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North Carolina District 2
Rep. Bob Etheridge (D)

North Carolina 2nd District

Rep. Bob Etheridge (D)


The coastal plain of North Carolina was long bypassed by history. It was settled after Virginia and South Carolina, and only filled in with English settlers as Scots-Irish families were streaming down the valley of Virginia to the western Piedmont. This had long been tobacco country, a high-yield crop that for many years could support a family on 40 acres. Tobacco, an important colonial crop, became even more so after James B. Duke created Bull Durham tobacco and Lucky Strike cigarettes. But this was long a backward area. Its small farms and little cities were populated mainly by tenant farmers and mill hands, people raising families in thin-walled frame houses, often with no electricity or running water.

2008 Presidential Vote
Obama 158,878 (53%)
McCain 141,448 (47%)
Cook Partisan Voting Index
R+ 2

In many ways, life here has improved, in large part because this region adjoins one of the nation’s fastest-growing metropolitan areas, Raleigh-Durham. The population of Wake County, which includes Raleigh, grew 33% from 2000 to 2007. Similar growth is taking place in surrounding Franklin (21%), Johnston (29%), Harnett (19%), and Chatham (25%) counties. The dynamic local economy has generated tens of thousands of jobs, with subdivisions and retirement communities sprouting up. While counties to the east have seen denim mills close and tobacco farms reduced by half since Congress in 2004 ended price supports, other parts of the region have boomed. Raleigh combines North Carolina State University and glitzy new cultural institutions with country-cured hams and collard greens at such culinary destinations as Big Ed’s City Market Restaurant. In Chatham County, a co-op in 2006 opened the state’s first biodiesel production plant.

The 2nd Congressional District of North Carolina consists of an irregular loop south of Raleigh, taking in parts of nine counties, including Wake County, which is split among three congressional districts. It covers all of Johnston County, the state’s top tobacco-producing county, and parts of hog-producing Sampson County and Cumberland County, including portions of the Army’s Fort Bragg and Pope Air Force Base. The Hispanic population has grown to 10% as Latinos flock to jobs in meat- and chicken-processing factories, but many are not registered to vote. This is by and large the blue-collar, country music part of the booming Raleigh-Durham metro area, a place where most voters have a Democratic heritage but many have gotten into the habit of voting Republican for major offices. In 2000, the district voted for Republican George W. Bush for president and for Democrat Michael Easley for governor. Despite the presence of native-son John Edwards on the Democratic ticket as the vice presidential nominee in 2004, the 2nd voted for Bush again. But in Barack Obama’s narrow victory in North Carolina in 2008, he beat John McCain in this district, 52.5%-47%.



North Carolina District 2

Rep. Bob Etheridge (D)



Elected: 1996, 7th term.
Born: Aug. 7, 1941, Turkey .
Home: Lillington.
Education: Campbell U., B.S. 1965.
Religion: Presbyterian.
Family: Married (Faye); 3 children.
Military career: Army, 1965–67.
Elected office: Harnett Cnty. Comm., 1973–76, Chmn., 1975-76; NC House of Reps., 1978–88; NC Superintendent of Public Instruction, 1989–96.
Professional Career: Farmer, 1965–present; V.P. sales, Sorensen Industries, 1968–87; Owner, Layton Hardware, 1973–90; Co–owner, WLLN Radio, 1979–91.

 

The congressman from the 2nd District is Bob Etheridge, a Democrat first elected in 1996. His biography seems tailored to the district: He was born in the hamlet of Turkey in Sampson County, grew up in Johnston County, went to Campbell University in Harnett County, where he was a basketball star, and owned a hardware store in Lillington, the county seat. He is a tobacco farmer who served four years on the Harnett County Commission in the 1970s. He was elected to the North Carolina House in 1978 and served 10 years, eventually chairing the Appropriations Committee. In 1988 and 1992, he was elected state superintendent of public instruction. In the mid-1990s, Democratic Gov. Jim Hunt called for abolishing the superintendent’s post and transferred 300 employees to the state Board of Education. Etheridge decided to run for the U.S. House against freshman David Funderburk, a Republican and longtime ally of conservative firebrand Jesse Helms in the Senate. When Funderburk tried to tie Etheridge to the Food and Drug Administration’s announcement that tobacco could be regulated as a drug, Etheridge responded by citing his own tobacco credentials: “I own tobacco allotments and have for years. I’d like to know how many days Mr. Funderburk spent priming tobacco, setting tobacco, and how many days he spent under the hot sun in the tobacco fields.” Etheridge won 53%-46%.

