The North Carolina State Board of Elections voted to certify the results of the 2024 election aside from a few outstanding races still under recount.
Four Legislature races and one state Supreme Court race were not certified by the North Carolina State Board of Elections on Tuesday. Notably, the state’s sole Supreme Court race between Democratic incumbent Allison Riggs and Republican challenger Jefferson Griffin is one of those currently under both recount and protest.
How many votes weren’t counted because of missing ID? What about ballots that showed up late? Here’s what to know from post-election data.
CHARLOTTE — The North Carolina Elections Board has certified the results from the November election. More than 5.7 million voters were counted, which is a 73% turnout. However, 10 races are going to a recount.
On Tuesday, the embattled North Carolina State Board of Elections is scheduled to certify the 2024 election. The majority of the election results from 2,658 precincts across the state are expected to be approved,
CNN wants Mark Robinson's defamation lawsuit against them thrown out. The media company filed a motion of dismissal last week in the defamation lawsuit filed by Robinson, North Carolina's lieutenant governor.
After a decade of battles over voter ID, the law that finally went into effect landed with a whimper, not a bang.
This week, North Carolina Republicans continued making moves in the halls of power to both seize authority over future elections and steal a victory for an apparently defeated Republican high-court candidate.
The state’s Republican-controlled legislature passed a sweeping bill that would erode the power of the Democratic governor and attorney general and hand the G.O.P. more control over elections.
As the contest for a seat on the NC Supreme Court remains close, some cast doubt on how election results are certified. Here’s how it works.
Democrats fell short again in wresting away swing-state prize North Carolina from Republicans in the presidential election.