North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper will leave the mansion. Sweaters, driving, sports and maybe the Senate are in his future.
North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper, a Democrat, worked with and against a Republican-controlled legislature on issues like economic development and the coronavirus pandemic.
Cooper, 67, will pass the baton off to fellow Democrat and governor-elect Josh Stein. Before serving as the top leader in the ...
North Carolina this year was home to some of the nation’s closest elections chock full of rhetoric and a deadly natural ...
In front of an audience filled with friends, family and supporters, Roy Cooper reflected on his time leading the state during ...
Cooper has served in public office since 1987, spending time in both the state House and state Senate, four terms in the ...
After Gov. Roy Cooper leaves office, he'll take a few months off before making a decision on his future, he told the Citizen ...
North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper and First Lady Kristin Cooper after the governor's farewell address at Nash Community College ...
Several more top lieutenants of outgoing North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper have agreed to work for fellow Democrat and successor ...
The prospect of getting health care for hundreds of thousands of North Carolinians was too important” to give up on Medicaid ...
North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper reflected on his tenure, citing achievements and future support for Hurricane Helene ...
In May 2009, Gov. Roy Cooper, then North Carolina’s Democratic attorney general, delivered a commencement address at Wingate University near Charlotte. At the time, the state was in the throes ...