Dan Forest
Dan Forest (born 1967) is an American Republican politician and former architect who served as the 34th Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina from January 2013 to January 2021.[1][2] Born in Harrisonburg, Virginia, and raised in Charlotte, North Carolina, he is the son of former U.S. Congresswoman and Charlotte Mayor Sue Myrick.[2][1] Forest entered politics after a career in architecture, earning degrees from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte and becoming a senior partner at an architectural consulting firm.[1][3] Elected in 2012 as the first Republican lieutenant governor in over two decades, he was reelected in 2016 and presided over the state Senate as its president.[1] In that role, he chaired the Energy Policy Council and the State Board of Education's Digital Technology Committee, while serving on bodies addressing economic development and community colleges.[3][1] Forest advanced policies promoting school choice through opportunity scholarships, mandatory high school financial literacy and economics education, statewide high-speed internet access for classrooms via a digital learning plan, and strengthened penalties for human trafficking.[3] He also authored legislation protecting free speech on university campuses and supported emerging technologies like electric vertical takeoff vehicles and cryptocurrency regulation.[3] Running for governor in 2020 against Democratic incumbent Roy Cooper, Forest narrowly lost amid disputes over COVID-19 restrictions, which he legally challenged as overreach, advocating for reopening schools and businesses while questioning mask efficacy for coronaviruses based on prior studies.[1][4] Post-tenure, he transitioned to government relations consulting at NC Capitol Strategies, continuing to emphasize limited government and opportunity-driven policies.[3]Early life and education
Upbringing and family influences
Daniel James Forest was born on October 15, 1967, in Harrisonburg, Virginia.[5] He spent much of his childhood in the Charlotte, North Carolina, area, where he attended public schools for part of his early education before graduating from Irmo High School in Columbia, South Carolina.[2] During this period, Forest developed a strong interest in sports, which became a notable aspect of his youth.[6] Forest is the son of Sue Myrick, who later became Mayor of Charlotte (1987–1991) and U.S. Representative for North Carolina's 9th congressional district (1995–2013).[2] His parents divorced when he was young, but both emphasized patriotism, a love for America, and faith, with regular church attendance fostering a moral foundation that influenced his worldview.[6] These early familial lessons on character and values persisted into adulthood, though Forest did not formally convert to Christianity until his late 20s.[6]Academic pursuits and early career
Forest earned a Bachelor of Architecture from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte in 1991, followed by a Master of Architecture from the same institution.[7][1] His academic focus on architecture laid the foundation for a professional trajectory emphasizing design and consulting in the built environment.[8] Upon completing his education, Forest entered the field of architecture, joining Little Diversified Architectural Consulting, a Charlotte-based firm recognized among the nation's larger practices in workplace and architectural design.[1][2] Over more than two decades, he advanced to the role of senior partner, where he led design teams on projects involving corporate interiors, workplace strategies, and broader architectural developments.[3] This period, spanning from the late 1980s until approximately 2009, honed his expertise in managing complex design initiatives and client consultations prior to his transition into public service.[7]Pre-political professional life
Architectural practice and business development
Forest began his architectural career at Little Diversified Architectural Consulting, a Charlotte-based firm founded in 1964 and recognized as one of North Carolina's largest architectural practices during his tenure.[2] He joined the firm in May 1988 and advanced through progressively senior roles, culminating in positions as Senior Partner, Office President, and Workplace National Studio Principal by December 2009.[7] In these capacities, Forest directed multi-disciplinary teams focused on the design, programming, and strategic planning of workplace environments, serving Fortune 500 clients across global projects.[7] His leadership emphasized integrated architectural solutions that aligned business objectives with physical spaces, contributing to the firm's expansion in workplace consulting services.[7] Little Diversified's client partnerships during this period included major corporations seeking innovative office and operational designs, though specific project attributions to Forest remain tied to his studio oversight rather than individual commissions.[9] Forest's professional designation as Architect Emeritus reflects his sustained contributions to the field prior to entering politics.[8] His departure from the firm in late 2009 preceded his 2012 campaign for lieutenant governor, marking the end of over two decades in private architectural practice.[7]Community involvement and initial civic roles