 
Election Results:
  2008 General
        Bob Etheridge (D) 199,730 (67%) ($984,575)
        Dan Mansell (R) 93,323 (31%) ($21,861)
  2008 Primary
        Bob Etheridge (D) Unopposed

Prior Winning Percentages: 2006 (67%), 2004 (62%), 2002 (65%), 2000 (58%), 1998 (57%), 1996 (53%)

In the House, Etheridge has compiled a moderate voting record that is generally more liberal on economic issues. He belongs to the centrist New Democrats. The only tobacco farmer in Congress, Etheridge vigorously opposed all attempts to regulate the crop and worked for years on the tobacco buyout bill, which finally was enacted in 2004 and reportedly paid him and his wife $31,000. Utilizing his previous experience as an educator, he won a provision in the Higher Education Reauthorization Act to teach values in public schools. He also pushed legislation to allow states to obtain interest-free loans to build schools. He supported the flag-burning amendment, a ban on “partial-birth” abortions, and later, in 2002, supported the use of force in Iraq. He also split with his party when he voted for trade promotion authority for Bush, which made it easier for the president to negotiate free-trade deals. North Carolina high-tech and farm interests supported the measure. The state has suffered setbacks from expanded trade, he said, but added, “We’ve been a net winner.”

After his district was devastated by Hurricane Floyd in 1999, Etheridge won enactment of his bill to assist weather forecasters to improve hurricane warnings for inland areas. In another assist for his district, he passed a measure to name the post office in Smithfield for actress Ava Gardner, who “did live the American dream, but never forgot her beginnings in Johnston County.”

After Democrats won majority control of the House in 2006, Etheridge became chairman of the Agriculture Subcommittee on General Farm Commodities and Risk Management. From that perch, he helped to shape the 2008 farm bill, including reduced subsidies for big farmers. With Rep. Jerry Moran, R-Kan., he won passage of a bill to permit small farmers to qualify for farm programs, overturning a controversial federal agency ruling. In 2007, he traveled to Cuba and sought to end the U.S. trade embargo on that country, a move supported by many American farmers. During the recent spike in energy prices, Etheridge in 2008 pushed a bill designed to reduce market manipulation and excessive speculation, but it fell 13 votes short of passage. He is also a major enthusiast for production of renewable fuels. In 2009, he stepped down as chairman to join the powerful, tax-writing Ways and Means Committee, where he was positioned to be a deal-cutter for moderate Democrats, a measure of the growing size and influence of the Democrats in the North Carolina congressional delegation. He is the only House member from the state on Ways and Means, where he landed a spot on the Trade Subcommittee to pursue his interest in that area.

The Democratically controlled state Legislature’s redistricting plan after the 2000 census added part of Raleigh, making this district more Democratic. Since then, Etheridge has won easily. In 2008, he caused a minor stir when, in an appearance at a local elementary school, he referred to Republican nominee John McCain as “an old white man.” Etheridge later apologized. In recent years, he twice thought about running for an open Senate seat, but was pre-empted by wealthy former Clinton chief of staff Erskine Bowles, who was able to self-finance some of his campaign. Etheridge seems safe, but an open-seat contest in this district could be competitive.


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Population
Population 2007 687,531
Change since 2000 11.0%
Urban 49.5%
Area size 3,979 sq mi
Work
Private 71.9%
Government 22.1%
Self-employed 5.8%
Blue collar 28.5%
White collar 50.4%
Khaki collar 4.5%
Other 16.6%
Median income $41,521
Median home value $114,800
Age
Median age 33.7 yrs
Over 65 9.9%
Under 18 25.6%
Education
High school degree 79.4%
College degree 17.3%
Graduate degree 5.1%
Race/Ethnicity
White 58.1%
Black 28.7%
Hispanic 10.0%
Asian 1.0%
Native Am. 0.4%
Hawaiian 0.1%
Two+ 1.5%
Ancestry
USA 10.1%
English 8.3%
German 7.6%
Irish 7.2%
Scotch-Irish 2.6%
Military veterans
% of pop. 11.8%
Office Information

State Offices

Lillington, 910-814-0335; Raleigh, 919-829-9122.

DC Office

1533 LHOB, 20515, 202-225-4531

Fax

202-225-5662

Web site

 http://www.house.gov/etheridge

Committees
House Budget Committee (11th of 24 D).
House Ways and Means Committee (23rd of 26 D): Oversight; Trade.

Group Ratings
  2007 2008
ADA 90 85
ACLU -- 82
AFS 91 100
LCV 85 92
ITIC -- 71
NTU 9 6
COC 65 67
ACU 8 --
CFG 9 --
FRC -- 29

NJ Ratings
  2009 Lib.-Con. 2008 Lib.-Con. 2007 Lib.-Con.
Economic - 71 - 29 56 - 43
Social - 75 - 18 57 - 42
Foreign - 59 - 37 61 - 39
Composite - 70.2 - 29.8 58.3 - 41.7
Complete Ratings For: 2008 | 2009

House Key Votes
Bail out financial markets Y 2008
Repeal D.C. gun law N 2008
Overhaul FISA Y 2008
Increase minimum wage Y 2007
Expand SCHIP N 2007
Raise CAFE standards Y 2007
Share immigration data N 2007
Foreign aid abortion ban N 2007
Ban gay bias in workplace Y 2007
Withdraw troops 8/08 Y 2007
No operations in Iran Y 2007
Free trade with Peru Y 2007
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