News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Trump, Harris in dead heat for North Carolina with a week left to Election Day
SUMMARY: One week before the general election, a recent poll shows a tied presidential race in North Carolina between former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris, each at 47%. The electorate is deeply divided across demographics; men favor Trump by six points, while women support Harris by seven, resulting in a 13-point gender gap. Trump leads among white voters (62%-33%), whereas black voters prefer Harris (82%-13%). Geographic divisions also exist, with Harris dominating urban areas and Trump excelling in rural regions. Both candidates are focusing on mobilizing their supporters to vote, as early voting records have already been set.
Former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris are in a dead heat in North Carolina with just a week to go until Election Day, according to a new WRAL News Poll released Tuesday. The results come one day before both major-party presidential candidates are scheduled to be in this key battleground state for a final get-out-the-vote push.
Harris, the Democratic nominee, and Trump, the Republican, were tied at 47% among likely voters. Another 2% said they planned to vote for one of the third-party candidates on the ballot this year. The remaining 4% were undecided. Trump had trailed Harris by 3 percentage points, still a statistical tie, in a WRAL News Poll released in September. Both the September Poll and the new survey released Tuesday were conducted by SurveyUSA in partnership with WRAL.
North Carolina is one of only six or seven states that are considered competitive in this year’s presidential election; Trump won the state in 2016 and 2020, including by just 1.5% of the vote in 2020.
Harris will be in Raleigh on Wednesday and Trump will be in Rocky Mount as the candidates seek to break that apparent tie in pursuit of the state’s 16 electoral votes, which are seen as critical to winning the White House.
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News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
In a departure from past North Carolina elections, Republican voters are turning out more heavily than Democrats to vote early โข Asheville Watchdog
With just a week before Election Day, North Carolina’s Republicans are turning out more heavily than Democrats and independents in early voting, shedding the party’s former disdain for anything other than balloting on the first Tuesday of November.
The number of registered Republicans casting early ballots across the state surpassed Democrats late last week and have been holding a slim lead through Tuesday’s overnight count.ย ย
Trailing both parties are voters who are independent, the so-called unaffiliated voters, who constitute the largest bloc of registrants and are capable of tilting most races.ย ย
The numbers through Oct. 27: Republicans 961,871; Democrats 938,167; and the unaffiliated 904,669. That’s less than a half percent separating the two major party’s voters.
But here are some key qualifiers to keep in mind when looking at these numbers:ย ย
- First and foremost, this is the count of party and unaffiliated voters who have cast ballots. None of these ballots will be counted until the polls close at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 5.ย While party loyalty is a strong indicator of how we vote, there will be party defectors and the party disgruntled who leave the ballot blank. (Spoiler alert: In this election the voter’s gender may matter more than party; see below).
- Second, these numbers are snapshots taken in the middle of a race and don’t show which competitor may have some energy in reserve (more on this below) for a final sprint, including on Nov. 5.ย
- Third, unaffiliated voters are true wild cards whose leanings defy accurate predictions. Although they vote in lower percentages than party loyalists, their sheer numbers can decide the winner.
Two additional measures in the early-voting reports are noteworthy. One, which I alluded to above, is a measure called โproportion.โย So far, about 35 percent of the early ballots have been cast by Republicans and 33 percent by Democrats.ย
But here’s that qualifier: To get that lead, it’s taken 38 percent of all registered Republicans to cast votes. Just 35 percent of all Democrats have voted, meaning the party has more in reserve to catch up. Think of it like a NASCAR race in which the leading car is slightly ahead of a rival. But the rival has more fuel in the tank, which could be important toward the finish.ย ย ย
The other noteworthy measure has nothing to do with party registration. It’s gender. It comes to this: Women can determine this election. In North Carolina, one of the handful of swing states in the presidential election, women have the clout to decide every race from the White House and governor’s mansion to school boards, county commissions and the judiciary.ย ย
In the 12 days of early voting since Oct. 17, women have outvoted men by about 10 percentage points. On a typical day, about 52 percent of the ballots are cast by women and just 42 percent cast by men. ( Six percent of voters decline to report their gender).ย
Through Monday, women have cast about 300,000 more ballots than men โ more of a gender chasm than a gender gap.ย Keep in mind that this is a state where Donald Trump beat Joe Biden in 2020 by just 74,483 votes. By Nov. 5, that winning margin four years ago will be a small fraction of the gender gap.ย
The size of that gap is widened even more by the fact that women turn out to voteย disproportionately higher than their percentage of the electorate. In this early voting period, although women comprise 49 percent of all registered voters, they have cast 52 percent of the early ballots.ย
What does this mean? The words written in 1865 by poet William Ross Wallace may apply here: โThe hand that rocks the cradle is the hand that rules the world.โย ย ย
