State of the State 2025 LPNC Response
Speech by the Chair of the Libertarian Party of North Carolina
Delivered March 11, 2025
Good evening. I’m Ryan Brown, Chair of the Libertarian Party of North Carolina. I want to thank you for being here with me.
Tonight, I’m here to offer a different perspective—one that cuts through the noise of the last two speeches you just heard by the Democrats and the Republicans, with the same old polished promises and finger-pointing. You can switch the scripts, and no one would notice a difference.
Instead, let’s talk about what’s really happening in our state and our nation. Let’s talk about the failures, the hypocrisy, and the solutions neither of these parties will touch. Most importantly, let’s talk about hope—real hope—for a future where people, not politics, come first.
First, let’s address the elephant (pun intended) in the room: the Republicans’ failure on the budgetary continuing resolution. In Washington, our GOP leaders had a chance to stand for fiscal responsibility, to demand transparency and restraint in a bloated federal budget. Instead, they caved like they always do. They supported a stopgap that keeps the government’s spending spree alive, piling more debt on our children’s backs while dodging tough choices. This isn’t leadership—it’s cowardice. North Carolinians deserve representatives who fight for principle, not just uniparty loyalty.
True to form, our U.S. Senators, Thom Tillis and Ted Budd, are expected to vote for the spending bill, virtually a carbon copy of Biden’s spending bill from last year. The Liberty Index—a measure of how well lawmakers protect our freedoms—came out last week for U.S. senators. Budd scored an underwhelming F with a 65% while Tillis scored an abysmal 15%.
These numbers reflect votes that expand government overreach, erode privacy, and prop up corporate welfare. If they truly valued liberty, they’d reject warrantless surveillance, end crony handouts, and stop the war on our rights. Instead, they’re playing the same old Washington game.
Thom Tillis and Ted Budd represent the interests of big government and big spending. We deserve better.
Our new Democratic Attorney General, Jeff Jackson, voted for the reauthorization of FISA 702—a law that lets the feds spy on your calls, emails, and texts without a warrant. He’s all for government intrusion when it suits him, yet the so-called straight shooter is auspiciously silent on the ActBlue money laundering scandal right here in North Carolina, like AG Stein before him. Reports have surfaced of suspicious donations funneled through this Democratic fundraising platform—potentially millions in untraceable cash influencing our elections. Where’s the outrage, Jeff? Where’s the investigation? It seems his principles bend when it’s his party on the line. That’s not integrity—that’s fraudulence.
Governor Stein talked about our law enforcement officers being heroes and introduced several during his speech. If he is serious about protecting law enforcement officers, then it’s time for him to publicly support real body camera reform. We pay for the body cameras to see how our public safety is handled. Let’s make that information public. I have seen personally, firsthand, how rogue officers violating their oaths, are able to manipulate the restrictions on body camera access and use them to hide evidence of their crimes. SHaring the truth is good for everyone, all the time.
Further, if Governor Stein is serious about tackling the opioid epidemic, then it’s time for him to end the costly, violent, and destructive war on drugs. The War on Drugs has not only failed but it has led to the largest attack on our civil liberties in recent decades. Let’s not escalate the War on Drugs in North Carolina. Opioids are a problem because of government support for their corporate donors for decades. Turning victims into criminals and empowering drug lords is not the way to solve this problem.
We have two parties that love to yell about how important our democracy is, but then work as hard as they can to disenfranchise anyone who doesn’t support them. Beyond partisan gerrymandering at the state and local levels, absurd lead times for elections, ballot harvesting, unclear ID rules, and all the other games the uniparty plays to try and rig elections in their favor, North Carolina has the dubious distinction of owning the only non-certified race in the country, 4 months and 7 days after the election ended.
The Board of Elections is strictly partisan, despite our state now having more unaffiliated voters than republicans or democrats. In fact, just a few short years ago, governor Roy Cooper went to court to make sure it stayed that way. Tonight, I am calling on the legislature to make a bold move that reflects the population of North Carolina and change this structure. It’s time to put a Libertarian on the Board of Elections, and to add at least three unaffiliated representatives. We need to restore confidence in the Board of Elections and have elections the people can trust.
Read moreLPNC State Chair to Deliver Libertarian Response to State of the State
March 12, 2025 (RALEIGH) – Libertarian Party of North Carolina (LPNC) State Chair Ryan Brown will deliver the Libertarian viewpoint on the current state of politics in North Carolina, following the Democratic State of the State and the Republican response this evening. Brown’s remarks will offer a principled Libertarian perspective on the issues facing North Carolinians, challenging the status quo of the two-party system.
Read moreTar Heel Libertarian - February 2025
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NCGA Proposes Series of Bills - Guns and Taxes, LPNC Quick Reaction
by: Ryan Brown, LPNC Chair
During the first week of the North Carolina General Assembly session there were a significant number of bills filed. I took a look at a few of them and will rate them, according to our platform and beliefs. If you guys like this type of article, let us know and we’ll keep it up. Today we’re going to keep it short and do a quick writeup on five bills: HB5, HB9, HB11, HB14, and HB28.
Guns
First up, there were three gun-related bills, two of which were pretty good, and one not great, or superfluous, at best.
First up was HB 5 - NC Constitutional Carry Act introduced by Representative Keith Kidwell (REP) and sponsored by another two dozen representatives. Overall, it is a good bill but still includes some disappointing things. It keeps the requirement to notify officers you’re carrying and provide an ID. If not, you’re guilty of a crime. It keeps the stipulation that you are committing a crime if you are carrying and have a single drink out at dinner with your family. And it fails to lift the ban on students or visitors carrying or owning a weapon on college campuses. Regardless, we’d support passage of this bill. On net, it is a reduction of gun laws in North Carolina.
Next, we have HB 9 - Firearm Discharge/Preempt Local Ordinance, also introduced by Representative Keith Kidwell (REP). This bill seems like a response to local governments trying to mandate how people are allowed to exercise their right to self-defense on their own property. This is a short and clear bill restricting local governments and protecting property rights. We strongly support this bill.
Finally, HB28. The Gun Violence Prevention Act was introduced by Representative Jennifer Balkcom (REP). While the intentions of this act seem good, it has no provisions to actually try and prevent gun violence. All the act does is make it extra illegal for people to commit crimes with a gun. North Carolina needs fewer gun laws. Making crime extra illegal isn’t going to help anyone.
Go to the Liberty and Legislation page to read our reaction to the bills concerning taxes.