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Update on 'local' election legislation

Rep. Justin Burr's attempt to change the make up of the Stanly County Board of Elections did not survive the legislative session.

Burr, an Albemarle Republican, stripped a statewide elections bill that had passed the Senate and replaced it with a local bill that directs how appointments would be made for Stanly County boards. It would have required two of the three members of the county elections board be chosen based on which party had the highest percentage of registered voters in the county. Current law requires they be chosen based upon the political party that controls the governor's office.

The legislation would have made Stanly County's board majority Republican while a Democratic governor runs state government.

But after Bob Hall, executive director of Democracy North Carolina, cried foul, saying the bill opens a "Pandora's Box" for other county boards to follow suit, Burr's bill got rejected by the Senate.

The compromise legislation that emerged Saturday morning jettisoned any language pertaining to the Stanly County election board. It has now passed both chambers, and is now law. Since it is a local bill, it is not subject to a governor's veto.

 

Big change to elections boards in a 'local' bill?

The state House is scheduled to take up a bill today that could change the political representation of county election boards across the state.
Rep. Justin Burr, an Albemarle Republican, stripped a statewide elections bill that had passed the Senate and replaced it with a local bill that directs how appointments would be made for Stanly County boards. The bill cleared the House elections committee Tuesday.
The bill would require two of the three members of the county elections board be chosen based on which party had the highest percentage of registered voters in the county. Current law requires they be chosen based upon the political party that controls the governor's office.
As a result Stanly County's board would be majority Republican while a Democratic governor runs state government.
Bob Hall, executive director of Democracy North Carolina, said if the bill becomes law, other counties are likely to follow suit, causing a lack of consistency on election issues.
"It's just opening Pandora's Box," Hall said. "If he succeeds the other counties will be doing it as well."
Since it is a local bill, it would not be subject to a governor's veto, Hall said. If it gets approval in the House, it will then only need concurrence in the Senate.
We're seeking comment from Burr.

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