As North Carolina’s March 5 primary looms, there’s not much competition at the presidential level on the Democratic side. President Joe Biden will be the only name on the ballot here, but there are plenty of races worth watching further down the Democratic Party ballot for governor, Council of State and legislative seats. Will low turnout lead to some surprise results? Will votes in support of Republican legislation cost several incumbent Democrats their seats in the state House and Senate?
To sort through the Democratic primary ballot, WUNC spoke with Sen. Graig Meyer, D-Orange, and Kimberly Reynolds, former executive director of North Carolina Democratic Party and a partner in the consulting firm Maven Strategies.
Power returns, Tillis negotiates, and justices consider a new normal
Is SCOTUS holding a democracy grenade with Moore v. Harper?
Legislative leadership unchanged, a major federal elections case heads to SCOTUS
Is a 'Digital Civil War' on the horizon?
Unpacking the midterms results
Election impacts
Election Day breakdown: GOP just shy of supermajority in NC House
Governor Cooper forms commission, Election Day predictions
A forecast for election night
Early voting in full swing, SCOTUS briefs pour in
An authentic longshot candidate
Political winds shift, another shooting aftermath
Important and obscure: North Carolina's judicial elections
A heavy-handed search
In Wake County referenda on schools, community college, parks
Beasley and Budd debate in NC, as national Democrats spend elsewhere
A supermajority fight in the NC House
Campaign ads turn nasty, and a visit from the treasury secretary
Battling for a supermajority in the NC Senate
Senate leader Phil Berger talks midterms, migration, and his future
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