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2016 North Carolina gubernatorial election

The 2016 North Carolina gubernatorial election was held on November 8, 2016, concurrently with the 2016 U.S. presidential election, as well as elections to the United States Senate and elections to the United States House of Representatives and various state and local elections.

2016 North Carolina gubernatorial election

← 2012 November 8, 2016 2020 →
Turnout68.98% 1.68%
 
Nominee Roy Cooper Pat McCrory
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 2,309,157 2,298,880
Percentage 49.0% 48.8%

Cooper:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%      >90%
McCrory:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%      >90%
Tie:      40–50%

Governor before election

Pat McCrory
Republican

Elected Governor

Roy Cooper
Democratic

Primary elections were held March 15.[1] Both major party candidates won their primaries by overwhelming margins. The Republican nominee, incumbent governor of North Carolina Pat McCrory was running for a second term in office.[2] Roy Cooper, the incumbent Attorney General of the state and the second-longest-serving Attorney General in North Carolina history, was the Democratic nominee. Lon Cecil, a consultant and electrical engineer, was the Libertarian nominee. This race was expected to be among the most competitive in the country in the 2016 gubernatorial election cycle.[3]

On election night, the race was too close to call, with Cooper leading by fewer than 5,000 votes out of more than 4.6 million cast.[4] That lead eventually widened to 10,281 votes. Cooper claimed victory that night, with thousands of provisional ballots still yet to be counted, saying, "We have won this race." However, McCrory refused to concede, claiming that the race was still too close to call and the winner had not yet been determined. He cast doubt on the authenticity of 90,000 late-arriving votes from Durham County, which put Cooper in the lead.[5] McCrory's campaign filed complaints alleging voter fraud in over 50 counties.[6] Both campaigns anticipated a protracted legal battle over the results.[7]

On November 22, 2016, McCrory formally requested a statewide recount;[8] once all ballots are counted, North Carolina election law allows either candidate to request a recount if the margin is fewer than 10,000 votes.[7] On November 30, 2016, the North Carolina State Board of Elections ordered a recount of certain votes in Durham County.[9] The recount was slated to be completed on December 5, 2016. However, when early results made it apparent that the margin would not change, McCrory conceded the race to Cooper on the afternoon of December 5.

This was the first time since North Carolina governors became eligible for immediate reelection in 1976 that a sitting officeholder was defeated in their bid for a second term.[10] It was also the only gubernatorial seat to flip from Republican to Democratic in 2016. With a margin of 0.22%, this election was additionally the closest race of the 2016 gubernatorial election cycle.

Republican primary

Candidates

Declared

Declined

Polling

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Pat
McCrory
Charles
Moss
Robert
Brawley
Undecided
Public Policy Polling March 11–13, 2016 749 ± 3.6% 70% 7% 6% 17%
High Point University March 9–10, 2016 734 ± 2.5% 73% 6% 8% 13%
SurveyUSA March 4–7, 2016 688 ± 3.6% 66% 6% 9% 19%
SurveyUSA February 14–16, 2016 437 ± 4.5% 67% 17% 16%
Public Policy Polling February 14–16, 2016 597 ± 4.0% 69% 4% 5% 22%
High Point University January 30–February 4, 2016 477 ± 4.5% 75% 3% 2% 20%
Public Policy Polling January 18–19, 2016 433 ± 3.2% 68% 6% 4% 22%
Hypothetical polling
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Pat
McCrory
Dan
Forest
Undecided
Public Policy Polling August 12–16, 2015 406 ± 4.9% 60% 20% 20%

Results

Republican primary results[17]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Pat McCrory (incumbent) 869,114 82.0%
Republican Robert Brawley 112,624 11.0%
Republican Charles Moss 81,315 7.0%
Total votes 1,063,053 100.00%

Democratic primary

 
Results by county:
Cooper
  •   Cooper—80–90%
  •   Cooper—70–80%
  •   Cooper—60–70%
  •   Cooper—50–60%
Spaulding
  •   Spaulding—50–60%
  •   Spaulding—60–70%

Candidates

Declared

Withdrawn

Declined

Polling

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Roy
Cooper
Kenneth
Spaulding
Other Undecided
Public Policy Polling March 11–13, 2016 746 ± 3.6% 53% 17% 30%
High Point University March 9–10, 2016 669 ± 2.5% 64% 18% 19%
SurveyUSA March 4–7, 2016 687 ± 3.8% 51% 19% 30%
SurveyUSA February 14–16, 2016 449 ± 4.7% 50% 21% 29%
Public Policy Polling February 14–16, 2016 575 ± 4.1% 55% 12% 33%
High Point University January 30–February 4, 2016 478 ± 4.5% 49% 11% 40%
Public Policy Polling January 18–19, 2016 461 ± 3.2% 55% 10% 35%
Public Policy Polling December 5–7, 2015 555 ± 2.8% 54% 10% 36%
Public Policy Polling October 23–25, 2015 421 ± 4.8% 58% 13% 29%
Hypothetical polling
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Roy
Cooper
Anthony
Foxx
Kay
Hagan
Charles
Meeker
Kenneth
Spaulding
Other/
Undecided
Civitas Institute March 20–23, 2015 400 ± 5% 31% 7% 43% 3% 4% 12%

Results

Democratic primary results[25]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Roy Cooper 710,658 69.0%
Democratic Kenneth Spaulding 323,774 31.0%
Total votes 1,034,432 100.0%

Libertarian primary

Candidates

Declared

Withdrawn

Declined

Write-in candidates

Declared

  • Daniel Orr, navy veteran[31]

General election

Debates

  • Complete video of debate, October 11, 2016 - C-SPAN
  • Complete video of debate, October 18, 2016 - C-SPAN

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[32] Tossup August 12, 2016
Daily Kos[33] Tossup November 8, 2016
Rothenberg Political Report[34] Tilt D (flip) November 3, 2016
Sabato's Crystal Ball[35] Lean D (flip) November 7, 2016
Real Clear Politics[36] Tossup November 1, 2016
Governing[37] Tossup October 27, 2016

