Friday, January 2, 2026

A Softening, But Not a Flip: North Carolina's Partisan Identification Shifted Late in 2025

By Michael Bitzer

With 2025 concluded and the start of what will be an intense 2026, I was reviewing the past year’s Catawba College-YouGov surveys of North Carolinians (1) to see what interesting patterns or trends occurred over the year.

One thing that stood out to me (because of its potential implications for electoral volatility in a presidential-to-midterm transition year) was a fairly consistent pattern of the state’s partisan identification—that is, until the final survey of 2025.

As part of a standard set of questions asked in each Catawba-YouGov poll, respondents can initally say what their partisan identification is: Democrat, Republican, Independent, other, or not sure. Another question asks for the respondents’ ‘strength’ of their initial partisan identification, meaning for partisans ‘are you strong or not very strong’ in your identity, while among those who initially say they are ‘Independent,’ do they lean to one party or the other, or do they consider themselves a ‘pure’ independent.

Starting with the first Catawba-YouGov Survey in August 2024, the partisan self-identifications of the surveys showed a pretty consistent pattern over the past year, until the last survey.


Figure 1: Catawba-YouGov 2024-2025 Surveys with initial partisan identifications among North Carolina Respondents.

Sunday, December 28, 2025

'Tis the Season: The 5 Most Important Stories from North Carolina Politics in 2025

by Christopher Cooper

There are year-end lists for everything—music,1 books, architecture, sports, longform journalism, and, of course, politics. So, why not one more?

Here’s my take on the five most important North Carolina politics stories from 2025. I selected stories that tell us something bigger about the state of our politics, and will matter long after 2025 comes to a close. Is this “the” definitive, list? Absolutely not—I encourage you to read and listen to others. But these five stories all have long-term implications for how we understand North Carolina politics.