Steve Harrison
Political ReporterSteve Harrison is WFAE's politics and government reporter. Prior to joining WFAE, Steve worked at the Charlotte Observer, where he started on the business desk, then covered politics extensively as the Observer’s lead city government reporter. Steve also spent 10 years with the Miami Herald. His work has appeared in The Washington Post, the Sporting News and Sports Illustrated.
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The March 5 primary was the first statewide test of North Carolina's voter ID law. Of the 1.8 million people who voted, 473 had their ballots not counted because of photo ID. That’s one rejected ballot for every 3,800 voters.
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In the March 5 primary, 174 Republicans and 171 Democrats had their ballots not counted because they didn't have photo ID.
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The North Carolina Board of Elections released a breakdown Tuesday of the number of people whose ballots weren't counted because they didn't have photo ID.
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The fight over whether Republicans keep their supermajority in the General Assembly will come down to just a handful of legislative districts. There are 120 seats in the House. Almost all are preordained in terms of who will win.
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Charlotte Democratic Congressman Jeff Jackson apologized in a video this weekend for how he handled his vote to potentially ban the popular app TikTok, where Jackson has built a large following.
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Democrat Jeff Jackson and Republican Dan Bishop are running for North Carolina attorney general. They differed Wednesday on a vote to force Chinese company ByteDance to sell TikTok.
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A three-judge panel of two Republicans and one Democrat said the law was “the most stark and blatant removal of appointment power from the Governor” in the past six years.
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As the Republican Party stampedes ever further to the right, politicians who were once the vanguard of the conservative movement, like Dan Bishop, find themselves with plenty of company.
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Turnout in North Carolina’s Super Tuesday primary was down from 2020. Perhaps that’s due to no contested Democratic primary this year, as well as Donald Trump having essentially sewn up the Republican nomination in 2024. But Mecklenburg County stands out for its particularly lackluster showing for Democrats. Just under 19% of registered voters cast ballots here.
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Longtime pastor Mark Harris completed a political comeback Tuesday, five years after his earlier win was thrown out in a fraud-tainted race that ended up being one of the only congressional do-overs in U.S. history.