Prior to entering elective politics, Forest participated in civic activities primarily through leadership roles in faith-based nonprofit organizations focused on promoting Christian principles in business and personal life. In March 2011, he co-founded The Faith Driven Consumer, a nonprofit aimed at empowering consumers and companies to align economic decisions with a Christian worldview, and served as a board member, as disclosed in his 2012 State Ethics Commission statement.[10][11] Forest also held the position of president of the Triangle Leadership Forum, a conservative Christian men's group in the Raleigh area dedicated to leadership development from a biblical perspective, which he listed as an active affiliation in his 2012 ethics disclosure.[10][11] Additionally, he was associated with Revision North Carolina, a 501(c)(4) nonprofit linked to Revision America, which sought to encourage cultural and societal change through Christian values; this involvement appeared on his campaign disclosures and an archived 2011 website, though no formal incorporation records for the North Carolina entity were identified in state databases.[10][11] These roles reflected Forest's emphasis on integrating faith into community and professional spheres during his architectural career, though public records show limited engagement in secular civic bodies such as local chambers or service clubs prior to 2012.[2]Lieutenant Governorship
2012 and 2016 elections
In the Republican primary for lieutenant governor on May 8, 2012, Dan Forest advanced to a runoff election after finishing second in a multi-candidate field. On July 17, 2012, Forest defeated Tony Gurley in the runoff, securing the Republican nomination with a convincing margin in low-turnout voting that drew criticism for undermining legitimacy.[12][13] Forest faced Democrat Linda Coleman in the general election on November 6, 2012, in a contest that became North Carolina's closest statewide race. Forest received 2,187,779 votes (50.07 percent) to Coleman's 2,181,472 (49.93 percent), prevailing by 6,307 votes after a recount.[14] His victory marked the first time a Republican had won the office since 1992, breaking two decades of Democratic control.[1] Seeking reelection in 2016, Forest faced no significant opposition in the Republican primary on March 15, advancing unopposed as the incumbent. The general election on November 8 rematched Forest against Coleman, but with Trump carrying North Carolina by nearly 4 percentage points, Forest expanded his margin to approximately 7 points statewide.[15][16] This outcome reflected Republican gains in the state amid national trends, securing Forest's second term.Administrative role and legislative priorities
As Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina from January 2013 to January 2021, Dan Forest served as President of the State Senate, presiding over its sessions and eligible to cast tie-breaking votes only when the body was evenly divided, per Article III, Section 4 of the state constitution.[17] This dual-branch role positioned him uniquely to influence legislative proceedings while also participating in executive functions through appointments to key boards, including as chairman of the Energy Policy Council, the Digital Technology Committee of the State Board of Education, and the Postsecondary Educational Credentials Board, as well as a voting member of the North Carolina Board of Community Colleges and the Economic Development Board.[3] Forest's administrative duties extended to fostering coordination between legislative and executive priorities, particularly in education and economic policy, where he chaired initiatives aimed at modernizing state infrastructure and workforce development. Forest's legislative priorities emphasized expanding educational opportunities, promoting economic growth through deregulation and innovation, and advancing conservative fiscal policies. In education, he supported measures to enhance school choice via charter school expansion and opportunity scholarships for disadvantaged students, alongside implementing a digital learning plan that provided high-speed internet access to every public school classroom in the state by 2018—the first such comprehensive rollout nationwide.[3] He also backed mandates for financial literacy and economics coursework as high school graduation requirements to equip students for economic participation. Economically, Forest advocated for tax relief and regulatory reductions, contributing to 2017 legislation that lowered individual and corporate income tax rates across brackets, which helped grow the state's rainy day fund to nearly $2 billion by year's end.[18] Through his Senate presidency and board leadership, Forest influenced passage of bills aligning with these priorities, such as the 2017 Restore/Preserve Campus Free Speech Act, which established protections for viewpoint diversity on public university campuses, including policy mandates and disciplinary protocols enforced by the University of North Carolina Board of Governors—the nation's first such statewide measure.