Polling

Aggregate polls
Source of poll
aggregation
Dates
administered
Dates
updated
Pat
McCrory (R)
Roy
Cooper (D)
Other/Undecided
[a]
Margin
Real Clear Politics October 23 – November 6, 2016 November 6, 2016 46.2% 48.4% 5.4% Cooper +2.2%
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Pat
McCrory (R)
Roy
Cooper (D)
Lon
Cecil (L)
Other Undecided
SurveyMonkey November 1–7, 2016 3,126 ± 4.6% 43% 54% 3%
November 4–6, 2016 800 ± 3.5% 46% 47% 7%
Quinnipiac University November 7, 2016, at the Wayback Machine November 3–6, 2016 870 ± 3.3% 47% 50% 1% 3%
SurveyMonkey October 31–November 6, 2016 2,865 ± 4.6% 43% 54% 3%
SurveyMonkey October 28–November 3, 2016 2,292 ± 4.6% 44% 53% 3%
SurveyMonkey October 27–November 2, 2016 1,886 ± 4.6% 45% 53% 2%
Quinnipiac University October 27–November 1, 2016 602 ± 4.0% 47% 49% 1% 3%
SurveyMonkey October 26–November 1, 2016 1,617 ± 4.6% 45% 52% 3%
SurveyUSA October 28–31, 2016 659 ± 3.9% 47% 48% 2% 4%
SurveyMonkey October 25–31, 2016 1,574 ± 4.6% 46% 52% 2%
CBS News/YouGov October 26–28, 2016 992 ± 4.1% 44% 46% 1% 9%
Elon University Poll October 23–27, 2016 710 ± 3.7% 44% 44% 1% 3% 8%
NBC/WSJ/Marist October 25–26, 2016 780 LV ± 3.5% 45% 51% 2% 2%
1,018 RV ± 3.1% 45% 50% 3% 3%
Quinnipiac University October 20–26, 2016 702 ± 3.7% 47% 49% 3%
New York Times Upshot/Siena College October 20–23, 2016 792 ± 3.5% 45% 51% 4%
Monmouth University October 20–23, 2016 402 ± 4.9% 48% 47% 2% 3%
Public Policy Polling October 21–22, 2016 875 ± 3.3% 44% 46% 3% 8%
October 17–18, 2016 924 ± 3.0% 43% 50% 7%
SurveyUSA October 14–18, 2016 651 ± 3.9% 45% 47% 3% 5%
Civitas Institute (R) October 14–17, 2016 600 ± 4.0% 46% 42% 10%
Washington Post/SurveyMonkey October 8–16, 2016 1,191 ± 0.5% 42% 55% 2%
CNN/ORC October 10–15, 2016 788 LV ± 3.5% 48% 49% 2%
929 RV ± 3.0% 47% 49% 2%
NBC/WSJ/Marist October 10–12, 2016 743 LV ± 3.6% 48% 49% 1% 3%
1,025 RV ± 3.1% 47% 48% 1% 4%
High Point University October 1–6, 2016 479 ± 4.5% 42% 49% 3% 5%
SurveyUSA September 29–October 3, 2016 656 ± 3.9% 44% 48% 2% 6%
Bloomberg/Selzer September 29–October 3, 2016 805 ± 3.5% 44% 50% 6%
Quinnipiac University September 27–October 2, 2016 507 ± 4.4% 46% 48% 6%
Elon University Poll September 27–30, 2016 660 ± 3.8% 44% 48% 3% 5%
Public Policy Polling September 27–28, 2016 861 ± 3.3% 42% 45% 4% 9%
44% 49% 7%
September 18–22, 2016 487 ± 4.4% 41% 39% 1% 6% 14%
High Point University September 17–22, 2016 404 ± 4.9% 41% 50% 3% 5%
September 18–20, 2016 734 LV ± 3.5% 46% 43% 3% 1% 7%
800 RV 45% 42% 3% 1% 9%
Public Policy Polling September 18–20, 2016 1,024 ± 3.1% 41% 46% 2% 11%
43% 50% 8%
New York Times Upshot/Siena College September 16–19, 2016 782 ± 3.6% 42% 50% 7%
Elon University Poll September 12–16, 2016 644 ± 3.9% 49% 46% 2% 3%
Civitas Institute (R) September 11–12, 2016 600 ± 4.0% 45% 43% 1% 9%
Quinnipiac University August 29–September 7, 2016 751 ± 3.6% 44% 51% 5%
Monmouth University August 20–23, 2016 401 ± 4.9% 43% 52% 3% 3%
CNN/ORC August 18–23, 2016 803 LV ± 3.5% 46% 52% 2%
912 RV
NBC/WSJ/Marist August 4–10, 2016 921 ± 3.2% 44% 51% 5%
Public Policy Polling August 5–7, 2016 830 ± 3.4% 42% 43% 4% 11%
NBC/WSJ/Marist July 5–11, 2016 907 ± 3.3% 45% 49% 1% 5%
Civitas Institute (R) June 21–23, 2016 600 ± 4.0% 45% 40% 3% 10%
Public Policy Polling June 20–21, 2016 947 ± 3.2% 41% 41% 6% 13%
Civitas Institute (R) May 21–23, 2016 600 ± 4.0% 45% 40% 3% 11%
Public Policy Polling May 20–22, 2016 928 ± 3.2% 41% 41% 5% 13%
RABA Research April 27–28, 2016 688 ± 3.7% 36% 41% 6% 17%
Civitas Institute (R) April 23–25, 2016 600 ± 4.0% 39% 48% 5% 8%
Public Policy Polling April 22–24, 2016 960 ± 3.2% 42% 43% 4% 11%
Elon University Poll April 10–15, 2016 621 ± 3.9% 42% 48% 6% 5%
SurveyUSA April 8–11, 2016 701 ± 3.8% 43% 47% 2% 8%
Public Policy Polling March 18–20, 2016 843 ± 3.4% 42% 40% 6% 12%
High Point University March 9–10, 2016 1,576 ± 2.5% 47% 45% 8%
Elon University Poll February 15–19, 2016 1,530 ± 2.5% 40% 42% 3% 15%
Public Policy Polling February 14–16, 2016 1,291 ± 2.7% 43% 41% 16%
SurveyUSA February 14–16, 2016 1,250 ± 2.8% 45% 42% 12%
Public Policy Polling January 18–19, 2016 948 ± 3.2% 40% 43% 17%
Public Policy Polling December 5–7, 2015 1,214 ± 2.8% 44% 42% 14%
Elon University Poll October 29–November 2, 2015 1,040 ± 3.0% 40% 45% 3% 13%
Public Policy Polling October 23–25, 2015 893 ± 3.3% 43% 44% 13%
Public Policy Polling September 24–27, 2015 1,268 ± 2.8% 44% 41% 15%
Elon University Poll September 17–21, 2015 1,258 ± 3.0% 43% 42% 3% 11%
Public Policy Polling August 12–16, 2015 957 ± 3.2% 39% 42% 18%
Civitas Institute (R) August 10–12, 2015 400 ± 4.0% 32% 34% 33%
Public Policy Polling July 2–6, 2015 529 ± 4.3% 41% 43% 16%
Civitas Institute (R) June 23–25, 2015 600 ± 4.0% 43% 38% 17%
Public Policy Polling May 28–31, 2015 561 ± 4.1% 41% 44% 15%
Elon University Poll April 20–24, 2015 677 ± 3.8% 45% 43% 4% 8%
Public Policy Polling April 2–5, 2015 751 ± 3.6% 44% 41% 15%
Public Policy Polling February 24–26, 2015 849 ± 3.4% 43% 41% 16%
Diversified Research February 2–3, 2015 800 ± 3.5% 44% 42% 14%
Public Policy Polling January 29–31, 2015 845 ± 3.4% 44% 39% 17%
January 21–22, 2015 500 ± 4.4% 47% 44% 9%
Public Policy Polling December 4–7, 2014 823 ± 3.4% 46% 39% 15%
Gravis Marketing October 29–30, 2014 1,006 ± 3.0% 47% 45% 8%
Gravis Marketing October 16–18, 2014 1,022 ± 3.0% 49% 41% 9%
Gravis Marketing September 22–23, 2014 860 ± 3.0% 45% 42% 12%
Public Policy Polling September 11–14, 2014 1,266 ± 2.8% 44% 41% 15%
Public Policy Polling August 14–17, 2014 856 ± 3.4% 44% 43% 14%
Gravis Marketing July 22–27, 2014 1,380 ± 3.0% 44% 46% 10%
Public Policy Polling June 12–15, 2014 1,076 ± 3.0% 44% 42% 14%
Public Policy Polling May 9–11, 2014 877 ± 3.3% 43% 42% 15%
Public Policy Polling April 3–6, 2014 740 ± 3.6% 43% 43% 15%
Public Policy Polling February 6–9, 2014 708 ± 3.7% 43% 41% 15%
Public Policy Polling September 6–9, 2013 600 ± 4.0% 42% 48% 11%
Hypothetical polling
with Pat McCrory
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Pat
McCrory (R)
Kenneth
Spaulding (D)
Other Undecided
Public Policy Polling February 14–16, 2016 1,291 ± 2.7% 44% 32% 24%
SurveyUSA February 14–16, 2016 1,250 ± 2.8% 48% 38% 15%
Public Policy Polling January 18–19, 2016 948 ± 3.2% 43% 34% 22%
Public Policy Polling December 5–7, 2015 1,214 ± 2.8% 47% 32% 21%
Public Policy Polling October 23–25, 2015 893 ± 3.3% 46% 31% 23%
Public Policy Polling September 24–27, 2015 1,268 ± 2.8% 46% 34% 21%
Public Policy Polling August 12–16, 2015 957 ± 3.2% 40% 35% 25%
Public Policy Polling July 2–6, 2015 529 ± 4.3% 43% 33% 24%
Public Policy Polling May 28–31, 2015 561 ± 4.1% 43% 32% 25%
Public Policy Polling April 2–5, 2015 751 ± 3.6% 46% 33% 21%
Public Policy Polling February 24–26, 2015 849 ± 3.4% 44% 35% 21%
Public Policy Polling January 29–31, 2015 845 ± 3.4% 47% 36% 17%
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Pat
McCrory (R)
Janet
Cowell (D)
Undecided
Public Policy Polling December 4–7, 2014 823 ± 3.4% 47% 36% 16%
Public Policy Polling September 6–9, 2013 600 ± 4% 43% 47% 10%
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Pat
McCrory (R)
Anthony
Foxx (D)
Undecided
Public Policy Polling December 4–7, 2014 823 ± 3.4% 48% 34% 18%
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Pat
McCrory (R)
Kay
Hagan (D)
Undecided
January 21–22, 2015 500 ± 4.38% 50% 42% 8%
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Pat
McCrory (R)
Charles
Meeker (D)
Undecided
Public Policy Polling April 3–6, 2014 740 ± 3.6% 45% 38% 17%
Public Policy Polling September 6–9, 2013 600 ± 4% 42% 45% 13%
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Pat
McCrory (R)
Josh
Stein (D)
Undecided
Public Policy Polling September 6–9, 2013 600 ± 4% 42% 44% 14%
with Phil Berger
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Phil
Berger (R)
Roy
Cooper (D)
Undecided
Public Policy Polling December 4–7, 2014 823 ± 3.4% 35% 41% 24%
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Phil
Berger (R)
Janet
Cowell (D)
Undecided
Public Policy Polling December 4–7, 2014 823 ± 3.4% 37% 38% 25%
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Phil
Berger (R)
Anthony
Foxx (D)
Undecided
Public Policy Polling December 4–7, 2014 823 ± 3.4% 39% 36% 25%
with Dan Forest
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Dan
Forest (R)
Roy
Cooper (D)
Undecided
Public Policy Polling August 12–16, 2015 957 ± 3.2% 33% 42% 25%

