributed throughout the caucus, and we — of course — got our hands on a copy. Its centerpiece is a Dear Colleagues letter:

    I want to share with you my vision of where we can take not just the north Carolina House Republican caucus – but North Carolina as a state.

    For many years our role was to explain to the citizens of North Carolina how the wrong-headed and corrosive decisions of Big Government liberals were eroding the livelihoods and hope of North Carolinians. North Carolina was placed in real jeopardy by the long unchecked decisions to place government and those who "knew best" in charge of our progress and prosperity. For too long the legislative majority ignored the basic truth that individuals are best positioned and motivated to build lives and take risks for the benefit of themselves and their families. Our role, in the minority, was to point out the dangers of liberal legislation at every turn, to sound the alarm no matter whether it grew tiresome to those who didn't want to hear it, and who didn't recognize the danger of their actions.

    Then came 2010. We arrived in the majority of both chambers for the first time in over 100 years and immediately undertook the herculean task of steering the ship away from the rocks. We passed a sound budget and began enacting sensible conservative reforms to restore balance between government and the hard-working citizens of North Carolina. There was no time to waste. We began to put the House back in order.

    In 2012 we gained a supermajority in both chambers and a Governor who saw, for all our intra-party differences, our great State in fundamentally the same way.

    •  We made progress in disentangling our State from the cumbersome and job-killing regulations on business

    •  We took important steps toward reforming the tax code, including enacting much-needed income tax relief for North Carolina

    •  We gave parents more choice in the way they pursue the dream of providing a better educational experience for their children.

    •  We began fixing and reforming Medicaid to improve the delivery of health care to our citizens.

    We gave our teachers one of the largest pay raises in our state's history.legis

    We passed significant legislation to instill confidence and integrity in the elections process.

    We gave the people the chance to decide on the definition of marriage through a Constitutional Amendment.

    We placed the interests of hard working taxpayers above the various special interests.

    Even with those accomplishments, it is time we move toward a different phase in our leadership of North Carolina. To govern in the future, I believe we must use and grow our collective wisdom and participation. That means we must use the vast resources of the membership of our caucus to solve problems. We must encourage fruitful debate and respect opposing viewpoints and each other. Regardless of the outcome, we stand as one caucus.

    I am announcing my intention to run for Speaker of the North Carolina House of Representatives. I hope you will take some time to review my goals for our caucus and our state. I look forward to speaking with you personally soon.


    Hmmm. A move away from an all-powerful speaker (Brubaker, Tillis, Black, Hackney, et. al.) to a lot more of the key decisions being made by the majority caucus. Interesting.

    Moore's document also includes a detailed outline of his stands on issues and his plans for the House under his speakership.
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( November 19th, 2014 @ 9:53 am )
 
I became a resident of NC for the first time in 1967-70 as a student at Southeastern Seminary then as the first Baptist Chaplain to the Wake County Juvenile Court. I had come from Atlanta and WAS NOT IMPRESSED with the state of growth and progress. When I graduated and left for SC and GA pastoral duties, I thought to myself, "Raleigh is nothing but a Capital Cow Town and this state is far from growing as has GA where I was reared near Atlanta!"

In 1986 I returned to become a Representative for Ministers Life Insurance Company --- traveling from Durham to Wilmington and all points East. Had things ever changed in my absence!

The Research Triangle Park had transformed Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill into a "happening place." The placing of a Medical School in Pitt County and the transformation of ECTC into ECU had turned Greenville into an equally growing town.

We moved to Rocky Mount of my wife's birth and rearing. It was pumped as "The City on the Rise." However, the death of textiles in this state and loss of manufacturing have now made it a "City on the Rise"~~~in drugs and crime ONLY!

The above claims by Conservatives to build this state and remain a "progressive leader among states" falls on deaf ears for me. Atlanta and GA are still growing by leaps and bounds / Texas is doing the same / SC is even seeing a capture of several large auto manufacturers to take the place of their lost textiles.

Why is NC losing teachers to other states? What has been done to replace the lost textile and furniture manufacturing? Especially, what is this deal over Fracking and the legislation to make it a felony to disclose chemicals being used? Add to that the coal ash dumping into the Haw River! Our Pamlico Sound is having issues with pollution and that will only grow unless something is done upriver on the Roanoke, Tar, and Neuse basins feeding this lovely Sound! What is PCS putting into the air and the water as it produces some of the most caustic substances across from my home at Bayview.

Just asking, folks!!!



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