Ellmers Loses 2nd District Primary; Edmunds Advances | Eastern North Carolina Now

    Publisher's note: The author of this post is Rick Henderson, who is managing editor for the Carolina Journal, John Hood Publisher.

Holding defeats Ellmers easily in 2nd District; GOP incumbent Pittenger has slim lead in 9th District; Budd wins 17-way GOP primary in 13th


    RALEIGH     Conservative state Supreme Court Justice Bob Edmunds prevailed in a primary election he didn't think he'd have to contest, and incumbent Rep. Renee Ellmers of the 2nd Congressional District was trounced by 13th District U.S. Rep. George Holding in an election made necessary by several court decisions.

    The congressional primary was mandated after a three-judge federal court panel ruled in February the districts drawn in 2011 by the General Assembly violated the federal Voting Rights Act. Lawmakers drew new maps in a special legislative session, and last Thursday, the court upheld the districts.

    Ellmers may not be the only incumbent member of Congress to lose a primary challenge. Embattled two-term 9th District GOP Rep. Robert Pittenger, who has weathered ethics complaints challenging whether he fully divested interest in his family's business after being elected to Congress, had a lead of roughly 140 votes (or 0.5 percent) over Charlotte-area pastor Mark Harris in a three-way race. Union County insurance agent Todd Johnson trailed the field. If Pittenger finishes less than 1 percent ahead of Harris in the final tally, Harris can request a recount.

    Meanwhile, Holding's slot on the 13th District's Republican ballot in November was won by businessman Ted Budd, who prevailed in a 17-way primary, aided by the support of a political action committee operated by the limited-government group Club for Growth. Budd, who owns a shooting range and a firearms store, received about 20 percent of the vote, besting a handful of General Assembly members, including Sen. Andrew Brock and Reps. Julia Howard, John Blust, and Harry Warren.

    In the 12th District, which runs along Interstate 85 from Charlotte to Greensboro and was shifted entirely into Mecklenburg County, incumbent Rep. Alma Adams, who until recently lived in Guilford County, easily won a seven-way Democratic primary.

    The Supreme Court primary became necessary when a state court ruled unconstitutional a 2015 law changing judicial elections to referendums. Under that law, incumbent judges seeking new terms on the state Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court would have faced up-or-down votes to retain their seats. The court ruled that the 2015 law violated the state constitution's definition of an election as a contest between two or more candidates, setting the stage for a primary.

    Edmunds, the only registered Republican on the ballot, will face Superior Court Judge Mike Morgan in the November general election. Unaffiliated attorney Sabra Faires, who filed the lawsuit that resulted in the reversal of the retention-election law, finished third, with Democratic attorney Daniel Robertson a distant fourth.

    The winners

    There were no primaries in the 1st or 7th Congressional Districts, and in several districts, candidates for one party ran unopposed. These candidates won primaries on Tuesday and will appear on the Nov. 8 general election ballot:

N.C. Supreme Court (top two advance):

  • Bob Edmunds (I); Mike Morgan

U.S. House of Representatives


2nd District

  • Republican George Holding (13th District incumbent); Democrat John McNeil

3rd District

  • Republican Walter Jones (I); Democrat Ernest Reeves

4th District

  • Republican Sue Googe

5th District

  • Republican Virginia Foxx (I); Democrat Josh Brannon

6th District

  • Republican Mark Walker (I)

8th District

  • Republican Richard Hudson (i)

  • 9th District

  • Republican Robert Pittenger (I) led Mark Harris by 0.5 percent before provisional ballots had been counted and results certified

10th District

  • Republican Patrick McHenry (I)

11th District

  • Democrat Rick Bryson led Tom Hill by 0.5 percent before provisional ballots had been counted and results verified

12th District

  • Democrat Alma Adams (I); Republican Leon Threatt

13th District

  • Republican Ted Budd; Democrat Bruce David led Bob Isner by 0.6 percent before provisional ballots had been counted and results verified

Go Back


Leave a Guest Comment

Your Name or Alias
Your Email Address ( your email address will not be published)
Enter Your Comment ( no code or urls allowed, text only please )




State Tax Burden Has Declined Carolina Journal, Editorials, Op-Ed & Politics What's Wrong with Business Schools?


HbAD0

Latest Op-Ed & Politics

Atheist Soros, although born Jewish, was Nazi collaborator in Hungary in WWII
anti-immigration conservative nationalist beats Social Democrat incumbent 2 to 1
Biden wants to push this in public schools and Gov. deSantis says NO
this at the time that pro-Hamas radicals are rioting around the country
populist / nationalist anti-immigration AfD most popular party among young voters, CDU second

HbAD1

 
Back to Top