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Your guide to 2024 Super Tuesday in North Carolina

Voting sign in English and Spanish.
Wikimedia Commons

The 2024 election season is in full swing, and it’s time for North Carolina voters to participate in Super Tuesday. WFAE has collected some of the key things voters need to know for this year’s primaries.

Early in-person voting ended on Saturday, March 2. Polls across the state will open Tuesday, March 5 at 6:30 a.m. and close at 7:30 p.m. Any voter in line at their polling place by 7:30 p.m. will be able to vote.

Find your polling place here.

Voters affiliated with a political party can only vote in that party’s primary. Unaffiliated voters can choose to vote in the Democratic, Republican or Libertarian primaries.

Photo identification is required. You can learn more about which IDs are acceptable here. They include driver’s licenses, U.S. passports and some student IDs. If you don’t have a photo ID when you go to vote, you can still cast a provisional ballot and either: 1) fill out an ID Exception Form or 2) return to your county election board with your photo ID before canvassing starts on Friday. March 15.

Early voting is underway for the March 5 primary — the biggest election North Carolina has held under the state’s photo ID law. To get an idea of the impact of photo ID, Inside Politics is looking at the November 2023 election, which was mostly city and town contests across the state. A photo ID was also required for voters in that election, sort of a dry run for the much bigger contests this year.

Key Races in North Carolina:

  • The Republican presidential primary is between former President Donald Trump and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley.
  • There are three candidates in the Republican primary for North Carolina governor with Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson as the frontrunner. There are five candidates on the Democratic side, with Attorney General Josh Stein favored.
  • The 8th Congressional District is wide open after Republican Dan Bishop decided to run for attorney general. The district begins in suburban Mecklenburg County and stretches east to Robeson County. Six Republican candidates are running including Mecklenburg State Representative John Bradford and Mark Harris — who in 2019 declined to run again after the state board of elections ordered a special election. It’s a heavily Republican district, so the winner of the primary will be favored in November.
  • The primary for Mecklenburg County Commissioner At-Large race has three incumbents running including Pat Cotham, Arthur Griffin and Leigh Altman.

For the latest election results, tune in to WFAE starting at 7 p.m. for special coverage that will include news from around the state.

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Kenny is a Maryland native who began his career in media as a sportswriter at Tuskegee University, covering SIAC sports working for the athletic department and as a sports correspondent for the Tuskegee Campus Digest. Following his time at Tuskegee, he was accepted to the NASCAR Diversity Internship Program as a Marketing Intern for The NASCAR Foundation in Daytona Beach, Florida in 2017.