Preliminary results and legal battle

North Carolina's gubernatorial election, 2016[38]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Roy Cooper 2,309,162 49.02% +5.79%
Republican Pat McCrory (incumbent) 2,298,881 48.80% -5.82%
Libertarian Lon Cecil 102,978 2.19% +0.06%
Margin of victory 10,281 0.22% -7.92%
Turnout 4,711,021 68.98% +1.68%
Democratic gain from Republican

Polls closed at 7:30 pm on election day. On election night, as votes were tallied, Cooper held an early lead, but was overtaken by McCrory around 9:30 pm, and McCrory held the lead for most of the evening. Shortly before midnight, McCrory held a 60,000 vote lead until a block of 90,000 votes from Durham County was added to the total, putting Cooper back in the lead by fewer than 5,000 votes out of 4,500,000 cast.[5] Both candidates addressed supporters around 12:30 am; Cooper declared victory, while McCrory vowed the race was not over and that every vote needed to be counted.[5]

Under North Carolina state law, absentee ballots postmarked on or before election day must be counted, and military and overseas ballots accepted through November 17 must also be counted.[39] Additionally, election administrators "must decide the eligibility of more than 60,000 provisional ballots and the validity of thousands of challenged votes."[39] This process, plus a protracted legal challenge from the McCrory campaign, was likely to leave the election result not formally decided for some time after election day.[39]

McCrory's campaign said that it had "grave concerns over potential irregularities in Durham County."[5] Republican Party of North Carolina Chairman Robin Hayes called Cooper's declaration of victory "rude and grossly premature."[7] On November 10, 2016, both campaigns announced they had retained attorneys in anticipation of a protracted legal battle: Cooper hired lawyers from Washington-based firm Perkins Coie (including Marc Elias[40]), while McCrory hired lawyers from Virginia-based firm Holtzman Vogel Josefiak.[7]

Once all ballots are counted, North Carolina election law allows either candidate to request a recount if the margin is fewer than 10,000 votes.[7]

On November 12, the general counsel of the Durham County Republican Party filed a formal protest with the Durham County Board of Elections alleging "malfeasance" in the tallying of votes in Durham County and calling for a recount.[41] McCrory's campaign said that the 90,000 votes added to the total late on election night appeared to have come from corrupted memory cards. A campaign spokesman said, "What transpired in Durham County is extremely troubling and no citizen can have confidence in the results at this point in time."[41]

On November 14, WRAL reported that there was speculation among political operatives about whether the race could possibly be contested and handed to the North Carolina General Assembly to determine the winner, as was done in 2005, when the General Assembly made June Atkinson the winner of a disputed election for the office of North Carolina Superintendent of Public Instruction.[42] North Carolina House Speaker Tim Moore said getting the General Assembly involved would be "an absolute last resort".[43]

Also on November 14, WRAL reported that the State Bureau of Investigation was investigating whether crimes were committed in the mishandling of 1,000 ballots in the March 2016 primaries in Durham County, the likely epicenter of the battle over the gubernatorial race.[44] The Durham County electoral board chairman said there was no connection between the investigation and the gubernatorial race.[44]

On November 15 Bladen County Soil and Water Conservation District Supervisor McCrae Dowless, a Republican and the incumbent for reelection, filed a protest with that county's board of elections over several hundred absentee ballots cast for Cooper and other Democrats, claiming that they were fraudulent; on the basis of similarity of the handwriting with which they were filled out. In his initial filing, Dowless claimed corroboration by a handwriting expert. The complainant had initially expressed concerns about voter fraud related to his own reelection campaign, and before election day.[45][46][47] The McCrory campaign alleged that the ballots were filled out by paid employees of the Bladen County Improvement Association PAC, a political action committee that received funding from the North Carolina Democratic Party.[45] The complaint alleged that one person served as a witness for at least 67 mail-in absentee ballots, and the same person appeared to have filled out the selections on 71 ballots.[48] It said there were at least 250 questionable ballots connected to five people paid by the Bladen County Improvement Association PAC. That organization has responded that the people involved were volunteers with their get-out-the-vote effort, and that the only payments made to them were small stipends for expenses incurred as part of that activity; such as food and gas costs.[49] The McCrory campaign stated, "A massive voting fraud scheme has been uncovered in Bladen County."[49] In response, the Cooper campaign stated: "Governor McCrory has set a new standard for desperation in his attempts to undermine the results of an election he lost."[50]

On November 16, the McCrory campaign announced it had filed election protests alleging fraud in 11 more counties.[6][51] On November 17, the McCrory campaign announced the number of counties in which it had filed protests alleging voter fraud had grown to 50 counties,[50][52] which the Associated Press reported were "without offering detailed proof."[53]

Every county election board in the state has three members: two Republican appointees and one Democrat.[40][54]

Durham County has been seen as the most pivotal county, as it has the most votes at stake.[40] On November 16, the Durham County Board of Elections voted 2-1 to hold an evidentiary hearing on election protest about the ballots in Durham County.[55] At the hearing on November 18, the board unanimously dismissed the protest, with the board's Republican chairman, William Brian Jr., saying that all the evidence shows that the count is correct.[53]

By November 18, Cooper's unofficial advantage over McCrory had grown to about 6,600 votes, out of almost 4.7 million cast.[53][54]

