(The Center Square) – North Carolina voters will choose between Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Whatley and former two-term Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper to succeed Republican U.S. Sen. Thom Tillis, multiple reports say.
Politico on Thursday morning at dawn was first to report Whatley, based on “two people familiar with the decision.” Cooper has long been the desired option for the state’s party supporters, and WRAL in Raleigh said “people familiar” with his plans confirmed Cooper’s intention.
Gov. Roy Cooper meets his supporters after winning election for a second term as governor on Nov. 3, 2020.
Neither man has publicly announced himself a candidate. The seat is one of two held by the Grand Old Party in the chamber considered most vulnerable in the 2026 midterms. Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, has the other.
Whatley’s inclusion comes with Lara Trump, daughter-in-law of President Donald Trump, saying she will not move from Florida to her native North Carolina and make a run. The two were hand-picked by the now two-term president to lead the 2024 election for the Republican National Committee, and Politico reports he’ll support Whatley for the seat.
Former U.S. Rep. Wiley Nickel is the lone Democrat to declare intention for the election. No Republicans with name recognition have given intent. On each side, there have been a number of names bandied about.
Both candidates are expected to formally announce their campaigns within 10 days. Cooper is a headliner at this weekend’s state party convention for Democrats in Raleigh.
The formal filing period is in December, and March 3 is the date for primaries. However, past patterns indicate a candidate backed by Trump and one as popular for his party as Cooper could lead to little or no competition. That would allow each to generate campaign funding for November.
President Trump on Dec. 4 chose Whatley to continue as the chairman of the national committee. He’ll be unable to run for a third term in 2028. As was done with Trump before him, the national candidate for president is expected to name the RNC chairman – though Whatley did get a formal elected vote in March 2024.
Whatley, 56, is the former chairman of the North Carolina Republican Party. When first chosen in March to succeed Ronna McDaniel, he said, “We are already well on our way to making Joe Biden a one-term president, and I look forward to working with every Republican to deliver victories up and down the ballot!”
He delivered in many places, none larger than the federal trifecta – Trump in the White House, the U.S. Senate flipped to a 53-47 majority for Republicans, and the U.S. House stayed with the GOP 220-215.
Cooper, a 68-year-old born and raised in the Nash County community of Nashville, claimed gubernatorial wins of Medicaid expansion, cumulative raises of 19% for teachers, and dismantling of the infamous bathroom bill, also known as House Bill 2, that now appears about eight years ahead of its time. The legislation didn’t allow boys and men to enter private spaces of the opposite sex by saying they were girls or women.
His losses are led by universal school choice, photo identification for voting, deregulation and abortion. The national move on the protection of women’s spaces is poised to erode a similar battle he won on HB2.
The potential battle of Whatley and Cooper will test trends. Cooper is 13-0 in elections for state House of Representatives, state Senate, state attorney general and governor. Republicans in statewide races for this decade – 2020, 2022 and 2024 – are 32-10 against Democrats.
Republicans are 5-for-5 in U.S. Senate races since losing to the late Kay Hagan in 2008. Democrats chase back to 1998 for the last time winning a Senate seat at the midterms.
Since Hagan’s win, nearly 1.3 million voter registrations have been added to the state rolls. Democrats have 555,811 fewer than they did then and Republicans have 289,657 more – an 845,468-registration difference.