[18] [3] He also prioritized public safety and anti-trafficking efforts, supporting 2017 enhancements to human trafficking statutes that increased penalties, allocated funds for awareness campaigns, and granted the State Bureau of Investigation original jurisdiction over cases. Additional accomplishments included designating September 11 as "First Responders Day" to honor law enforcement, firefighters, and emergency personnel, and rebuilding the Teaching Fellows Program using the Education Endowment Fund to provide scholarships targeting STEM fields and special education in understaffed, low-performing districts.[18] Forest further endorsed innovative economic legislation facilitating electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) aircraft development and cryptocurrency frameworks to position North Carolina as a hub for emerging technologies.[3] These efforts reflected a focus on empirical outcomes, such as sustained teacher compensation increases for the fifth consecutive year in 2017, amid broader Republican-led reforms balancing budget growth with targeted investments.[18]Advocacy for education reform and school choice
During his tenure as Lieutenant Governor from 2013 to 2021, Dan Forest positioned himself as a proponent of school choice mechanisms, including vouchers, charter schools, and alternative educational pathways, arguing that competition improves outcomes for students.[19] He emphasized empowering parents to select schools that best fit their children's needs, rather than mandating attendance at assigned public schools, and supported policies allowing public funds to follow students to private or non-traditional options.[20] Forest advocated for local control in public education decisions, contending that communities, not centralized state bureaucracies, are best equipped to address specific needs.[20] A key focus of Forest's advocacy was expanding North Carolina's Opportunity Scholarship program, which provides state-funded vouchers to eligible families for private school tuition; he opposed efforts by Governor Roy Cooper's administration in 2020 to defund or limit the program for low-income students.[21] In July 2019, Forest co-hosted a roundtable with U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos to promote Education Freedom Scholarships, a federal tax-credit initiative aimed at broadening access to non-public schooling options nationwide, highlighting North Carolina's existing voucher expansions as a model.[19] He produced campaign videos in November 2019 underscoring school choice as essential for "students first," linking it to broader reforms like financial literacy requirements in curricula.[22][23] Forest's platform critiqued the traditional public school monopoly, advocating for accountability through parental choice over regulatory oversight of private providers, as he stated during a 2016 discussion that parents serve as the primary check on school performance.[24] In his 2020 gubernatorial bid, he proposed universal voucher access regardless of family income, aiming to enable all North Carolina students to attend private, charter, or homeschool options with state support, though critics like Cooper argued this would divert funds from public schools.[25][26] Forest maintained that such reforms align education with workforce demands by fostering innovation and measurable results, drawing on his architectural background to analogize systemic redesign.[27][28]Opposition to executive overreach during COVID-19
During the COVID-19 pandemic, North Carolina Lieutenant Governor Dan Forest publicly criticized Governor Roy Cooper's executive orders for exceeding statutory authority under the state's Emergency Management Act, which requires concurrence from the Council of State for certain restrictions.[29] On March 17, 2020, Forest challenged Cooper's order mandating the closure of restaurants and bars for dine-in service, arguing it lacked sufficient legal backing and imposed undue burdens on businesses without adequate legislative oversight.[30] Forest escalated his opposition in June 2020, announcing plans to sue Cooper for issuing mandates on business closures and mask requirements without obtaining required approvals, claiming the orders selectively targeted citizens and violated separation of powers by bypassing the General Assembly.[31] [32] He filed the lawsuit on July 1, 2020, specifically contesting eight executive orders issued since March, including those limiting mass gatherings, closing non-essential businesses, and enforcing face coverings, on grounds that Cooper failed to seek or receive Council of State support as mandated by law.[33] [29] A hearing occurred on August 4, 2020, before Superior Court Judge James Gale, who on August 11 ruled against Forest, upholding the orders' validity under the governor's emergency powers.[34] Forest voluntarily dismissed the suit on August 13, 2020, stating that while the ruling affirmed Cooper's unilateral authority, it also implied full accountability for any consequences, and emphasizing his actions were driven by commitment to the rule of law rather than political gain.[35] [36] Throughout, Forest advocated for greater legislative involvement in pandemic responses, arguing that prolonged executive actions undermined democratic checks without evidence of proportional public health benefits justifying the economic impacts.[37]2020 Gubernatorial campaign
