Republican nominee Madison Cawthorn has beat out Democrat nominee and retired U.S. Air Force Col. Moe Davis to win North Carolina’s 11th Congressional District on Tuesday, the Associated Press reported.
Cawthorn, 25, will be one of the youngest people to ever serve in Congress and will take the seat left vacant by Republican Rep. Mark Meadows who left to be President Trump’s chief of staff.
The young GOP nominee, who was left paralysed from a car accident, beat out Trump’s preferred candidate in the June primaries. Cawthorn appeared at the Republican National Convention in August, during which he stood up from his wheelchair to deliver his speech.
“All glory goes to God and I am excited to serve each and every member of this district. Thank you!”
Cawthorn first drew attention after defeating Trump’s preferred candidate in the June GOP primary runoff.
“While the far left is lighting our cities on fire, we are lifting the light of liberty,” he said in June this year following the primary victory.
He added, “We can build new pillars all across this nation and prove Lincoln right when he said, ‘That this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom—and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.'”
Cawthorn has previously described himself as a constitutional conservative, says on his campaign website that he wants to secure America’s borders, protect religious freedom, and oppose socialized medicine. He also says he’s pro-Trump, pro-life, and pro-Second Amendment. He has sought to portray himself as part of a new generation of Republicans who, he said, are promoting a message of hope, opportunity, and freedom.
He delivered a speech at the Republican National Convention in August during which he stood up from his wheelchair with the help of a walker.