NASH COUNTY, N.C. — After eight years as North Carolina’s chief executive, Gov. Roy Cooper is saying goodbye to the office.
According to his office, he will speak at Nash Community College in Rocky Mount, where he will reflect on his accomplishments during his eight years leading North Carolina.
As attorney general, Cooper oversaw 27 executions. But he’s been quiet about the death penalty in his two terms as governor.
The three players arrested were eventually declared innocent by then-North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper, who is now ...
North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper and Gov.-elect Josh Stein have challenged a portion of a law just enacted by the ...
Bishop William Barber led a rally Monday in Raleigh to protest the override of Gov. Roy Cooper's veto of a bill that moves executive powers from incoming Democratic members of the Council of State to ...
One day after the North Carolina House voted to make a controversial bill stripping power from Democrats into law, the ...
Michael Coates chose to buy a generator to keep his insulin cold rather than pay rent. His landlord evicted him. Hundreds ...
Shares have advanced in Asia after Wall Street resumed its upward climb as an update on inflation appeared to clear the way ...
Sen. Thom Tillis planned to make his 2026 reelection campaign for the Senate official Wednesday with an event in Washington ...
The final count of votes in the race on Tuesday upheld Democratic incumbent Allison Riggs ’s victory, reports Kyle Ingram.
Calling the bill a “damnable, moral shame,” Barber urged Moral Monday protesters to return to the legislature on Wednesday ...