On November 20, the state Board of Elections held an emergency meeting. They declined a McCrory campaign petition for the state board to take jurisdiction over all 50 county election protests, except for the one in Bladen County, which they took over.[56] They decided to convene another meeting on November 22 to issue guidance to county boards on how to handle the protests.[57]

On November 22, the McCrory campaign formally requested a statewide recount.[8]

Also on November 22, the Civitas Institute filed a federal lawsuit seeking an injunction to delay the State Board of Elections' count of ballots of unverified same-day registrants, alleging that there is not enough time to verify the eligibility of voters who registered to vote on election day.[58] Civitas said that neither the McCrory campaign nor the state Republican Party were involved in the lawsuit.[59] Civitas cited a 2012 review conducted by the state Board of Elections that found 2.44% of voters who used same-day registration in 2012 failed the verification process, but the process was not completely finished when the ballots were counted.[59] A court hearing is scheduled for December 8.[60]

On November 26, the Durham County Republican Party's general counsel asked the state Board of Elections to hold an expedited hearing on his appeal of the Durham County Board of Elections' refusal to conduct a recount of that county's votes.[61] The campaign stated they would withdraw their request for a statewide recount if a manual recount of Durham County votes produced the same results as were reported on election day.[62]

On November 30, the State Board of Elections ordered a recount of the Durham County votes.[9] The recount was to be completed by 7 p.m. on December 5. However, by that morning, early results showed no change in the tally. McCrory announced on his campaign's YouTube channel that he was conceding the race to Cooper, saying that it was now clear that "the majority of our citizens had spoken."[10]

Official results

North Carolina's gubernatorial election, 2016[63]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Roy Cooper 2,309,157 49.02% +5.79%
Republican Pat McCrory (incumbent) 2,298,880 48.80% -5.82%
Libertarian Lon Cecil 102,977 2.19% +0.06%
Total votes 4,711,014 100.00% N/A
Democratic gain from Republican

Aftermath

Following the election, the General Assembly, controlled by Republicans, passed legislation that would limit the incoming governor's powers.[64] Democrats have referred to the move as a power grab, and Republicans have countered that Democrats have made similar moves when they controlled the legislature.[65]

Notes

  1. ^ Calculated by taking the difference of 100% and all other candidates combined.

References

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on October 2, 2015. Retrieved October 1, 2015.
  2. ^ a b "Gov. Pat McCrory launches 2016 campaign". The News & Observer. December 2, 2014. Retrieved December 5, 2014.
  3. ^ "Top 10 governors races of 2016". Politico. Retrieved November 22, 2016.
  4. ^ "In North Carolina, a Governor's Race Is Too Close to Call". The New York Times. November 9, 2016. Retrieved November 22, 2016.
  5. ^ a b c d news, jonah kaplan, abc11 anchors, wtvd anchors, abc11 reporters, wtvd reporters, wtvd talent, veteran, raleigh news, durham news, fayetteville (November 8, 2016). "Cooper claiming victory in Governor's race". Retrieved November 22, 2016. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  6. ^ a b "McCrory team: Election protests filed in 12 counties". Retrieved November 22, 2016.
  7. ^ a b c d e "The North Carolina governor's race still isn't over. And it's about to get even uglier". The Washington Post. Retrieved November 22, 2016.
  8. ^ a b N.C. governor seeks recount amid voter-fraud complaints, won’t concede
  9. ^ a b . Archived from the original on December 1, 2016. Retrieved December 1, 2016.
  10. ^ a b Campbell, Colin (December 6, 2016). "Gov. Pat McCrory concedes defeat to Roy Cooper as Durham recount wraps up". The News & Observer.
  11. ^ Campbell, Colin (December 9, 2015). "Gov. Pat McCroy gets a challenger in Republican primary". The News & Observer. Retrieved December 10, 2015.
  12. ^ "McCrory: Election wins no mandate for GOP". WRAL.com. November 5, 2014. Retrieved November 7, 2014.
  13. ^ "Candidate Listing" (PDF). North Carolina State Board of Elections. Retrieved December 21, 2015.[permanent dead link]
  14. ^ Campbell, Colin (October 7, 2015). "Former GOP Senate candidate Greg Brannon to make 'big announcement' Thursday". The News & Observer. Retrieved October 8, 2015.
  15. ^ Brannon, Greg (December 21, 2015). "WATCH as I officially file as a Republican candidate for the United States Senate!". Facebook. Retrieved December 21, 2015.
  16. ^ Leslie, Laura (February 18, 2015). "Coleman, Forest to run again for lieutenant governor". WRAL-TV. Retrieved February 18, 2015.
  17. ^ "NC SBE Election Contest Details". Retrieved November 22, 2016.
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  20. ^ "Protzman drops out of governor's race after 7 months". The News & Observer. October 17, 2013. Retrieved November 28, 2013.
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  22. ^ Matt Vasilogambros (April 29, 2013). . National Journal. Archived from the original on September 26, 2013. Retrieved September 9, 2013.
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  26. ^ "Libertarians look to keep NC ballot status with candidate slate". Retrieved November 22, 2016.
  27. ^ Lynn Bonner (December 31, 2014). "Libertarian candidate for NC governor announces". News & Observer. Retrieved January 5, 2015.
  28. ^ Frankel, Paul (August 8, 2015). "Fortenberry withdraws from NC governor's race". Independent Political Report. Retrieved August 11, 2015.
  29. ^ Craig Jarvis (January 5, 2015). "Sean Haugh considers another Libertarian bid". News & Observer. Retrieved January 5, 2015.
  30. ^ Ziggler, Jed (October 7, 2015). "Sean Haugh: "I Intend to Run for U.S. Senate as a Libertarian in North Carolina in 2016"". Independent Political Report. Retrieved October 13, 2015.
  31. ^ "Richmond County Daily Journal". October 28, 2015.
  32. ^ "2016 Governor Race ratings". The Cook Political Report. Retrieved October 15, 2018.
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  34. ^ "Gubernatorial Ratings". The Rothenberg Political Report. Retrieved October 15, 2018.
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  38. ^ 11/08/2016 UNOFFICIAL GENERAL ELECTION RESULTS - STATEWIDE, North Carolina Board of Elections
  39. ^ a b c Nigel Duara, North Carolina governor's race still undecided with thousands of votes to be finalized, Los Angeles Times (November 18, 2016).
  40. ^ a b c Virginia Bridges, Colin Campbell & Craig Jarvis, Appeal planned after Durham County dismisses demand for hand recount, News & Observer (November 17, 2016).
  41. ^ a b "Provisional ballot count offers few hints in governor race". Retrieved November 22, 2016.
  42. ^ WRAL (November 14, 2016). "Could NC lawmakers choose the next governor? :: WRAL.com". Retrieved November 22, 2016.
  43. ^ "Could NC legislators decide governor race? 'Last resort,' House speaker says". Retrieved November 22, 2016.
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  56. ^ WRAL (November 20, 2016). . Archived from the original on November 22, 2016. Retrieved November 22, 2016.
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External links