Republican primary and platform
Forest entered the 2020 Republican primary for governor as the frontrunner, leveraging his record as lieutenant governor and name recognition within the party. His primary challenger was state Representative Holly Grange, a West Point graduate and freshman legislator from New Hanover County who positioned herself as a less divisive alternative, criticizing Forest's approach to social issues as potentially alienating moderate voters.[38][39] No other candidates mounted significant campaigns, making the contest primarily between Forest and Grange.[40] The primary election occurred on March 3, 2020, with Forest securing a decisive victory, receiving approximately 80% of the vote to Grange's 20%, as tallied by state election officials.) This outcome demonstrated robust support from the Republican base, including endorsements from party leaders and conservative groups, amid a low-turnout primary influenced by early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic. Forest celebrated the win by pledging to challenge incumbent Democratic Governor Roy Cooper on issues of governance and policy overreach. Forest's platform centered on restoring conservative governance, prioritizing education reform to empower parents through expanded school choice and opportunity scholarships, which he had advanced as lieutenant governor via legislative advocacy. He proposed cutting taxes and regulations to stimulate economic opportunity, arguing that North Carolina's growth required reducing barriers for businesses and families rather than expanding government intervention. On public safety, Forest committed to backing law enforcement with resources and opposing criminal justice reforms that he viewed as undermining deterrence. His positions also included staunch defense of Second Amendment rights against encroachments and opposition to abortion, framing these as protections for individual liberties rooted in North Carolina's values. As the campaign progressed into the pandemic, Forest increasingly emphasized resistance to executive-imposed restrictions, advocating for reopening businesses and schools to safeguard economic vitality and personal freedoms.[41][27][42]General election contest against Roy Cooper
In the 2020 North Carolina gubernatorial general election, incumbent Democratic Governor Roy Cooper faced Republican Lieutenant Governor Dan Forest, who had secured the GOP nomination on March 3, 2020, by defeating John Hood and Holly Grange with 69.1% of the primary vote. The contest, held amid the COVID-19 pandemic, highlighted stark contrasts in pandemic management, economic recovery, and education policy, with Forest criticizing Cooper's executive orders restricting businesses and schools as overreach that stifled growth, while Cooper touted his administration's handling of the virus surge and Hurricane Florence recovery.[43] Campaign strategies diverged sharply: Forest pursued in-person rallies and events to mobilize conservative voters, raising over $10 million by September and emphasizing themes of liberty and limited government, whereas Cooper relied predominantly on virtual town halls and ads, leveraging his incumbency and raising more than $20 million to maintain a fundraising edge.[44] [45] The sole televised debate occurred on October 14, 2020, hosted by WRAL-TV and the North Carolina State Board of Elections, where candidates clashed over reopening protocols—Forest advocating for data-driven, localized decisions over statewide mandates, and Cooper defending phased reopenings based on infection metrics—and economic impacts, with Forest highlighting job losses exceeding 300,000 under Cooper's tenure.[46] Polls consistently showed Cooper ahead, such as a late October survey by East Carolina University placing him at 51% to Forest's 44% among likely voters, reflecting Democratic advantages in urban areas and suburban shifts amid pandemic concerns.[47] Voter turnout reached a record 75.6%, boosted by expanded absentee and early voting options amid COVID-19, with over 4.5 million ballots cast.[48] On November 3, 2020, Cooper secured reelection with 1,517,258 votes (49.93%) to Forest's 1,434,472 (47.20%), a margin of 4.73 percentage points, alongside minor shares for Libertarian Steven DiFiore II (2.4%) and Constitution Party's Al Pisano (0.5%).[49] The race marked one of the nation's most expensive gubernatorial contests, with combined spending exceeding $60 million, driven by national party committees and outside groups targeting swing voters on issues like Medicaid expansion and Second Amendment rights.[48] Forest's campaign garnered strong rural and evangelical support but underperformed in metro counties like Wake and Mecklenburg, where Cooper expanded his 2016 margins.[50]Post-election certification dispute and legal actions
