North Carolina Republican gubernatorial nominee Mark Robinson has vowed to remain in his race despite a CNN media report about comments it says he made on a website.
Donald Trump’s campaign declined to comment Thursday on whether North Carolina Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson, whom the former president once described as “Martin Luther King on steroids,” should drop out of the battleground state’s race for governor.
Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson denied making inflammatory comments on a pornography website’s message board.
As North Carolina’s Mark Robinson confronts brutal new allegations, the future of his Republican gubernatorial campaign is in doubt.
The political forecasting site Larry Sabato’s Crystal Ball has shifted the North Carolina governor’s race toward Democrats amid an unfolding controversy Thursday involving Mark
Also in today’s newsletter, Teamsters opts against presidential endorsement and what the Fed’s rate cut means for the election
North Carolina Republican gubernatorial nominee Mark Robinson has vowed to remain in his race despite a CNN media report about comments it says he made on a website
Mark Robinson, the Republican candidate for governor in North Carolina, denies claims reported by CNN that he referred to himself as a "Black NAZI" on the message board of a pornography website. In a video posted to X,
Republican candidate Mark Robinson says he'll stay in the race for governor of North Carolina amid allegations of past disturbing comments online. Robinson has vehemently denied the accusations. NBC News' Laura Jarrett reports.
Larry Sabato's Crystal Ball announced it is shifting the North Carolina gubernatorial race from "lean D" to "likely D" after a report regarding Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson, the Republican nominee.