  • Daniel Orr (L) for Governor

2016, north, carolina, gubernatorial, election, this, article, missing, information, about, background, context, campaign, please, expand, article, include, this, information, further, details, exist, talk, page, march, 2018, related, races, 2016, united, stat. This article is missing information about the background and context of the campaign Please expand the article to include this information Further details may exist on the talk page March 2018 For related races see 2016 United States gubernatorial elections The 2016 North Carolina gubernatorial election was held on November 8 2016 concurrently with the 2016 U S presidential election as well as elections to the United States Senate and elections to the United States House of Representatives and various state and local elections 2016 North Carolina gubernatorial election 2012 November 8 2016 2020 Turnout68 98 1 68 Nominee Roy Cooper Pat McCroryParty Democratic RepublicanPopular vote 2 309 157 2 298 880Percentage 49 0 48 8 County resultsPrecinct resultsCooper 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 90 gt 90 McCrory 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 90 gt 90 Tie 40 50 Governor before electionPat McCroryRepublican Elected Governor Roy CooperDemocraticPrimary elections were held March 15 1 Both major party candidates won their primaries by overwhelming margins The Republican nominee incumbent governor of North Carolina Pat McCrory was running for a second term in office 2 Roy Cooper the incumbent Attorney General of the state and the second longest serving Attorney General in North Carolina history was the Democratic nominee Lon Cecil a consultant and electrical engineer was the Libertarian nominee This race was expected to be among the most competitive in the country in the 2016 gubernatorial election cycle 3 On election night the race was too close to call with Cooper leading by fewer than 5 000 votes out of more than 4 6 million cast 4 That lead eventually widened to 10 281 votes Cooper claimed victory that night with thousands of provisional ballots still yet to be counted saying We have won this race However McCrory refused to concede claiming that the race was still too close to call and the winner had not yet been determined He cast doubt on the authenticity of 90 000 late arriving votes from Durham County which put Cooper in the lead 5 McCrory s campaign filed complaints alleging voter fraud in over 50 counties 6 Both campaigns anticipated a protracted legal battle over the results 7 On November 22 2016 McCrory formally requested a statewide recount 8 once all ballots are counted North Carolina election law allows either candidate to request a recount if the margin is fewer than 10 000 votes 7 On November 30 2016 the North Carolina State Board of Elections ordered a recount of certain votes in Durham County 9 The recount was slated to be completed on December 5 2016 However when early results made it apparent that the margin would not change McCrory conceded the race to Cooper on the afternoon of December 5 This was the first time since North Carolina governors became eligible for immediate reelection in 1976 that a sitting officeholder was defeated in their bid for a second term 10 It was also the only gubernatorial seat to flip from Republican to Democratic in 2016 With a margin of 0 22 this election was additionally the closest race of the 2016 gubernatorial election cycle Contents 1 Republican primary 1 1 Candidates 1 1 1 Declared 1 1 2 Declined 1 2 Polling 1 3 Results 2 Democratic primary 2 1 Candidates 2 1 1 Declared 2 1 2 Withdrawn 2 1 3 Declined 2 2 Polling 2 3 Results 3 Libertarian primary 3 1 Candidates 3 1 1 Declared 3 1 2 Withdrawn 3 1 3 Declined 4 Write in candidates 4 1 Declared 5 General election 5 1 Debates 5 2 Predictions 5 3 Polling 5 4 Preliminary results and legal battle 5 5 Official results 6 Aftermath 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksRepublican primary EditCandidates Edit Declared Edit Robert Brawley former state representative 11 Pat McCrory incumbent governor 2 12 Charles Moss preacher former Randolph County Soil amp Water Conservation Board member Democratic state senate candidate in 2004 and candidate for governor in 2012 13 Declined Edit Greg Brannon physician Tea Party activist and candidate for the U S Senate in 2014 running for U S Senate 14 15 Dan Forest Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina running for re election 16 Polling Edit This article s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references August 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin of error PatMcCrory CharlesMoss RobertBrawley UndecidedPublic Policy Polling March 11 13 2016 749 3 6 70 7 6 17 High Point University March 9 10 2016 734 2 5 73 6 8 13 SurveyUSA March 4 7 2016 688 3 6 66 6 9 19 SurveyUSA February 14 16 2016 437 4 5 67 17 16 Public Policy Polling February 14 16 2016 597 4 0 69 4 5 22 High Point University January 30 February 4 2016 477 4 5 75 3 2 20 Public Policy Polling January 18 19 2016 433 3 2 68 6 4 22 Hypothetical pollingPoll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin of error PatMcCrory DanForest UndecidedPublic Policy Polling August 12 16 2015 406 4 9 60 20 20 Results Edit Republican primary results 17 Party Candidate Votes Republican Pat McCrory incumbent 869 114 82 0 Republican Robert Brawley 112 624 11 0 Republican Charles Moss 81 315 7 0 Total votes 1 063 053 100 00 Democratic primary Edit Results by county Cooper Cooper 80 90 Cooper 70 80 Cooper 60 70 Cooper 50 60 Spaulding Spaulding 50 60 Spaulding 60 70 Candidates Edit Declared Edit Roy Cooper North Carolina Attorney General 18 Kenneth Spaulding former state representative and candidate for North Carolina s 2nd congressional district in 1984 19 Withdrawn Edit James Protzman businessman and former Chapel Hill town council member 19 20 Declined Edit Janet Cowell North Carolina State Treasurer not seeking re election or running for any other office 19 21 Anthony Foxx United States Secretary of Transportation and former Mayor of Charlotte 22 Kay Hagan former U S Senator and former State Senator 19 21 Charles Meeker former mayor of Raleigh running for Labor Commissioner 19 23 Heath Shuler former U S Representative 24 Josh Stein state senator and former deputy attorney general of North Carolina running for Attorney General 19 21 Polling Edit This article s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references August 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin of error RoyCooper KennethSpaulding Other UndecidedPublic Policy Polling March 11 13 2016 746 3 6 53 17 30 High Point University March 9 10 2016 669 2 5 64 18 19 SurveyUSA March 4 7 2016 687 3 8 51 19 30 SurveyUSA February 14 16 2016 449 4 7 50 21 29 Public Policy Polling February 14 16 2016 575 4 1 55 12 33 High Point University January 30 February 4 2016 478 4 5 49 11 40 Public Policy Polling January 18 19 2016 461 3 2 55 10 35 Public Policy Polling December 5 7 2015 555 2 8 54 10 36 Public Policy Polling October 23 25 2015 421 4 8 58 13 29 Hypothetical pollingPoll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror RoyCooper AnthonyFoxx KayHagan CharlesMeeker KennethSpaulding Other UndecidedCivitas Institute March 20 23 2015 400 5 31 7 43 3 4 12 Results Edit Democratic primary results 25 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Roy Cooper 710 658 69 0 Democratic Kenneth Spaulding 323 774 31 0 Total votes 1 034 432 100 0 Libertarian primary EditCandidates Edit Declared Edit Lon Cecil retired engineer and nominee for NC 12 in 2010 26 Withdrawn Edit Ken Fortenberry newspaper publisher author journalist and Republican candidate for North Carolina s 10th congressional district in 2012 27 28 Declined Edit Sean Haugh pizza delivery man and nominee for the U S Senate in 2002 and 2014 running for U S Senate 29 30 Write in candidates EditDeclared Edit Daniel Orr navy veteran 31 General election EditDebates Edit Complete video of debate October 11 2016 C SPAN Complete video of debate October 18 2016 C SPANPredictions