Following the November 3, 2020, general election, media outlets projected incumbent Democratic Governor Roy Cooper as the victor over Republican challenger Dan Forest, with Cooper securing 51.6% of the vote to Forest's 47.0%, a margin of approximately 4.5 percentage points or 74,483 votes out of over 5.4 million cast. Forest addressed supporters at a watch party in Selma that evening, delivering remarks that acknowledged the outcome without conceding explicitly in combative terms but focusing on future conservative priorities rather than contesting the tally.[51][52] County boards of elections completed their canvasses by November 12, 2020, after which the North Carolina State Board of Elections convened to review protests, audits, and recounts where requested; no formal protest or recount request was filed by Forest's campaign for the gubernatorial race, consistent with the non-close margin that did not trigger automatic recount thresholds under state law (0.5% for statewide offices). On November 24, 2020, the five-member board certified the general election results, including Cooper's victory, by a 4-1 vote, with the dissenting Republican-appointed member objecting primarily to procedural aspects of absentee ballot handling rather than outcome-specific irregularities in the governor's race.[53][54][55] Forest pursued no legal actions to halt or reverse the certification, distinguishing the North Carolina gubernatorial contest from contemporaneous presidential election challenges in other states where narrower margins prompted litigation over mail-in voting protocols. State law assigns certification authority solely to the executive-controlled State Board of Elections, with no formal role for the lieutenant governor; Forest, as outgoing officeholder, did not intervene or comment publicly on the board's process beyond general advocacy for election integrity measures during his campaign. The certification proceeded without judicial involvement specific to the gubernatorial results, enabling Cooper's inauguration on January 9, 2021.[56]Controversies and public debates
Stance on HB2 and transgender policies
Dan Forest, as Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina, was a vocal supporter of House Bill 2 (HB2), enacted on March 23, 2016, which required individuals to use public restrooms, locker rooms, and changing facilities in government buildings and schools corresponding to their biological sex as indicated on their birth certificates.[57][58] He defended the legislation as a measure to protect privacy and safety, particularly for women and children, arguing that it preempted local ordinances—such as Charlotte's February 2016 expansion of anti-discrimination protections to include sexual orientation and gender identity—that would have allowed access based on self-identified gender rather than biological sex.[59][60] In public appearances, including a March 30, 2016, interview on CNBC's Squawk on the Street, Forest emphasized that HB2 was not discriminatory but addressed "common sense" concerns about biological males entering female facilities, rejecting claims that it targeted transgender individuals broadly.[61] He criticized opponents' portrayals of the bill as "anti-LGBT," calling such narratives "disingenuous" and insisting the law focused on statewide uniformity rather than broader rights restrictions.[62] Following the U.S. Department of Education's May 13, 2016, directive mandating transgender students' access to facilities matching their gender identity under Title IX, Forest issued a statement directing North Carolina schools to adhere to HB2, describing the federal guidance as an overreach that conflicted with state law.[63] Forest extended his advocacy beyond North Carolina, traveling to Texas on March 6, 2017, to endorse a similar bathroom bill (SB 6), praising HB2's framework for safeguarding women's spaces while preempting local variations.[58] He maintained this position amid economic backlash, including boycotts by organizations like the NCAA and businesses such as PayPal, countering claims of severe financial harm by citing data showing limited actual losses and arguing that privacy protections outweighed such pressures.[64][65] In a February 22, 2017, interview, he expressed no willingness to compromise on HB2, viewing repeal efforts as unnecessary concessions to ideological demands.[66] His stance aligned with broader socially conservative principles, prioritizing biological sex distinctions in public policy over gender identity accommodations, as articulated in statements rejecting federal and local expansions of transgender access as threats to privacy without empirical justification for safety risks.[67][63] Critics, including LGBT advocacy groups, labeled his defenses as stigmatizing, but Forest consistently framed them as rooted in legal preemption and empirical privacy concerns rather than animus.[68] HB2 was partially repealed and replaced by HB 142 on March 30, 2017, retaining bathroom provisions until December 1, 2020, though Forest opposed the compromise, arguing it undermined core protections.[69]Defense of historical monuments
