Offering an insightful analysis of North Carolina political trends
and personalities, Paul Luebke moves beyond the usual labels of
Republican and Democrat, conservative and liberal. In
Tar Heel
Politics 2000, he argues that North Carolina's real political
battle is between two factions of the state's political and
economic elite: modernizers and traditionalists. Modernizers draw
their strength from the bankers, developers, news media, and other
urban interests that support growth, he says. Traditionalists, in
contrast, are rooted in small-town North Carolina and
fundamentalist Protestantism, tied to agriculture and low-wage
industries and threatened by growth and social change. Both
modernizers and traditionalists are linked with politicians who
represent their interests.
An updated and revised version of Luebke's
Tar Heel Politics:
Myths and Realities (1990),
Tar Heel Politics 2000
highlights the resurgence of the southern Republican Party for the
first time in a century and discusses a number of significant
changes that have occurred over the last decade. These include the
institutionalization of a viable two-party system in the General
Assembly, the further shift of native-born whites throughout the
South into the Republican voting column, and ideological conflict
in North Carolina that parallels to some extent the post-1994
battles between the Republican Congress and the Clinton White
House. In addition, the book provides a detailed analysis of the
political appeal of Senator Jesse Helms and draws on Luebke's
insights as a member of the North Carolina State House since
1991.