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Ballots are about choices, and US House District 4’s Democratic primary offers a clear one. We bring you inside a sharp, respectful forum between Congresswoman Valerie Foushee and Durham Councilwoman Nida Allam as they wrestle with living wages, immigration enforcement, and the fast-rising footprint of AI data centers. The conversation moves past slogans to the tools that change outcomes: setting national wage standards, curbing ICE’s reach and funding, and deciding whether to pause new data centers until federal rules protect water, energy costs, and neighborhood health.
You’ll hear how each candidate’s path shaped their priorities. Foushee draws on decades of service—from school board to Congress—arguing for steady, results-driven governance and tighter federal guardrails. Allam, the daughter of immigrants and a county leader and organizer, presses for a $24 living wage, Medicare for All, and a moratorium on new data centers, while refusing corporate and AI lobby money. On immigration, both commit to protecting neighbors, with Allam backing abolition of ICE and Foushee emphasizing funding restraints and legislative reform. On tech and infrastructure, Foushee points to an AI commission and the need for national guidelines; Allam highlights rising rates, heavy water use, and the need to stop construction until safeguards exist.
Along the way, we root the policy in the realities of our local communities— where affordability, school infrastructure, and growth pressures meet at the kitchen table. If you’re deciding a Democratic ballot, this forum surfaces the trade-offs between institutional experience and movement energy, and how a safe blue seat can best deliver for working families, students, and small businesses.
2026 Voters' Guide for Southern Wake County
Valerie Foushee-https://valeriefoushee.com/ * [email protected] Facebook/Instagram/X
Nida Allam-https://nidaallam.com/ * [email protected]
Facebook/Instagram/X/TikTok
Mary Patterson-[email protected]
Voter Information (Register, Am I Registered?, Election Information)
Voter Info (Designated Polling Places, Sample Ballots, Registration Status, Voting Jurisdiction, Verify Address and Party Affiliation)
Election Information (Absentee by Mail Voting, Early Voting, Election Day Voting)
Closest Early Voting Locations
February 12-28
WE Hunt Recreation Center-Holly Springs/Hilltop Needmore Town Park Clubhouse-Fuquay Varina
ELECTION DAY
Tuesday, March 3 from 6:30 AM to 7:30
Support the show
As always, if you are interested in being on or sponsoring the podcast or if you have any particular issues, thoughts, or questions you'd like explored on the podcast, please email [email protected]. Your contributions would be greatly appreciated.
Now, let's dive in!
By Amanda Lunn4.4
1919 ratings
Ballots are about choices, and US House District 4’s Democratic primary offers a clear one. We bring you inside a sharp, respectful forum between Congresswoman Valerie Foushee and Durham Councilwoman Nida Allam as they wrestle with living wages, immigration enforcement, and the fast-rising footprint of AI data centers. The conversation moves past slogans to the tools that change outcomes: setting national wage standards, curbing ICE’s reach and funding, and deciding whether to pause new data centers until federal rules protect water, energy costs, and neighborhood health.
You’ll hear how each candidate’s path shaped their priorities. Foushee draws on decades of service—from school board to Congress—arguing for steady, results-driven governance and tighter federal guardrails. Allam, the daughter of immigrants and a county leader and organizer, presses for a $24 living wage, Medicare for All, and a moratorium on new data centers, while refusing corporate and AI lobby money. On immigration, both commit to protecting neighbors, with Allam backing abolition of ICE and Foushee emphasizing funding restraints and legislative reform. On tech and infrastructure, Foushee points to an AI commission and the need for national guidelines; Allam highlights rising rates, heavy water use, and the need to stop construction until safeguards exist.
Along the way, we root the policy in the realities of our local communities— where affordability, school infrastructure, and growth pressures meet at the kitchen table. If you’re deciding a Democratic ballot, this forum surfaces the trade-offs between institutional experience and movement energy, and how a safe blue seat can best deliver for working families, students, and small businesses.
2026 Voters' Guide for Southern Wake County
Valerie Foushee-https://valeriefoushee.com/ * [email protected] Facebook/Instagram/X
Nida Allam-https://nidaallam.com/ * [email protected]
Facebook/Instagram/X/TikTok
Mary Patterson-[email protected]
Voter Information (Register, Am I Registered?, Election Information)
Voter Info (Designated Polling Places, Sample Ballots, Registration Status, Voting Jurisdiction, Verify Address and Party Affiliation)
Election Information (Absentee by Mail Voting, Early Voting, Election Day Voting)
Closest Early Voting Locations
February 12-28
WE Hunt Recreation Center-Holly Springs/Hilltop Needmore Town Park Clubhouse-Fuquay Varina
ELECTION DAY
Tuesday, March 3 from 6:30 AM to 7:30
Support the show
As always, if you are interested in being on or sponsoring the podcast or if you have any particular issues, thoughts, or questions you'd like explored on the podcast, please email [email protected]. Your contributions would be greatly appreciated.
Now, let's dive in!