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Vernon Robinson

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Vernon Lucius Robinson (born 1955) is a former US Air Force Captain, conservative political activist, former candidate for U.S. Congress, and a former City Council member of Winston-Salem, North Carolina. During the 2016 Republican presidential nomination process, Robinson was the campaign director of the National Draft Ben Carson for President Committee.[1]

Early life[edit]

Robinson was born in New York City and raised in Los Angeles, California. He graduated from the US Air Force Academy in 1977 and was commissioned as a 2nd Lieutenant. After serving as a nuclear missile launch commander he left the Air Force having attained the rank of Captain. While in the Air Force, Robinson earned an MBA from the University of Missouri. He moved to Winston-Salem, North Carolina with his wife Helene. There he taught business administration at Winston-Salem State University.[2]

Politics and public service[edit]

Robinson's campaigns for office have included runs for North Carolina Superintendent of Public Instruction (1996), state Senate (1998), state House of Representatives (2002), U.S. Congress (2004, 5th District, NC), Chair of the NC Republican Party (2005), and U.S. Congress (2006, 13th District, NC). He served two terms on Winston-Salem's City Council as one of only two Republicans. In 2005 he was defeated by Democrat Molly Leight, garnering 922 votes against her 1,665.

During the 1990s and 2000s, Robinson crusaded for school choice legislation as a measure to improve North Carolina public schools. As president of an education reform foundation, he authored articles on the topic, which were published in non-partisan public policy digests.[3]

2004 congressional race[edit]

Robinson was a candidate in the 2004 primary for the Republican nomination for North Carolina's 5th congressional district. He placed first in the July 20 primary before losing a runoff in August; the seat was being vacated by Richard Burr.

During the campaign, the Winston-Salem Journal, in an editorial criticizing Robinson, declared: "Jesse Helms is back! And this time, he's black."[citation needed]

His 2004 campaign highlighted several issues, especially illegal immigration. In fact, his campaign really began a year earlier when he was the keynote speaker at an anti-illegal-alien rally in front of the Mexican consulate in Raleigh. His campaign, once underway, included one radio advertisement that was temporarily removed from radio stations due to concerns regarding Federal Election Commission and Federal Communications Commission regulations. The advertisement ended with a message in Spanish which translates to "Yo, gringo! This episode of 'The Twilight Zone' was paid for by Robinson for Congress." The radio station, WSJS, was concerned that the FEC and/or FCC might take issue with the non-English disclaimer, as the rest of the ad was in English. To avoid possibly being construed as biased, WSJS pulled all ads for the 5th District Primary.[1] After Robinson decided to change the disclaimer to be in English with the above text, WSJS restored the modified ad, and with it, all 5th District ads. The guideline with which WSJS was concerned required the organization paying for a political advertisement to be disclosed. In defending his ad, Robinson said, according to the Winston-Salem Journal, "I think there might be a debate about 'paid for' (being understood), but 'Robinson for Congreso' is clear."[2]

Robinson takes a socially conservative stance on a number of other issues. He campaigned at gun shows in the 5th District. Robinson frequently charged his primary opponents as being big tax-raisers and homosexual rights supporters. Jack Kemp initially endorsed Robinson, but withdrew his endorsement when Robinson supported strong enforcement of immigration laws.[4]

In an eight-way primary for the Republican nomination, Robinson pulled 24% of the vote, finishing first and ahead of well-funded candidates but falling short of the 40% threshold required to avoid a runoff. Therefore, in August, Robinson faced off against second-place primary finisher Virginia Foxx, who also was a social conservative. He polled 45% against Foxx. Foxx went on to win the general election over Democrat Jim Harrell, Jr..

2006 congressional race[edit]

In early 2006, Robinson announced he would again seek to become a member of the Congressional delegation from North Carolina. He sought to run against Congressman Mel Watt in the heavily Democratic 12th Congressional District.

On February 28 Robinson withdrew as a candidate in the 12th District and filed to run in the more competitive 13th District, against incumbent Congressman Brad Miller. Robinson defended his candidacy in this district by saying he had several donors from the 13th in 2004 and that he was motivated by a desire to defeat Miller. Winning 63% of the vote, Robinson won a May 2 primary against two relatively unknown candidates.[5]

In August 2011, Robinson launched a new official campaign website, announcing his candidacy for the 8th Congressional district in North Carolina. He summarized his positions on the issues on his new site and stated, "I believe there is no more pressing issue regarding national survival than the issue of our exploding national debt. We cannot allow the Obama Administration and Washington insiders to spend money that we do not have with an IOU drawn off the backs of our grandchildren. This is fiscal child abuse and changes our country's motto from "Home of the Brave" to "No Child Left a Dime."[6]

2016 congressional race[edit]

In March 2016, Robinson announced that he would be running for the 13th Congressional District in North Carolina.[7] He lost the nomination to Ted Budd.

References[edit]

  1. "The Ben Carson Super PAC Is Pretty Lucrative If You're Running It". Retrieved 3 December 2016.
  2. http://teapartycheer.com/bios/the-south/north-carolina/vernon-l-robinson-nc-bio/
  3. 'Pro: North Carolina Should Embrace School Choice' North Carolina Insight, (published by the NC Center for Public Policy Research) September 1995, pp. 34–41.
  4. Gizzi, John (July 26, 2004). "Black Conservative Tops North Carolina Primary". Human Events (60, number 25). p. 6.
  5. Jenkins, Jim (2006-08-24). "Vernon Robinson on the line..." The News & Observer. Archived from the original on 2013-01-29. Retrieved 2009-03-10. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  6. "For Congress". Retrieved 3 December 2016.
  7. "Seventeen Republicans Walk into a Primary..." 23 May 2016. Retrieved 3 December 2016.

External links[edit]


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