ReportWire

Tag: 1st district

  • New NC political map quickly challenged in court as racial discrimination

    [ad_1]

    Protesters chant “Berger’s maps are racist maps” ahead of a vote on a new congressional redistricting plan backed by former President Donald Trump, during a North Carolina House redistricting committee hearing on Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2025. Senate Republicans approved the map in a 26-20 party-line vote on Tuesday, following an initial vote the previous day marked by hours of heated debate and repeated interruptions from protesters in the gallery.

    Protesters chant “Berger’s maps are racist maps” ahead of a vote on a new congressional redistricting plan backed by former President Donald Trump, during a North Carolina House redistricting committee hearing on Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2025. Senate Republicans approved the map in a 26-20 party-line vote on Tuesday, following an initial vote the previous day marked by hours of heated debate and repeated interruptions from protesters in the gallery.

    tlong@newsobserver.com

    A group of voters is challenging North Carolina’s new Republican-drawn congressional map in federal court.

    Their complaint Thursday came in the form of a new legal filing in an existing lawsuit challenging a previous round of redistricting. It was just one day after lawmakers, heeding President Donald Trump’s call for more favorable maps ahead of the 2026 midterms, approved the new map in a party-line vote.

    Three judges hearing the existing lawsuit had ordered that by 5 p.m. Monday, both the plaintiffs and the defendants file briefs addressing the development of the new map on the pending litigation.

    In a statement by the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, Chairwoman Suzan DelBene said: “I made clear that the DCCC would fight against this illegal map in the courts, and that’s exactly what we’re continuing to do today with these new claims filed on behalf of Black voters.”

    The new map redraws the 1st Congressional District, which is located in northeastern North Carolina and encompasses the state’s historic “Black Belt.” For over 30 years, the 1st district has elected Black lawmakers to Congress, including current Democratic Rep. Don Davis.

    But the new map significantly undercuts the influence of Black voters by adding several majority-white, Republican-leaning counties along the coast into the district.

    Republican lawmakers frequently stated that they did not use racial data in the creation of the new map.

    The plaintiffs in the lawsuit are asking the courts to declare that the new map intentionally discriminates against minority voters, among other claims.

    The lawsuit is filed by eight residents of the 1st and 3rd congressional districts, whose boundaries were redrawn this week by lawmakers, and 13 others living in areas like Guilford, Mecklenburg and Gaston counties.

    Kyle Ingram

    The News & Observer

    Kyle Ingram is a politics reporter for the News & Observer. He reports on the legislature, voting rights and more in North Carolina politics. He is a graduate of the Hussman School of Journalism and Media at UNC-Chapel Hill. 

    [ad_2]

    Kyle Ingram,Danielle Battaglia

    Source link

  • Combat veteran wins GOP nomination in NC’s ‘only competitive’ congressional district

    Combat veteran wins GOP nomination in NC’s ‘only competitive’ congressional district

    [ad_1]

    Sandy Smith (left) and Laurie Buckhout (right) are vying for the Republican nomination to run against incumbent Don Davis in North Carolina’s First Congressional District.

    Sandy Smith (left) and Laurie Buckhout (right) are vying for the Republican nomination to run against incumbent Don Davis in North Carolina’s First Congressional District.

    Laurie Buckhout, a combat veteran running for office for the first time, won the Republican nomination in North Carolina’s 1st congressional District.

    Buckhout defeated Sandy Smith, who was twice the Republican nominee in the Eastern North Carolina district. She will move on to face incumbent Democrat Don Davis in November’s general election.

    The Associated Press called the election for Buckholt at 11:15 p.m. At that time, Buckholt was leading by a margin of 30,421 to 25,853 votes with 255 of 281 precincts reporting.

    Both candidates ran on policies in step with those supported by former President Donald Trump.

    Buckhout, a retired U.S. Army colonel, started a consulting firm after retiring from the service in 2010 but has since sold it. Buckhout, who lives in Edenton, ran on border security, anti-abortion and pro-gun policies.

    In a speech to supporters in Edenton Tuesday night, Buckholt criticized Davis, blasting his support for President Joe Biden, who she blamed for recent inflation. Buckholt described being on the campaign trail and talking with people who had to choose between buying gas to get to work or buying groceries.

    “Here in the 1st district of North Carolina, Joe Biden and the Biden agenda have one name and that’s Don Davis. Don Davis has enabled all of Biden’s failures and if you want more of the same failures, vote Don Davis,” Buckholt said.

    Democrats started their attacks on Buckholt Tuesday as well.

    “After spending a decade in Virginia after retiring from military service, she moved to North Carolina to run for office. Laurie is an anti-abortion extremist, insurrection apologist, and transplant opportunist only looking out for herself,” U.S. Rep Suzan DelBene, chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, said in a statement Tuesday.

    Smith, the more experienced candidate, was the Republican nominee for the seat in 2020 and 2022. Both times, she lost to a Democrat.

    Smith attended election denial events on Jan. 6, 2021 on the Washington Mall but previously told The News & Observer she did not enter the Capitol. Smith, who lives in Rocky Mount, has said her platform is anti-abortion, pro-gun, pro-military.

    Davis is serving his first term in the U.S. House following the retirement of longtime Democratic Congressman G.K. Butterfield.

    If Buckhout wins in the general election, she would become the first member of the GOP to represent the 1st congressional district since 1883.

    Largely rural, the 1st congressional district runs along the Virginia border from Currituck County in the east to Vance County in the west, looping in Nash and Wilson counties before also drawing in Kinston and Goldsboro.

    The district is widely expected to be the most competitive in the state after the N.C. General Assembly completed redistricting in October 2023.

    “It’s the only competitive district in the state,” Chris Cooper, a political science professor at Western Carolina University, previously told The News & Observer.

    The district’s voters have been somewhat fluid politically in recent elections, with 52% of those who voted casting ballots for Republican Ted Budd in the 2022 U.S. Senate race. That was a change from the 2020 U.S. Senate race, when voters narrowly went Democratic.

    The district could also carry national significance, if control of the U.S. House of Representatives remains tightly contested.

    A Buckholt victory could mean it will be more difficult for Davis to win re-election, Cook Political Report Executive Editor Amy Walters said during a Tuesday appearance on The New York Times’ The Run-Up podcast.

    “If we’re talking about the House as being a battle of inches, then this is one of those inches,” Walter said.

    Adam Wagner covers climate change and other environmental issues in North Carolina. His work is produced with financial support from the Hartfield Foundation and Green South Foundation, in partnership with Journalism Funding Partners, as part of an independent journalism fellowship program. Wagner’s previous work at The News & Observer included coverage of the COVID-19 vaccine rollout and North Carolina’s recovery from recent hurricanes. He previously worked at the Wilmington StarNews.

    [ad_2]

    Adam Wagner

    Source link