Edit Source Ranking As ofThe Cook Political Report 32 Tossup August 12 2016Daily Kos 33 Tossup November 8 2016Rothenberg Political Report 34 Tilt D flip November 3 2016Sabato s Crystal Ball 35 Lean D flip November 7 2016Real Clear Politics 36 Tossup November 1 2016Governing 37 Tossup October 27 2016Polling Edit Aggregate pollsSource of pollaggregation Datesadministered Datesupdated PatMcCrory R RoyCooper D Other Undecided a MarginReal Clear Politics October 23 November 6 2016 November 6 2016 46 2 48 4 5 4 Cooper 2 2 Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror PatMcCrory R RoyCooper D LonCecil L Other UndecidedSurveyMonkey November 1 7 2016 3 126 4 6 43 54 3 New York Times Upshot Siena College November 4 6 2016 800 3 5 46 47 7 Quinnipiac University Archived November 7 2016 at the Wayback Machine November 3 6 2016 870 3 3 47 50 1 3 SurveyMonkey October 31 November 6 2016 2 865 4 6 43 54 3 SurveyMonkey October 28 November 3 2016 2 292 4 6 44 53 3 SurveyMonkey October 27 November 2 2016 1 886 4 6 45 53 2 Quinnipiac University October 27 November 1 2016 602 4 0 47 49 1 3 SurveyMonkey October 26 November 1 2016 1 617 4 6 45 52 3 SurveyUSA October 28 31 2016 659 3 9 47 48 2 4 SurveyMonkey October 25 31 2016 1 574 4 6 46 52 2 CBS News YouGov October 26 28 2016 992 4 1 44 46 1 9 Elon University Poll October 23 27 2016 710 3 7 44 44 1 3 8 NBC WSJ Marist October 25 26 2016 780 LV 3 5 45 51 2 2 1 018 RV 3 1 45 50 3 3 Quinnipiac University October 20 26 2016 702 3 7 47 49 3 New York Times Upshot Siena College October 20 23 2016 792 3 5 45 51 4 Monmouth University October 20 23 2016 402 4 9 48 47 2 3 Public Policy Polling October 21 22 2016 875 3 3 44 46 3 8 The Times Picayune Lucid October 17 18 2016 924 3 0 43 50 7 SurveyUSA October 14 18 2016 651 3 9 45 47 3 5 Civitas Institute R October 14 17 2016 600 4 0 46 42 10 Washington Post SurveyMonkey October 8 16 2016 1 191 0 5 42 55 2 CNN ORC October 10 15 2016 788 LV 3 5 48 49 2 929 RV 3 0 47 49 2 NBC WSJ Marist October 10 12 2016 743 LV 3 6 48 49 1 3 1 025 RV 3 1 47 48 1 4 High Point University October 1 6 2016 479 4 5 42 49 3 5 SurveyUSA September 29 October 3 2016 656 3 9 44 48 2 6 Bloomberg Selzer September 29 October 3 2016 805 3 5 44 50 6 Quinnipiac University September 27 October 2 2016 507 4 4 46 48 6 Elon University Poll September 27 30 2016 660 3 8 44 48 3 5 Public Policy Polling September 27 28 2016 861 3 3 42 45 4 9 44 49 7 Meredith College September 18 22 2016 487 4 4 41 39 1 6 14 High Point University September 17 22 2016 404 4 9 41 50 3 5 FOX News September 18 20 2016 734 LV 3 5 46 43 3 1 7 800 RV 45 42 3 1 9 Public Policy Polling September 18 20 2016 1 024 3 1 41 46 2 11 43 50 8 New York Times Upshot Siena College September 16 19 2016 782 3 6 42 50 7 Elon University Poll September 12 16 2016 644 3 9 49 46 2 3 Civitas Institute R September 11 12 2016 600 4 0 45 43 1 9 Quinnipiac University August 29 September 7 2016 751 3 6 44 51 5 Monmouth University August 20 23 2016 401 4 9 43 52 3 3 CNN ORC August 18 23 2016 803 LV 3 5 46 52 2 912 RVNBC WSJ Marist August 4 10 2016 921 3 2 44 51 5 Public Policy Polling August 5 7 2016 830 3 4 42 43 4 11 NBC WSJ Marist July 5 11 2016 907 3 3 45 49 1 5 Civitas Institute R June 21 23 2016 600 4 0 45 40 3 10 Public Policy Polling June 20 21 2016 947 3 2 41 41 6 13 Civitas Institute R May 21 23 2016 600 4 0 45 40 3 11 Public Policy Polling May 20 22 2016 928 3 2 41 41 5 13 RABA Research April 27 28 2016 688 3 7 36 41 6 17 Civitas Institute R April 23 25 2016 600 4 0 39 48 5 8 Public Policy Polling April 22 24 2016 960 3 2 42 43 4 11 Elon University Poll April 10 15 2016 621 3 9 42 48 6 5 SurveyUSA April 8 11 2016 701 3 8 43 47 2 8 Public Policy Polling March 18 20 2016 843 3 4 42 40 6 12 High Point University March 9 10 2016 1 576 2 5 47 45 8 Elon University Poll February 15 19 2016 1 530 2 5 40 42 3 15 Public Policy Polling February 14 16 2016 1 291 2 7 43 41 16 SurveyUSA February 14 16 2016 1 250 2 8 45 42 12 Public Policy Polling January 18 19 2016 948 3 2 40 43 17 Public Policy Polling December 5 7 2015 1 214 2 8 44 42 14 Elon University Poll October 29 November 2 2015 1 040 3 0 40 45 3 13 Public Policy Polling October 23 25 2015 893 3 3 43 44 13 Public Policy Polling September 24 27 2015 1 268 2 8 44 41 15 Elon University Poll September 17 21 2015 1 258 3 0 43 42 3 11 Public Policy Polling August 12 16 2015 957 3 2 39 42 18 Civitas Institute R August 10 12 2015 400 4 0 32 34 33 Public Policy Polling July 2 6 2015 529 4 3 41 43 16 Civitas Institute R June 23 25 2015 600 4 0 43 38 17 Public Policy Polling May 28 31 2015 561 4 1 41 44 15 Elon University Poll April 20 24 2015 677 3 8 45 43 4 8 Public Policy Polling April 2 5 2015 751 3 6 44 41 15 Public Policy Polling February 24 26 2015 849 3 4 43 41 16 Diversified Research February 2 3 2015 800 3 5 44 42 14 Public Policy Polling January 29 31 2015 845 3 4 44 39 17 Meeting Street Research January 21 22 2015 500 4 4 47 44 9 Public Policy Polling December 4 7 2014 823 3 4 46 39 15 Gravis Marketing October 29 30 2014 1 006 3 0 47 45 8 Gravis Marketing October 16 18 2014 1 022 3 0 49 41 9 Gravis Marketing September 22 23 2014 860 3 0 45 42 12 Public Policy Polling September 11 14 2014 1 266 2 8 44 41 15 Public Policy Polling August 14 17 2014 856 3 4 44 43 14 Gravis Marketing July 22 27 2014 1 380 3 0 44 46 10 Public Policy Polling June 12 15 2014 1 076 3 0 44 42 14 Public Policy Polling May 9 11 2014 877 3 3 43 42 15 Public Policy Polling April 3 6 2014 740 3 6 43 43 15 Public Policy Polling February 6 9 2014 708 3 7 43 41 15 Public Policy Polling September 6 9 2013 600 4 0 42 48 11 Hypothetical pollingwith Pat McCroryPoll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror PatMcCrory R KennethSpaulding D Other UndecidedPublic Policy Polling February 14 16 2016 1 291 2 7 44 32 24 SurveyUSA February 14 16 2016 1 250 2 8 48 38 15 Public Policy Polling January 18 19 2016 948 3 2 43 34 22 Public Policy Polling December 5 7 2015 1 214 2 8 47 32 21 Public Policy Polling October 23 25 2015 893 3 3 46 31 23 Public Policy Polling September 24 27 2015 1 268 2 8 46 34 21 Public Policy Polling August 12 16 2015 957 3 2 40 35 25 Public Policy Polling July 2 6 2015 529 4 3 43 33 24 Public Policy Polling May 28 31 2015 561 4 1 43 32 25 Public Policy Polling April 2 5 2015 751 3 6 46 33 21 Public Policy Polling February 24 26 2015 849 3 4 44 35 21 Public Policy Polling January 29 31 2015 845 3 4 47 36 17 Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror PatMcCrory R JanetCowell D UndecidedPublic Policy Polling December 4 7 2014 823 3 4 47 36 16 Public Policy Polling September 6 9 2013 600 4 43 47 10 Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror PatMcCrory R AnthonyFoxx D UndecidedPublic Policy Polling December 4 7 2014 823 3 4 48 34 18 Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror PatMcCrory R KayHagan D UndecidedMeeting Street Research January 21 22 2015 500 4 38 50 42 8 Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror PatMcCrory R CharlesMeeker D UndecidedPublic Policy Polling April 3 6 2014 740 3 6 45 38 17 Public Policy Polling September 6 9 2013 600 4 42 45 13 Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror PatMcCrory R JoshStein D UndecidedPublic Policy Polling September 6 9 2013 600 4 42 44 14 with Phil BergerPoll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror PhilBerger R RoyCooper D UndecidedPublic Policy Polling December 4 7 2014 823 3 4 35 41 24 Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror PhilBerger R JanetCowell D UndecidedPublic Policy Polling December 4 7 2014 823 3 4 37 38 25 Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror PhilBerger R AnthonyFoxx D UndecidedPublic Policy Polling December 4 7 2014 823 3 4 39 36 25 with Dan ForestPoll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror DanForest R RoyCooper D UndecidedPublic Policy Polling August 12 16 2015 957 3 2 33 42 25 Preliminary results and legal battle Edit North Carolina s gubernatorial election 2016 38 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Roy Cooper 2 309 162 49 02 