
Democrats react to Cooper's resounding primary win
Reaction was swift from various Democratic voices after former Gov. Roy Cooper easily won the primary in his bid for a U.S. Senate seat.
DNC Chair Ken Martin:
"Tonight, the DNC congratulates Governor Roy Cooper for winning the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate in North Carolina. Governor Cooper is a fighter who has always put working North Carolinians first. Throughout his time as Governor, Cooper showed time and time again that he shows up and delivers results for working families by creating high-paying jobs, expanding access to affordable health care, and working across the aisle and with business leaders to create an economic boom in the Tar Heel state. As a U.S. senator, Governor Cooper will wake up every morning and work to, as he puts it, 'make stuff cost less.' The DNC will be on offense, supporting him to ensure that North Carolinians have leaders who put them first."
DSCC Statement:
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee Chair Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand released a joint statement:
"From expanding Medicaid for hundreds of thousands of North Carolinians to bringing good-paying jobs to the state and tackling crime, Governor Roy Cooper has always been a champion for North Carolina families. Governor Cooper's strong leadership, enthusiastic support across North Carolina, and unmatched electoral record will power his campaign to victory, and he will flip North Carolina's Senate seat.
"While Governor Cooper has dedicated his career to fighting for North Carolina, Michael Whatley has only fought for himself and his special-interest backers. Whatley is a political insider and lobbyist who spent his career doing the bidding of big corporations, while North Carolina has paid the price. Whatley is only looking out for himself, and in November, voters will reject his self-serving politics and send Governor Cooper to the Senate."
Senate Majority PAC:
"Roy Cooper just won the Democratic nomination, and North Carolina Republicans should be nervous," said Senate Majority PAC Spokesperson Lauren French. "As governor, Cooper didn't just talk about the results; he delivered them. Half a million North Carolinians got health coverage. More than 640,000 jobs were created. And a landmark program wiped out more than $4 billion in medical debt. That's what governing actually looks like.
"Then there's Michael Whatley, a man so tangled in special interest money that 'conflict of interest' might as well be his campaign slogan. But serving North Carolina isn't about feathering your own nest, and its next senator shouldn't treat the job like an enrichment opportunity.
"The choice is simple: a proven governor who puts people first or a party operative who's spent his career putting himself first. North Carolinians know the difference, and they'll elect Roy Cooper in November because of it."










