With several important offices on the line, North Carolina primary races will be especially important this year.
North Carolina is a swing state with empty seats in the mix for the Senate and five House races. A win for Democrats in the Senate race could offer them the chance to control the Senate, while a win for Republicans maintains the current balance.
But Republicans have more to lose than Democrats among North Carolina House candidates due to a last-minute redistricting.
Although North Carolina has one more congressional district than it did last year, Republicans will have to win in a highly competitive district to send eight candidates to Congress as they have in the past.
In contrast, Democrats went from five Democrat-majority districts to six.
North Carolina Senate Race
With the retirement of conservative Republican senator Richard Burr, the Senate race in North Carolina looks likely to be neck and neck.In the 2016 election, Burr won by only 5.7 percentage points against his Democratic opponent. With Burr’s seat open in a purple state, the Senate primaries will play an important role in determining which party controls the Senate.
The Democrats have united behind frontrunner Cheri Beasley, a former North Carolina Supreme Court judge. Her biggest primary opponent, state senator Jeff Jackson, dropped out of the race and offered her his endorsement.
Beasley also has endorsements from climate change group the NRDC Action Fund, homosexual activist group the Human Rights Campaign PAC, the AFL-CIO union, pro-gun control group the Giffords PAC, and nearly 70 leaders from across North Carolina.
McCrory’s campaign site focuses on his past successes as governor, citing reduced taxes, actions to end sanctuary cities, infrastructure improvements, and stopping Antifa riots using the National Guard.
His platform includes lower taxes, pro-life policies, support for police, defending constitutional rights, and strengthening election security.
McCrory hasn’t received an endorsement from former president Donald Trump, but Budd has.
Budd’s campaign site shares most of McCrory’s policies while adding a few about fighting the ideological Left.
His campaign ad’s first page identifies him as a “Liberal agenda crusher.”
Budd’s platform mentions fighting corruption from big tech companies, creating jobs, stopping socialism, and letting parents control their child’s education.
Both Budd and McCrory have raised a little over $3 million, leaving each slightly behind Beasley’s fundraising totals.
Despite the looming race against Beasley in the general election, Budd and McCrory have waged an attack-ad war against each other.
Often, both McCrory and Budd attack ads have been deceptive. Budd’s ads took McCrory’s statements out of context, so it sounded like he preferred Biden over Trump.
“He’s my president and I want him to be re-elected,” he said of Trump. “But he’s gotta get off the stage occasionally and let Joe Biden take over the No.1 position if he wants to be president for a second term.”
Although McCrory did criticize Trump’s claims of victory in the 2020 election, he said he supported him.
A McCrory ad took a quote from Budd out of context to suggest he approved of Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.
North Carolina House Races
Several House races in North Carolina have no incumbent this election, giving the chance for political changes.In addition, North Carolina gained an additional House seat because of population growth, bringing up its total number of seats from 13 to 14.
The First, Fourth, 13th, and 14th Congressional Districts are most likely to see a new House member or a change in party control.
One Democratic candidate is Don Davis, who supports investment in rural high-speed broadband internet, government improvement of healthcare, cheaper education, and nationwide abortion on demand at any stage of pregnancy.
He has received endorsements from 110 North Carolina political leaders and Democratic Party leaders.
The other Democratic candidate is Erica Smith, a progressive Democrat who supports canceling all student loan debt, subsidizing small farms, a single-payer health care system, increased clean energy, reduced automatic removal of illegal immigrants, free education from pre-kindergarten to college, and nationwide abortion on demand at any stage of pregnancy.
She has received endorsements from the Progressive Democrats of America, climate change activism group The Sunrise Movement, African-American interest group The Collective PAC, and the left-wing activist Truth to Power PAC.
Fundraising efforts indicate that Republicans have put significant effort into winning the First District too.
Sandy Smith is the likely leading Republican candidate there.
Smith is a business executive and mother to a Marine. Her platform is pro-life, pro-Second Amendment, pro-increased voting security, anti-illegal immigration, pro-police, pro-school choice, and anti-cancel culture.
She has endorsements from the North Carolina Sheriff Police Alliance, conservative political consultant Roger Stone, Michael Flynn, Sheriff Joe Arpaio, several pro-Trump Congressmen, and other pro-Trump figures.
North Carolina’s Fourth Congressional District also has no incumbent. Democrat David Price announced that he would not seek reelection.
Democrats Nida Allam and Valerie Foushee are currently leading the primary competition for his seat. Whoever wins will likely win the general election.
Allam currently leads in funds raised by about $140,000. She also has endorsements from congresswoman Ilhan Omar, congresswoman Rashida Tlaib, congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi, several state officials, progressive activist group Our Revolution, 20 other progressive groups, and several local leaders.
Her platform includes support for the Green New Deal, a $23 minimum wage, single-payer healthcare, reducing the defense budget, and nationwide abortion on demand at any stage of pregnancy.
Allam said in the ad that since then she has fought against “racism and hate.”
Foushee has a platform including a path to citizenship for illegal immigrants, decreased ICE funding, legalizing marijuana, increased restrictions on police, making election day a holiday, the Green New Deal, canceling student debt, raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour, and support for abortion.
Foushee has endorsements from 28 North Carolina leaders and the Elect Black Women PAC.
The dramatically altered 13th Congressional District is extremely competitive, with no incumbent. A Democratic win there would evenly split North Carolina between blue and red, while a Republican win would keep the state narrowly red.
On the Republican side, the race is mostly between Bo Hines and Kent Keirsey.
Hines supports gun rights, free speech, pro-life policies, term limits, and economic policies that discourage moving jobs overseas.
He also has endorsements from pro-Trump group Walls Work, free enterprise group the Club for Growth PAC, and pro-America youth activist group Today is America.
His commercials highlight both his Trump endorsement, his background in playing football, and his support for Trump-favored policies. Another commercial argued for the importance of creating voter ID laws.
Keirsey has similar policies. He emphasizes his background as a combat veteran and business leader.
On the Democratic side, state senator Wiley Nickel leads the race with about 10 times the funds of the second-best funded Democrat.
Nickel supports increased taxes on the rich, a $15 minimum wage, increased education funding, universal healthcare with options for private healthcare, criminal justice reform, pro-LGBT legislation, gun control, and abortion.
He has received endorsements from 41 Democratic Congressmen, local politicians, and activists. He also received endorsements from the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees union; the United Rural Democrats; the North Carolina Sheet Metal, Air, Rail, and Transportation Union; the Voter Protection Project, and several other Democratic groups.
Nickel’s campaign commercial highlights his previous work with former president Barrack Obama and claims that Republicans are trying to suppress minority votes with increased vote security laws.
Jackson is a veteran, state legislator, and former assistant district attorney. His website highlights endorsements from thousands of North Carolina citizens. He has also received an endorsement from the progressive veteran group VoteVets.
His platform includes opposing legislation that keeps men from entering women’s bathrooms, promoting gun control measures, criminal justice reform, opposing pro-life laws, promoting social justice, and expanding funding for schools.
Although Jackson hasn’t yet released campaign ads, he has released short explainer videos on topics including Ukraine and Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson’s Supreme Court nomination.