President is dragging the U.S. down
To the Editor:
Will the USA follow its shamefully incompetent and dishonest “leaders” all the way through the sewage system, to the absolute bottom and the destruction of our United States? I’m ashamed that U.S. citizens have elected such a fool, who then appointed more fools, such that we have an administration, that is comprised entirely of fools.
Parents target Whatley over sex offender controversy
A new coalition of North Carolina parents is taking aim at Republican U.S. Senate candidate Michael Whatley, alleging his past leadership decisions placed children at risk and demanding accountability ahead of the November election.
The group, calling itself Parents Against Whatley, launched this week with more than 60 members spanning 19 counties. Organizers say the coalition includes a mix of party affiliations, with more than one-quarter identifying as unaffiliated voters.
Ethics probe targets Republican Rep. Chuck Edwards
Western North Carolina Congressman Chuck Edwards is under investigation by the U.S. House Committee on Ethics, according to multiple reports, with allegations reportedly involving inappropriate sexual conduct.
First reported by Axios on April 30, a Republican-led bipartisan panel authorized a review into claims against Edwards that have not been fully detailed publicly, but subsequent reporting indicates the probe may center on allegations of sexual harassment and a possible relationship with a former staff member.
Keeping the faith: First-of-its kind sheriff removal hearing plays out in Graham County
There was no shortage of gray-haired attorneys in Graham County Superior Court last week. Some represented witnesses; others were just curious to watch a proceeding not seen in modern history.
Maintaining faith in the justice system and protecting law enforcement were the themes of the four-day hearing held last week in Robbinsville to determine whether Graham County Sheriff Brad Hoxit — now suspended amid allegations of misconduct tied to an investigation of the ex-husband of his current wife — would be officially barred from returning to office.
More voters are choosing “independent”
To the Editor:
In response to guest columnist Walter Cook’s recent article, “Don’t expect better results with the same choices,” (Dec. 31 edition of SMN) Mr. Cook accurately describes a political reality in Western North Carolina: for far too long, many voters have cast ballots strictly along party lines — then wondered why so little changes, or why things get worse.
Library fight, taxes shape Jackson County commission races
Amid growing financial concerns, Jackson County’s four Republican commissioners have spent the last few years fighting a culture war. On March 3, Primary Election voters will weigh in on their priorities.
Over the past four budget cycles, Jackson County commissioners have overseen a steady expansion of county government, with the general fund growing from $71.7 million in fiscal year 2021-22 to $106.9 million in 2025-26, an increase of roughly 49% over five years.
The sad reality of a post-truth country
The first thing is to tame the rage so that you do not live in it all the time. Or worse, repressing it so often and so much that it calcifies into all-consuming despair. That won’t do.
The next thing is to cultivate joy stubbornly and aggressively. You know, that “pursuit of happiness” business. It is not easy to do it in our madhouse of a country. You know it and I know it.
2025 A Look Back: Where’s Waldo award
If there were an award for being hardest to find while holding an important job, Michael Whatley would have no competition, because he’s the only entry.
President Donald Trump named Whatley Western North Carolina’s hurricane recovery czar at a Jan. 24 briefing, saying he wanted Whatley in charge of making sure “everything goes well.” Trump praised Whatley’s work and assured folks Whatley would be the one to fix it.
Kirkland sworn in, transparency questions remain
Jason Kirkland was sworn in as chairman of the Swain County Board of Commissioners on Nov. 4, marking the end of an appointment process marred by transparency concerns and procedural misunderstandings.
The swearing-in ceremony began 15 minutes late, the individual facilitating the ceremony was not using a microphone and the oath began before attendees knew where to look.
Jackson commissioner skips key board meetings
Minutes from the Dec. 3, 2024, meeting of the Jackson County Board of Commissioners show that newly elected Commissioner Jenny Lynn Hooper “stated her willingness to serve on the Tourism Development Authority, Transit Board and the Mountain Projects board.” Records from those three boards show she’s missed at least 13 of 16 meetings this year.