5 79 Republican Pat McCrory incumbent 2 298 881 48 80 5 82 Libertarian Lon Cecil 102 978 2 19 0 06 Margin of victory 10 281 0 22 7 92 Turnout 4 711 021 68 98 1 68 Democratic gain from RepublicanPolls closed at 7 30 pm on election day On election night as votes were tallied Cooper held an early lead but was overtaken by McCrory around 9 30 pm and McCrory held the lead for most of the evening Shortly before midnight McCrory held a 60 000 vote lead until a block of 90 000 votes from Durham County was added to the total putting Cooper back in the lead by fewer than 5 000 votes out of 4 500 000 cast 5 Both candidates addressed supporters around 12 30 am Cooper declared victory while McCrory vowed the race was not over and that every vote needed to be counted 5 Under North Carolina state law absentee ballots postmarked on or before election day must be counted and military and overseas ballots accepted through November 17 must also be counted 39 Additionally election administrators must decide the eligibility of more than 60 000 provisional ballots and the validity of thousands of challenged votes 39 This process plus a protracted legal challenge from the McCrory campaign was likely to leave the election result not formally decided for some time after election day 39 McCrory s campaign said that it had grave concerns over potential irregularities in Durham County 5 Republican Party of North Carolina Chairman Robin Hayes called Cooper s declaration of victory rude and grossly premature 7 On November 10 2016 both campaigns announced they had retained attorneys in anticipation of a protracted legal battle Cooper hired lawyers from Washington based firm Perkins Coie including Marc Elias 40 while McCrory hired lawyers from Virginia based firm Holtzman Vogel Josefiak 7 Once all ballots are counted North Carolina election law allows either candidate to request a recount if the margin is fewer than 10 000 votes 7 On November 12 the general counsel of the Durham County Republican Party filed a formal protest with the Durham County Board of Elections alleging malfeasance in the tallying of votes in Durham County and calling for a recount 41 McCrory s campaign said that the 90 000 votes added to the total late on election night appeared to have come from corrupted memory cards A campaign spokesman said What transpired in Durham County is extremely troubling and no citizen can have confidence in the results at this point in time 41 On November 14 WRAL reported that there was speculation among political operatives about whether the race could possibly be contested and handed to the North Carolina General Assembly to determine the winner as was done in 2005 when the General Assembly made June Atkinson the winner of a disputed election for the office of North Carolina Superintendent of Public Instruction 42 North Carolina House Speaker Tim Moore said getting the General Assembly involved would be an absolute last resort 43 Also on November 14 WRAL reported that the State Bureau of Investigation was investigating whether crimes were committed in the mishandling of 1 000 ballots in the March 2016 primaries in Durham County the likely epicenter of the battle over the gubernatorial race 44 The Durham County electoral board chairman said there was no connection between the investigation and the gubernatorial race 44 On November 15 Bladen County Soil and Water Conservation District Supervisor McCrae Dowless a Republican and the incumbent for reelection filed a protest with that county s board of elections over several hundred absentee ballots cast for Cooper and other Democrats claiming that they were fraudulent on the basis of similarity of the handwriting with which they were filled out In his initial filing Dowless claimed corroboration by a handwriting expert The complainant had initially expressed concerns about voter fraud related to his own reelection campaign and before election day 45 46 47 The McCrory campaign alleged that the ballots were filled out by paid employees of the Bladen County Improvement Association PAC a political action committee that received funding from the North Carolina Democratic Party 45 The complaint alleged that one person served as a witness for at least 67 mail in absentee ballots and the same person appeared to have filled out the selections on 71 ballots 48 It said there were at least 250 questionable ballots connected to five people paid by the Bladen County Improvement Association PAC That organization has responded that the people involved were volunteers with their get out the vote effort and that the only payments made to them were small stipends for expenses incurred as part of that activity such as food and gas costs 49 The McCrory campaign stated A massive voting fraud scheme has been uncovered in Bladen County 49 In response the Cooper campaign stated Governor McCrory has set a new standard for desperation in his attempts to undermine the results of an election he lost 50 On November 16 the McCrory campaign announced it had filed election protests alleging fraud in 11 more counties 6 51 On November 17 the McCrory campaign announced the number of counties in which it had filed protests alleging voter fraud had grown to 50 counties 50 52 which the Associated Press reported were without offering detailed proof 53 Every county election board in the state has three members two Republican appointees and one Democrat 40 54 Durham County has been seen as the most pivotal county as it has the most votes at stake 40 On November 16 the Durham County Board of Elections voted 2 1 to hold an evidentiary hearing on election protest about the ballots in Durham County 55 At the hearing on November 18 the board unanimously dismissed the protest with the board s Republican chairman William Brian Jr saying that all the evidence shows that the count is correct 53 By November 18 Cooper s unofficial advantage over McCrory had grown to about 6 600 votes out of almost 4 7 million cast 53 54 On November 20 the state Board of Elections held an emergency meeting They declined a McCrory campaign petition for the state board to take jurisdiction over all 50 county election protests except for the one in Bladen County which they took over 56 They decided to convene another meeting on November 22 to issue guidance to county boards on how to handle the protests 57 On November 22 the McCrory campaign formally requested a statewide recount 8 Also on November 22 the Civitas Institute filed a federal lawsuit seeking an injunction to delay the State Board of Elections count of ballots of unverified same day registrants alleging that there is not enough time to verify the eligibility of voters who registered to vote on election day 58 Civitas said that neither the McCrory campaign nor the state Republican Party were involved in the lawsuit 59 Civitas cited a 2012 review conducted by the state Board of Elections that found 2 44 of voters who used same day registration in 2012 failed the verification process but the process was not completely finished when the ballots were counted 59 A court hearing is scheduled for December 8 60 On November 26 the Durham County Republican Party s general counsel asked the state Board of Elections to hold an expedited hearing on his appeal of the Durham County Board of Elections refusal to conduct a recount of that county s votes 61 The campaign stated they would withdraw their request for a statewide recount if a manual recount of Durham County votes produced the same results as were reported on election day 62 On November 30 the State Board of Elections ordered a recount of the Durham County votes 9 The recount was to be completed by 7 p m on December 5 However by that morning early results showed no change in the tally McCrory announced on his campaign s YouTube channel that he was conceding the race to Cooper saying that it was now clear that the majority of our citizens had spoken 10 Official results Edit North Carolina s gubernatorial election 2016 63 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Roy Cooper 2 309 157 49 02 5 79 Republican