Dan Blue became North Carolina's newest state senator Tuesday.
Blue, a former House Speaker, was sworn in to fill the seat of Sen. Vernon Malone, who died last month. He received a hearty welcome from his new colleagues after a swearing-in by Supreme Court Chief Justice Sarah Parker and attended by family members.
Several House members slipped into the back of the Senate chamber to watch.
Blue served two terms as speaker in the early '90s. He left the House to run for the U.S. Senate in 2002. He returned to the House in 2006 when he was appointed by Wake County Democratic Party officials to fill the seat of Rep. Bernard Allen, who died in office.
On Tuesday he answered the etiquette question of what to call him. "Senator" is his current title, but as a former speaker, he's still entitled to be called "Mr. Speaker."
"I'd prefer that," he said.
Although he just stepped into a new job, Blue would not rule out getting another one. When he was asked if he might run for the U.S. Senate next year, he responded: "I'm interested in serving the people of North Carolina and have been for three decades."
FWD: FOX OUT: Doug Fox may want to go back to a typewriter. The chairman of the state Alcoholic Beverage Commission resigned after a reporter with The Charlotte Observer and The News & Observer showed Gov. Beverly Perdue a racist e-mail Fox sent about President Barack Obama. The e-mail contained an altered picture depicting the White House lawn as a watermelon patch, with the phrase “There goes the neighborhood…" State Sen. David Weinstein has already said he wouldn't mind taking Fox's former job.
KIND OF BLUE: State Rep. Dan Blue will soon be state Sen. Blue. After winning a behind-the-scenes two-week campaign to get appointed to the seat of former Sen. Vernon Malone, the former House speaker said he wants to finish a few things up before moving to the other chamber. Presumably that means passing bills before next week's crossover that he can then vote on as a senator.
ORDER OF THE LONG LIST: Former Gov. Mike Easley found a lot of worthy North Carolinians. During two terms in office, the Southport Democrat named more than 4,000 people to the Order of the Long Leaf Pine, the state's highest award. That's a rate of more than one a day. Recipients included his wife's parents, members of his Cabinet, the Blue Angels and actor Danny Glover, who is not a Tar Heel.
IN OTHER NEWS: Durham attorney Kenneth Lewis is the first Democrat to say he'd like to run against U.S. Sen. Richard Burr in 2010. Attorney General Roy Cooper is widely expected to run as well. ... U.S. Sen. Kay Hagan would prefer that President Obama name a woman to the U.S. Supreme Court, while Burr is looking for a "non-activist" judge. ... Under pressure by Governor Perdue and Chief Justice Sarah Parker, statewide elected officials and elected judges have all volunteered to take a half a percent pay cut in line with one faced by state workers.
Elaine Marshall will also take a voluntary pay cut.
In a press release today, the secretary of state said she would ask that her annual salary be reduced by half a percent, in line with cuts proposed by Gov. Beverly Perdue.
"This is a significant step toward making hard choices to balance the State Budget," she said. "It affects all of us, including myself. I have taken the steps necessary to ensure the pay reduction applies to me as well."
Under state law, Perdue does not have the authority to reduce the pay of Council of State members such as Marshall.
Schools Superintendent June Atkinson and state Supreme Court Chief Justice Sarah Parker have also volunteered for a pay cut.
Update: Marshall and Atkinson's pay cuts are worth about $616 a year.
Second Update: Insurance Commissioner Wayne Goodwin has also volunteered.
"Balancing our state’s budget will not be an easy task, and I certainly want to do my part in supporting my employees at the Department of Insurance and this portion of the state budget solution," he said in a statement.
Third Update: A spokeswoman for the governor says that all of the members of the Council of State and elected judges will take the cut.
Which judges will volunteer for a pay cut?
N.C. Supreme Court Chief Justice Sarah Parker sent out a request this week to elected judges asking them to consider taking a proposed pay cut in solidarity with other state workers who are facing slightly lighter paychecks as a result of the recent budget woes.
Under state law, Gov. Beverly Perdue doesn't have the ability to take away from the paychecks of the elected judges as well as members of the Council of State.
Parker announced she'd be taking the cut, as well as Judge John Smith, head of the N.C. Administrative Office of the Courts.
Dome will be checking in with judges around the state next week, to see who is going to take the half of one percent cut.
Judges: If you want to tell us directly, e-mail sarah.ovaska@newsobserver.com.
The N.C. Supreme Court has ruled that doctors can be present at executions.