In August 2017, following protests inspired by the Charlottesville rally, Lieutenant Governor Dan Forest urged North Carolina officials not to yield to what he described as "communist agitators" and "anarchists" demanding the removal of Confederate statues, arguing that such decisions should respect state law and historical context rather than mob pressure.[70] North Carolina's 2015 law, enacted by the Republican-controlled General Assembly, prohibited local governments from removing monuments commemorating the Civil War, World War I, World War II, or the Civil Rights Movement without legislative approval, a measure Forest supported as preserving public history.[71] In October 2019, Forest publicly criticized Governor Roy Cooper's proposal to relocate all Confederate monuments from prominent public spaces, contending that such moves undermined legal protections and historical commemoration without due process.[72] He emphasized that monuments serve educational purposes, reflecting complex historical events rather than endorsing ideologies, and warned against politicized erasures that could extend to other controversial figures or eras.[72] The issue escalated in June 2020 amid nationwide protests following George Floyd's death, when demonstrators toppled two Confederate soldier statues from a 75-foot obelisk on the State Capitol grounds in Raleigh on June 19, prompting Forest to denounce the acts as "lawless" and fault Cooper for inadequate security measures that enabled the vandalism.[73] Forest called for accountability, stating that North Carolinians should be "shocked" by the governor's failure to protect state property and history, and advocated maintaining the monuments under existing statutes to prevent vigilante-driven changes.[74] Cooper's subsequent order on June 20 to remove the damaged monuments and two others for "public safety" further drew Forest's opposition, as it bypassed legislative hurdles, though Forest did not initiate legal challenges himself.[75][76] Forest's consistent position aligned with conservative arguments for contextual preservation over removal, viewing the latter as yielding to ideological demands amid documented instances of protest-related violence, such as the Raleigh incident where statues were dragged and defaced.[77]Criticisms of immigration policies and crime data
Forest has advocated for enhanced cooperation between local law enforcement and federal immigration authorities, criticizing policies that limit such collaboration as contributing to public safety risks from criminal undocumented immigrants. In particular, he opposed practices by some North Carolina sheriffs who declined to honor Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detainer requests, which seek temporary holds on individuals arrested for crimes who are suspected of being removable from the United States.[78] Forest argued that releasing these individuals without verification allows repeat offenders to evade deportation and potentially commit further crimes, citing ICE data on detainers issued in the state.[79] On November 25, 2019, during a press conference amid debates over sheriff compliance with ICE, Forest stated that undocumented immigrants wanted by federal authorities had "victimized tens of thousands of children" in North Carolina, referencing over 32,000 ICE detainers related to serious offenses, including those against minors, issued between 2008 and 2018.[79] [78] He stood by the claim, attributing it to data from an ICE official, while emphasizing the need for state policies to prioritize victim protection over sanctuary-like approaches.[80] Critics, including fact-checking organizations, rated the assertion false, noting that the detainer figures represented requests issued upon arrests—often multiple per individual—and did not equate to confirmed unique victims or specify crimes exclusively against children in that volume.[79] [78] In his 2020 gubernatorial campaign platform, Forest supported tighter immigration restrictions, including mandates for sheriffs to cooperate with ICE, positioning this as essential to curb crime linked to illegal immigration and contrasting it with Governor Roy Cooper's veto of related legislation.[81] He framed such policies within broader Republican priorities on border security and law enforcement, arguing that lax enforcement under Democratic leadership exacerbated risks from unvetted entrants.[1] Forest's stance aligned with national conservative critiques of sanctuary policies, though empirical studies on immigrant crime rates in the U.S. present mixed findings, with some analyses indicating lower overall offending rates among immigrants compared to native-born citizens, while others highlight elevated incarceration for specific subsets of undocumented individuals in state data.[82] [83]Challenges to election integrity measures
