State House Berry served in the
North Carolina House of Representatives from 1993 to 2000, where she chaired the welfare reform committee and co-chaired the commerce committee.
State Labor Commissioner In November 2000, she was elected state labor commissioner, the first woman to hold the post and the first Republican elected to the post. Berry was sworn in as North Carolina Commissioner of Labor on January 6, 2001. She was the only Republican on the
Council of State between 2001 and 2005, and defeated
Democrat Wayne Goodwin to win a second term in the
2004 statewide elections. Berry won a fifth four-year term in
November 2016, defeating former Raleigh mayor
Charles Meeker by more than 476,000 votes, her largest percentage margin of victory. On April 2, 2019, she announced at a Council of State meeting that she would not seek reelection. She endorsed Pearl Burris Floyd to succeed her. Berry was criticized in a newspaper report on poultry plant oversight. In 2008,
The Charlotte Observer found that at least half of contributors to Berry's reelection campaign were the executives and managers of business inspected by the department she leads. The same report also found that while Berry's department reduced fines for
workplace safety violations as a matter of routine, "Berry's contributors have usually gotten bigger-than-average breaks." ==In popular culture==