Coble served on Raleigh City Council from 1993 to 1999. While on the council, he served as chairman of the budget committee and the planning committee. He also served as mayor pro tem. Councilman Coble worked to cut the tax rate four times. Like his predecessor, Mayor Tom Fetzer, he was a conservativeRepublican.[citation needed] He was sworn in as Mayor on December 7, 1999, after winning the 1999 Raleigh mayoral election.[5] Coble served until 2001. During Coble's term as mayor, the city had to rapidly respond to a record 25-inch snow storm and opened the Progress Energy Center for the Performing Arts. Coble focused on public safety issues and promoted a program to prosecute gun violence under Federal laws.
Coble ran for reelection in 2001, facing Democrat Charles Meeker. On the first ballot, with a voter turnout of about 40,000 people, Coble received 49.15% of the votes while his opponent garnered 47.65%. In the subsequent run-off election voter turnout climbed to approximately 50,000 and Meeker defeated Coble, 50.97% to 48.87% of the votes.[6] The following year, Coble ran unsuccessfully for a seat in the North Carolina State Senate against Democrat Eric Reeves. Reeves won with 49.29% of the votes to Coble's 48.38%.[7]
In 2006, Coble sought a comeback to elective office by running for an open seat on the Wake County Board of Commissioners. He handily defeated Air Force veteran Rodger Koopman 54.42% to 45.58%.[8] Coble served as chairman of the Public Safety Committee and serves on the Wake County Fire Commission. He was re-elected to the commission in 2010, defeating Wake County attorney and former Wake County Democratic Party chair Jack Nichols. Coble served as chairman of the commissioners for two terms, in 2011 and 2012.[citation needed] In 2014 he lost reelection to the commission. He briefly served as a lobbyist before being hired as the North Carolina Legislative Services Officer in 2015.[9]
Coble,[11] former U.S. AttorneyGeorge E.B. Holding,[12] and 2010 nominee Bill Randall[13] ran for the Republican nomination.
Former Winston-Salem city council member Vernon Robinson[14] and Nathan Tabor, who ran unsuccessfully in the 5th district in 2004,[15] had both planned to seek the Republican nomination in the 13th district in 2012, but Robinson instead ran in the 8th district,[16] while Tabor declined to run as a result of changes made to the district in redistricting.[17] On May 8, George Holding won the Republican primary with almost 44 percent of the vote.[18]
Electoral history
2014
Wake County Board of Commissioners 7th district general election, 2014[19]