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North Carolina

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North Carolina on Ballotpedia

A hub for state political coverage of elections, policies, and more

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  • North Carolina fact checks
    • North Carolina fact checks

North Carolina 2022 elections: U.S. Senate • U.S. House • State Senate • State House • Supreme court • Appellate courts • Local ballot measures • School boards • Municipal • Candidate ballot access


North Carolina elections, 2023
Past elections: 2021 • 2020 • 2019 • 2018 • 2017 • 2016 • 2015 • 2014


Voting in North Carolina

Federal politics

  • U.S. congressional delegation from North Carolina
  • Federal courts in North Carolina

North Carolina state politics

  • North Carolina state executive offices
  • General Assembly of North Carolina (House, Senate)
  • Courts in North Carolina
  • Ballot measures

Local politics in North Carolina

  • Municipal elections
  • Mayoral elections
  • Charlotte, Durham (County), Durham (City), Forsyth County, Greensboro, Guilford County, Mecklenburg County, Raleigh, Wake County, Winston-Salem
  • School districts in North Carolina
  • Local courts and judges by county
Ballotpedia provides comprehensive election coverage in the 100 largest U.S. cities by population and also covers mayoral, city council, and district attorney elections in every state capital. Additionally, Ballotpedia covers school board elections in the 200 largest U.S. school districts by enrollment.
However, beginning in 2022, Ballotpedia is expanding its coverage of local elections in North Carolina. Click here to find your county!

North Carolina fact checks

Policy issues in North Carolina

  • Budget: Budget and finances • Taxes
  • Civil liberties: Affirmative action • Campaign finance • Nonprofit regulation
  • Education: Charter schools • Higher education • Public education • School choice
  • Election: Ballot access requirements • Redistricting • Voting
  • Energy: Energy information • Fracking
  • Environment: Environmental information • Endangered species
  • Finance: Financial regulation information
  • Healthcare: Healthcare information • Medicaid spending • Effect of the Affordable Care Act
  • Immigration: Immigration information
  • Pensions: Public pensions

Influencers in North Carolina

Influencers are power players who help get candidates elected, put through policy proposals, cause ideological changes, and affect popular perceptions. They can take many forms: politicians, lobbyists, advisors, donors, corporations, industry groups, labor unions, single-issue organizations, and nonprofits, to name a few.

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USA North Carolina location map.svg
State leadership[1]
  • Governor: Roy Cooper Democratic Party
  • Secretary of State: Elaine Marshall Democratic Party
  • Speaker of the House: Timothy K. Moore Republican Party
  • Chief Justice: Paul Martin Newby Republican Party
Capital:  Raleigh
Motto:  Esse quam videri
Translation:  To be rather than to seem
Population:  10,035,186
Land area of state:  48,618 sq. mi.
Admitted to U.S.:  1789
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Footnotes

  1. The legislative leaders on this list are current as of the most recent regular session of the state legislature. Know of an update we can make to this list? Email us to report a change.
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