Bluest of the blue Buncombe County
Not surprisingly, Democrats are outvoting Republicans by more than 2-to-1 in the latest tallies. Unaffiliated voters โ the largest bloc โ trail the Democrats by a smidgen. Unless something akin to a political Helene happens, it looks like Buncombe’s impact on Nov. 5 will be to make a lopsided contribution to the Democratic Party’s statewide vote total, which may offset Republican victories in more numerous, deep red counties.ย
Also notable in Buncombe early-voting turnout is the gender gap, which mirrors the statewide average. Going into the final five days of early voting, women had cast 42,084 ballots while men added just 33, 651. That’s a commanding 52-41 percent gap.ย (Memo to men: Find cradles to rock).ย
Campaign fallout from Helene
The disruption โ and some would say damage โ from Helene extended also into many political campaigns, just as most candidates were hoping to hit their peaks. Communicating with potential voters who were struggling to mend shattered lives became impossible, if not intrusive.ย Campaigning as we know it โ door knocking, rallying, phone calling โ was out of the question.ย
No campaign has been hit harder than Democrat Caleb Rudow’s longshot effort to unseat incumbent Republican Chuck Edwards in the 11th Congressional District, which was ground zero for the storm’s wrath. Unseating an even marginally competent incumbent is always a challenge, which Rudow, the Asheville state legislator, acknowledged when he launched his campaign a year ago.ย
Edwards began the race with an infusion of special-interest money, much of it coming from corporate and partisan PACs whose interests the Hendersonville Republican could impact through his House committee votes. Big checks rolled in from Walmart, gun rights organizations, the trucking and aviation industries, big pharma and even rural electrification. Big oil and gas funneled support through the American Battleground Fund, which is the House GOP’s deep pocket that provides camouflage for anti-green energy industries.
When Helene hammered the region, Edwards announced he was suspending his campaign to concentrate on assisting constituents because โit’s no time for politics.โ Give credit where it is due: Edwards’s office became a lifeline for many victims, connecting them to many federal agencies โ notably FEMA โ and to local governments. He’s been on battered ground in the district’s farthest corners, while shuttling back and forth to the Capitol to advocate for FEMA’s continued need.ย
Had he not failed to criticize ex-President Trump and House Speaker Mike Johnson for falsely accusing FEMA of diverting aid money from Helene victims to assist undocumented immigrants, Edwards would merit praise for actually keeping his pledge to put partisanship aside. Speaking truth to GOP power was apparently a bridge too far. He gave up the no-campaigning facade in the past week with a TV ad that, paradoxically, implies he’s not being political.ย
Fact is, he had the money to burn. When he called a halt to the campaign he had $309,221 in the bank. Rudow was down to $142,998 with little more than money for yard signs and digital ads to show for his efforts.ย
Politics isn’t an equal opportunity employer.
Related
The post In a departure from past North Carolina elections, Republican voters are turning out more heavily than Democrats to vote early โข Asheville Watchdog appeared first on avlwatchdog.org
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
FBI arrests NC man known as 'AK Guru' who is accused of selling hundreds of machine guns
SUMMARY: Earl Carter, known as the “AK Guru,” has been arrested by the FBI in Richmond County, NC, following a tip from another arrest. The 15-page criminal complaint details his alleged involvement in making and selling hundreds of machine guns, either by modifying legal firearms or assembling them from deconstructed parts. A confidential informant reported that Carter had sold around 1,000 modified automatic weapons to various groups in the Carolinas, including customers from mountainous regions. The FBI’s investigation is ongoing, and no further comments have been made by law enforcement or Carter’s attorney as of yet.
A North Carolina man has been arrested after being accused of making and selling hundreds of machine guns. Investigators were initially tipped off after arresting another man in Wake County. The defendant was allegedly described to FBI agents as “AK Guru” also known as Earl Carter of Hamlet, which is in Richmond County near the South Carolina border
https://abc11.com/post/earl-carter-hamlet-nc-fbi-arrests-man-known-ak-guru-is-accused-selling-hundreds-machine-guns/15486580/
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News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
What early voting trends signal in North Carolina
SUMMARY: As Election Day approaches, early voting turnout in North Carolina has been robust, with over 3 million voters participating. At polling sites like Durham, lines are forming as voters head to cast their ballots after work. Currently, slightly more registered Republicans have voted compared to Democrats, a shift from the 2020 election. While traditionally strong Democratic voter groups, like Black voters, lag in turnout, Democrats are optimistic about crossover support from unaffiliated and younger voters. With four days left of early voting, both parties are keenly assessing trends to prepare for a closely contested election.
With just a week left to go until Election Day, we’re getting a better idea of who’s turning out to vote. Over 3.1 million people across North Carolina have cast ballots between absentee and early in-person voting. As of Tuesday, registered Republicans have a slight turnout edge over registered Democrats, 34%-33%, with the remaining 32% Unaffiliated.
https://abc11.com/post/election-day-nc-2024-early-voting-trends-week-voters-north-carolina-ballots/15485569/
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