Pat McCrory incumbent 2 298 880 48 80 5 82 Libertarian Lon Cecil 102 977 2 19 0 06 Total votes 4 711 014 100 00 N ADemocratic gain from RepublicanAftermath EditFollowing the election the General Assembly controlled by Republicans passed legislation that would limit the incoming governor s powers 64 Democrats have referred to the move as a power grab and Republicans have countered that Democrats have made similar moves when they controlled the legislature 65 Notes Edit Calculated by taking the difference of 100 and all other candidates combined References Edit WRAL North Carolina primaries officially on March 15 with signing Archived from the original on October 2 2015 Retrieved October 1 2015 a b Gov Pat McCrory launches 2016 campaign The News amp Observer December 2 2014 Retrieved December 5 2014 Top 10 governors races of 2016 Politico Retrieved November 22 2016 In North Carolina a Governor s Race Is Too Close to Call The New York Times November 9 2016 Retrieved November 22 2016 a b c d news jonah kaplan abc11 anchors wtvd anchors abc11 reporters wtvd reporters wtvd talent veteran raleigh news durham news fayetteville November 8 2016 Cooper claiming victory in Governor s race Retrieved November 22 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a last has generic name help a b McCrory team Election protests filed in 12 counties Retrieved November 22 2016 a b c d e The North Carolina governor s race still isn t over And it s about to get even uglier The Washington Post Retrieved November 22 2016 a b N C governor seeks recount amid voter fraud complaints won t concede a b State Board Orders Recount of 94 000 Durham County Votes Archived from the original on December 1 2016 Retrieved December 1 2016 a b Campbell Colin December 6 2016 Gov Pat McCrory concedes defeat to Roy Cooper as Durham recount wraps up The News amp Observer Campbell Colin December 9 2015 Gov Pat McCroy gets a challenger in Republican primary The News amp Observer Retrieved December 10 2015 McCrory Election wins no mandate for GOP WRAL com November 5 2014 Retrieved November 7 2014 Candidate Listing PDF North Carolina State Board of Elections Retrieved December 21 2015 permanent dead link Campbell Colin October 7 2015 Former GOP Senate candidate Greg Brannon to make big announcement Thursday The News amp Observer Retrieved October 8 2015 Brannon Greg December 21 2015 WATCH as I officially file as a Republican candidate for the United States Senate Facebook Retrieved December 21 2015 Leslie Laura February 18 2015 Coleman Forest to run again for lieutenant governor WRAL TV Retrieved February 18 2015 NC SBE Election Contest Details Retrieved November 22 2016 Attorney General Announces Candidacy For Governor Charlotte Observer November 6 2014 Archived from the original on November 8 2014 Retrieved November 7 2014 a b c d e f Reid Wilson September 6 2013 Three years out Democrats eye McCrory s seat The Washington Post Retrieved September 9 2013 Protzman drops out of governor s race after 7 months The News amp Observer October 17 2013 Retrieved November 28 2013 a b c Knopf Taylor September 21 2015 State Sen Josh Stein makes formal announcement for attorney general The News amp Observer Retrieved October 13 2015 Matt Vasilogambros April 29 2013 What You Need to Know About Obama Transportation Pick Anthony Foxx National Journal Archived from the original on September 26 2013 Retrieved September 9 2013 Campbell Colin July 8 2015 Former Raleigh Mayor Charles Meeker to run for labor commissioner The News amp Observer Retrieved August 11 2015 Brinson Will July 23 2015 Ex Skins QB Heath Shuler says he won t run for NC Governor CBS Sports Retrieved August 11 2015 NC SBE Election Contest Details Retrieved November 22 2016 Libertarians look to keep NC ballot status with candidate slate Retrieved November 22 2016 Lynn Bonner December 31 2014 Libertarian candidate for NC governor announces News amp Observer Retrieved January 5 2015 Frankel Paul August 8 2015 Fortenberry withdraws from NC governor s race Independent Political Report Retrieved August 11 2015 Craig Jarvis January 5 2015 Sean Haugh considers another Libertarian bid News amp Observer Retrieved January 5 2015 Ziggler Jed October 7 2015 Sean Haugh I Intend to Run for U S Senate as a Libertarian in North Carolina in 2016 Independent Political Report Retrieved October 13 2015 Richmond County Daily Journal October 28 2015 2016 Governor Race ratings The Cook Political Report Retrieved October 15 2018 Elections 2015 16 Daily Kos Retrieved October 15 2018 permanent dead link Gubernatorial Ratings The Rothenberg Political Report Retrieved October 15 2018 Our Final 2016 picks Sabato s Crystal Ball Archived from the original on October 15 2018 Retrieved October 15 2018 2016 Election Maps 2016 Governor Races Real Clear Politics Retrieved October 15 2018 2016 Governors Races Ratings amp News Governing Magazine Retrieved October 28 2016 11 08 2016 UNOFFICIAL GENERAL ELECTION RESULTS STATEWIDE North Carolina Board of Elections a b c Nigel Duara North Carolina governor s race still undecided with thousands of votes to be finalized Los Angeles Times November 18 2016 a b c Virginia Bridges Colin Campbell amp Craig Jarvis Appeal planned after Durham County dismisses demand for hand recount News amp Observer November 17 2016 a b Provisional ballot count offers few hints in governor race Retrieved November 22 2016 WRAL November 14 2016 Could NC lawmakers choose the next governor WRAL com Retrieved November 22 2016 Could NC legislators decide governor race Last resort House speaker says Retrieved November 22 2016 a b WRAL November 14 2016 SBI investigating mishandled primary ballots in Durham WRAL com Archived from the original on November 19 2016 Retrieved November 22 2016 a b WECT Staff Protests filed in Bladen and 11 other counties over alleged fraudulent absentee ballots Archived from the original on November 16 2016 Retrieved November 22 2016 Bladen County votes scrutinized Retrieved November 22 2016 The Latest State board investigates Bladen absentee ballots Retrieved November 22 2016 Bladen Protest PDF Retrieved November 22 2016 a b Weber Joseph November 16 2016 Voter fraud complaints emerge in tight NC gov race Fox News Retrieved November 22 2016 a b Gov McCrory protests votes in 50 counties WGHP November 17 2016 TEGNA McCrory Campaign Now Protesting Votes In 50 Counties Retrieved November 22 2016 Jim Bradley Gov Pat McCrory protesting vote counts in 50 counties Archived November 18 2016 at the Wayback Machine WSOC November 18 2016 a b c Gary D Robinson Cooper s ballot count grows over McCrory as challenges continue Associated Press November 178 2016 a b Bill Chappell N C Challenger to Gov McCrory Remains In Lead As Final Ballots Counted NPR November 19 2016 Durham County board to hold hearing on election protest News amp Observer November 16 2016 WRAL November 20 2016 N Carolina election board takes Bladen protest not others WRAL com Archived from the original on November 22 2016 Retrieved November 22 2016 NC Board of Elections votes to reconvene Tuesday November 20 2016 Retrieved November 22 2016 Civitas Institute lawsuit wants same day vote count delayed a b Civitas sues to stop final NC vote count cites concerns about same day registration In North Carolina No End in Sight to Governor s Race NC elections board could consider key ballot appeal this week McCrory will withdraw recount demand if Durham votes recounted North Carolina Official General Election Results North Carolina State Board of Elections November 8 2016 Retrieved January 5 2017 North Carolina Governor Signs Bill Limiting His Successor s Power The Wall Street Journal December 16 2016 North Carolina Governor Signs Law Limiting Successor s Power The New York Times December 16 2016 External links EditPat McCrory R for Governor Roy Cooper D for Governor Daniel Orr L for Governor Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2016 North Carolina gubernatorial election amp oldid 1134126800, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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