In a 4-3 decision authored by Justice Edward Thomas Brady, the court found that the N.C. Medical Board could not prohibit physicians from participating in the state's capital punishment procedures.
A state statute, "by its plain language, envisions physician participation in executions in some professional capacity," Brady wrote.
The medical board, a professional group that sets ethics rules for doctors, had barred doctors from monitoring inmates who were being put to death. In a lawsuit, the state Department of Correction argued that state law requiring doctors trumped the board's decision.
A Wake County Superior Court judge sided with the state in 2007, but executions remained in limbo while the case was being resolved. In today's ruling, the majority of the state Supreme Court affirmed the lower court's ruling.
In a dissent, Justices Robin Hudson and Patricia Timmons-Goodson and Chief Justice Sarah Parker argued the court should have let the legislature decide the issue.
The state House of Representatives has been sworn in by Chief Justice Sarah Parker.
State Rep. Verla Insko, an Orange County Democrat, then formally nominated House Speaker Joe Hackney to remain in his leadership position, Ben Niolet reports.
"Joe Hackney has ably led us for the past two years," she said. "His most valuable contribution through this time was to the institution."
She praised his leadership during a time "when we lost our way."
Update: Rep. David Lewis, a Harnett County Republican, nominated Rep. Paul Stam for speaker.
Lewis cited a host of problems from inadequate roads to struggling schools and years of corruption in state government as reasons to back the Apex Republican.
"We ourselves, the elected leaders, are unable to bring true change sought by the voters," he said.
Lewis added that Stam would bring free-market principles to government.
"He understands that parents are better able to make educational decisions than a Raleigh bureaucrat," he said.
Second Update: Hackney won with 68 votes on a party-line vote.
A new administrative director has been named for the state court system — Special Superior Court Judge John W. Smith.
Smith replaces Judge Ralph A. Walker, who retires on New Year's Eve, Dan Kane reports.
As director of the N.C. Administrative Office of the Courts, Smith will oversee administrative services for the state's unified court system. Gov. Mike Easley appointed him a special Superior Court judge in 2001 to work out of Wilmington. Smith has also been a district court judge, certified juvenile court judge, chief district court judge and an assistant district attorney in North Carolina.
"Judge Smith has served with excellency and dedication to the North Carolina court system," said state Supreme Court Chief Justice Sarah Parker in a statement. She made the appointment. "He brings enormous commitment to the administration of justice both within the judicial branch and to the citizens of the state."
The position pays $126,738 annually.
A majority of state appellate judges are women.
After Cheri Beasley's win in November, eight of the 15 seats on the N.C. Court of Appeals are held by women. The court is the second-highest in the state after the Supreme Court.
Along with Beasley, the female judges are Linda Stephens, Linda McGee, Wanda Bryant, Ann Marie Calabria, Martha Geer, Barbara Jackson and Donna Stroud.
Although the posts are officially nonpartisan, Calabria, Jackson and Stroud are Republicans; the rest of the judges are Democrats. They are elected statewide.
Two other women, Jewel Ann Farlow and Kristin Ruth, lost campaigns in November.
State Supreme Court justices Robin Hudson, Patricia Timmons-Goodson and Sarah Parker previously served as judges on the Court of Appeals.
Correction: An earlier version of this post misstated Jackson's affiliation.
Three of seven state Supreme Court justices are women.
With Justice Bob Edmunds winning a second term in November, the women on the state's highest court remain Chief Justice Sarah Parker and associate justices Patricia Timmons-Goodson and Robin Hudson.
Although the positions are officially nonpartisan, all three are Democrats.
Timmons-Goodson and Hudson were elected in 2006.
A Supreme Court justice since 1992 and chief justice since 2006, Parker is the longest-sitting member of the current justices. She is also the third woman to serve as chief justice in North Carolina.
The first, Susie Sharp, was elected to that post in 1974, the first woman in the country to be elected the chief justice of a state supreme court. The second, Rhoda Billings, was appointed in 1986 but lost an election to the post that fall. Billings was the only Republican woman to serve on the court.
No other women have served on the N.C. Supreme Court.
State judges may be nonpartisan in North Carolina.
But that doesn't mean a few aren't in the audience at the Jefferson-Jackson Dinner tonight.
After N.C. Democratic Party Chairman Jerry Meek recognized several U.S. representatives, Democratic members of the Council of State, House Speaker Joe Hackney and various legislators, he gave a shoutout to state Supreme Court Justices Robin Hudson, Sarah Parker and Patricia Timmons-Goodson and state Appeals Court judges John Arrowood, Linda Stephens and Jim Wynn.