The Foxfire Dispatch

2.12 TFD After the Primary: 2026 NC Edition

1 h 18 min · 6 de mar de 2026
portada del episodio 2.12 TFD After the Primary: 2026 NC Edition

Descripción

Host Liz Purvis welcomes guest host Coach LeVon Barnes of Alamance County, a 23-year educator and working-class father running for a North Carolina General Assembly House district 64, to discuss why he entered politics and what he learned from past campaigns. We break down key North Carolina primary results and dynamics, including Alamance county commissioner and sheriff races, Durham’s Congressional District 4 primary between Valerie Foushee and Nida Allam (and Allam’s concession), new Durham school board members, and debates over severe public education underfunding and how counties are forced to fill gaps. We also discuss Roy Cooper’s Senate run, the importance of judicial races like Justice Anita Earls, surprising statewide outcomes, the razor-thin Phil Berger–Sam Page Republican contest, Democratic primary upsets of incumbents who overrode vetoes, and how turnout, organizing, and down-ballot investment shape November. Find LeVon at LeVonforNC.com

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37 episodios

episode 2.14 We're Back—and I Brought Poems artwork

2.14 We're Back—and I Brought Poems

Host Liz Purvis returns to The Foxfire Dispatch after a couple months away, explaining she needed the break while starting a new job and moving into a new home. In this minisode, she skips a full news breakdown and leans into an “Even Art Is Political” segment, reading Ada Limón’s “A New National Anthem” and reflecting on its tension of critique and belonging, then sharing her own poem of the same title, written after Limón, about loving a place that keeps trying to make you leave and continuing to show up for people told their voices don’t count. She outlines what’s ahead for season two as North Carolina heads into the summer of 2026 and toward the general election: following congressional races, amplifying down-ballot and judicial races, discussing progressive infrastructure work, featuring more interviews, and including more art and culture, while maintaining a looser schedule and asking for grace. 00:00 Welcome Back Minisode 01:39 Where Ive Been 02:57 Why This Podcast 03:54 Even Art Is Political 05:01 Ada Limon Poem 07:31 My New Anthem 10:38 Season Two Roadmap 13:23 Rest And Resolve 14:22 Support And Sign Off

Ayer16 min
episode 2.13 TFD Interviews Jason Brown II, Independent Progressive Running in VA-4 artwork

2.13 TFD Interviews Jason Brown II, Independent Progressive Running in VA-4

Host Liz Purvis discusses what it means to run outside the two-party system with Jason Brown, an independent progressive candidate for Congress in Virginia’s 4th District, a Democratic-leaning seat spanning urban/suburban areas like Richmond and rural communities farther south. Brown argues reform within a capitalist two-party framework can’t deliver systemic change and says the system prioritizes private profit over public good. His core platform is abolishing ICE and pursuing “affordability for all,” including housing, education, healthcare, universal pre-K, and public transit, while criticizing spending on war and proposed ICE detention expansion. He describes voter frustration with “lesser of two evils” politics, emphasizes organizing working-class power, and shares campaign realities without party infrastructure, including ballot-access signature gathering and relying on small-dollar donations while rejecting corporate PAC and AIPAC money.

20 de mar de 202642 min
episode 2.12 TFD After the Primary: 2026 NC Edition artwork

2.12 TFD After the Primary: 2026 NC Edition

Host Liz Purvis welcomes guest host Coach LeVon Barnes of Alamance County, a 23-year educator and working-class father running for a North Carolina General Assembly House district 64, to discuss why he entered politics and what he learned from past campaigns. We break down key North Carolina primary results and dynamics, including Alamance county commissioner and sheriff races, Durham’s Congressional District 4 primary between Valerie Foushee and Nida Allam (and Allam’s concession), new Durham school board members, and debates over severe public education underfunding and how counties are forced to fill gaps. We also discuss Roy Cooper’s Senate run, the importance of judicial races like Justice Anita Earls, surprising statewide outcomes, the razor-thin Phil Berger–Sam Page Republican contest, Democratic primary upsets of incumbents who overrode vetoes, and how turnout, organizing, and down-ballot investment shape November. Find LeVon at LeVonforNC.com

6 de mar de 20261 h 18 min
episode 2.11 TFD Interviews Congressional Candidate Kyah Creekmore artwork

2.11 TFD Interviews Congressional Candidate Kyah Creekmore

Host Liz Purvis welcomes Kyah Creekmore, a 24-year-old Democratic candidate running in North Carolina’s 5th Congressional District primary to take on 20-year Republican incumbent Virginia Foxx. Creekmore describes the gerrymandered, sprawling 10-county district—largely rural and Appalachian but containing major student populations across campuses like UNC Greensboro, NC A&T, and App State—and argues those students are a growing political force. The conversation covers recent student organizing and marches after the State Board of Elections removed campus polling locations and Sunday voting, which Creekmore frames as youth and Black and brown voter suppression. He contrasts Gen Z’s realities—low wages, high rents, rising tuition, student debt, and weak job prospects—with older, wealthier political leadership, and emphasizes building a youth movement and mobilizing disengaged voters through lived-experience messaging. The episode ends with a lightning round and ways to support the campaign at KyahCreekmore.org [http://KyahCreekmore.org], with Liz noting the race’s importance for rebuilding political power in gerrymandered communities.

20 de feb de 202658 min
episode 2.10 TFD Interviews Congressional Candidate Kate Barr artwork

2.10 TFD Interviews Congressional Candidate Kate Barr

In this episode of The Foxfire Dispatch, host Liz Purvis interviews Kate Compton Barr, the first Republican candidate to be featured on the show. Barr, a behavioral scientist and advocate for democracy, is running in the March Republican Primary for North Carolina's 14th Congressional District. Known for her radical transparency and previous 'can't win' campaign against gerrymandering, Barr discusses her motivations, experiences, and strategies for challenging incumbent Congressman Tim Moore. The conversation also delves into broader topics such as housing affordability, economic security, and the unique challenges of running as a progressive Republican in a gerrymandered district. Tune in for a candid and insightful discussion about political representation, voter empowerment, and the need for systemic change.

30 de ene de 202657 min