The North Carolina State Board of Elections certified the results of the November general election on Tuesday, awarding the state's 15 electoral votes to President Donald Trump.
The certification does not formalize the results in the statewide race for state Supreme Court chief justice between Republican Paul Newby and Democrat Cheri Beasley. Out of nearly 5.4 million cast, Newby leads by about 400 votes, as of Tuesday. Both candidates have pending protests in the race that went to a recount.
Democratic President-elect Joe Biden fell short of Trump in the state by 1.3 percentage points, a narrower defeat than the 1.7-point loss Democratic senate candidate Cal Cunningham had to Republican Sen. Thom Tillis. Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper defeated GOP challenger Dan Forest by 4.5 percentage points.
The five-member board tasked with overseeing elections voted 4-1 to certify the results. Former Republican state Sen. Tommy Tucker said he opposed certification because of a legal settlement approved by the state board and appeals courts that, among other things, extended the deadline for counties to receive mail-in ballots postmarked by Election Day.
Tucker, who was not on the board at the time the settlement was reached, called the agreement "unconstitutional," expressed concerns about the deliberative process that went into it, and said the board should have gone through the General Assembly if it wanted to make changes to election laws.
Despite multiple lawsuits by GOP leaders in state and federal court over the extended deadline, both the U.S. Supreme Court and North Carolina's highest court declined to intervene before the election.
Jeff Carmon, a Democratic member of the board, called Tucker's comments "dishonorable" and stressed the need to make it easier for people to vote amid the coronavirus pandemic. Damon Circosta, chairman of the state board, said Tucker's decision not to certify the results was disappointing.
"Nothing in this conversation or that happened today should detract from the fact that this election was secure," Circosta said. "This election was safe. This election was conducted in the midst of a pandemic, and yet, we achieved record turnout. Anything other than gratitude for the people working on this, this does not seem to sit well with me."
Three Democrats and one Republican approved the certification.
The 2020 election in North Carolina saw historic participation, which was partially fueled by a sharp rise in mail-in voting. More than 1 million voters cast their absentee ballots by mail, up from 191,601 cast in 2016.
Over 5.5 million of the more than 7.3 million registered voters cast ballots in this year's election. The 75 percent voter turnout surpassed the 69 percent participation seen in November 2016.
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