In September 2020, Forest publicly criticized a memo from the North Carolina State Board of Elections that advised against "policing of voters" at polling sites, arguing the guidance created unnecessary vulnerabilities by discouraging law enforcement presence, which he said was essential to deter potential intimidation or fraud.[84] The memo, issued amid concerns over voter intimidation, stated that visible policing could suppress turnout among certain groups, but Forest countered that excluding police endangered election workers and voters, especially given documented instances of polling site disruptions in prior elections.[84] Earlier, in July 2017, Forest submitted formal public comments opposing proposed amendments to state election rules, particularly 08 NCAC 02 .0111 on election protests, which he contended would effectively bar most challenges by imposing a two-day filing deadline and restricting protests to only those demonstrating material errors sufficient to alter outcomes.[85] He argued the changes prioritized administrative convenience over accountability, potentially allowing unresolved irregularities in vote counts or procedures to persist without judicial review, and urged the Rules Review Commission to reject them to preserve mechanisms for verifying results.[85] During the 2020 election cycle, Forest escalated scrutiny of expanded mail-in voting protocols following the resignation of the board's two Republican members amid a lawsuit settlement that permitted certain voters to drop off absentee ballots at early voting sites without traditional witnessing or photo ID requirements.[86] On September 25, 2020, he urged U.S. Attorney General William Barr to investigate what he described as improper coordination between Democratic state officials and the board, claiming the agreement undermined uniform safeguards and invited exploitation in a high-stakes contest.[86] Forest's stance aligned with broader Republican concerns over absentee ballot verification, citing North Carolina's history of ballot controversies, including the 2018 midterm irregularities that prompted a new election in the Ninth Congressional District due to evidence of tampering.[87]Post-2021 activities
Transition to private sector consulting
Following the end of his second term as Lieutenant Governor on January 16, 2021, Dan Forest founded Forest Consulting Group, marking his entry into private sector strategic consulting.[7] The firm draws on his background in public policy, legislative leadership, and executive governance to offer advisory services as a self-described "strategic thinker, visionary, connector, and road warrior."[7] Forest concurrently serves as a partner and senior government relations consultant at NC Capitol Strategies, LLC, a firm specializing in lobbying, public affairs, and policy navigation at state and federal levels.[3] In this role, he provides clients with expertise on North Carolina public policy, including energy, education, and regulatory matters, informed by his prior positions as Senate President pro tempore and chairman of the state's Energy Policy Council.[3] This transition reflects a pivot from elected office to leveraging governmental networks for business and policy consulting, with no public reports of specific client engagements or revenue figures disclosed as of 2025.[3]Ongoing political engagement and commentary
Following his 2021 departure from public office, Forest has maintained political engagement through government relations consulting at N.C. Capitol Strategies, advising clients on public policy and legislative matters in North Carolina and Washington, D.C.[3] This role leverages his prior experience presiding over the state Senate and leading initiatives on education and economic development, enabling ongoing influence in Republican-aligned policy advocacy.[3] Forest has provided public commentary on state political developments, including an appearance on PBS North Carolina's State Lines program on September 12, 2025, where he joined panelists to analyze North Carolina House and Senate leadership dynamics and criminal justice reform efforts.[88] His contributions emphasized practical governance perspectives drawn from his tenure, focusing on legislative priorities without endorsing partisan narratives.[88] Through social media platforms like X (formerly Twitter), under the handle @LtGovDanForest, Forest continues to post on public safety and community issues, such as expressing condolences for fallen officers, reflecting a sustained interest in law enforcement support amid ongoing state debates.[89] These activities underscore his transition to an advisory and observational role in North Carolina Republican circles, prioritizing policy substance over electoral pursuits.[89]Electoral history
Lieutenant Governor elections
Dan Forest first sought the office of Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina in the 2012 Republican primary. After advancing from the May 8 primary, he defeated Wake County Commissioner Tony Gurley in the July 17 runoff election, securing 101,961 votes to Gurley's 48,278, or approximately 67.9% of the vote.[90] In the November 6 general election, Forest defeated Democratic nominee Linda Coleman, receiving 2,187,728 votes (50.08%) to Coleman's approximately 2,178,000 votes.[91] This victory marked the first time a Republican had been elected to the position since 1992.[1] As the incumbent, Forest won re-election unopposed in the March 15, 2016, Republican primary.[92] In the November 8 general election rematch against Coleman—who had won the Democratic nomination over Holly Jones—he prevailed with 2,393,514 votes (51.81%) to Coleman's 2,093,375 (45.32%) and Libertarian Jacki Cole's 132,645 (2.87%).[93]| Party | Candidate | Votes | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Dan Forest (incumbent) | 2,393,514 | 51.81% |
| Democratic | Linda Coleman | 2,093,375 | 45.32% |
| Libertarian | Jacki Cole | 132,645 | 2.87% |
| Total | 4,619,534 | 100% |