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As of Friday, more than 4 million, or 51%, of North Carolina's registered voters had already cast ballots by mail or in-person during the early voting period, which ends Saturday, Nov. 2 at 3 p.m.
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Republicans sued to remove approximately 225,000 voters from North Carolina's rolls and to block some overseas voters from casting ballots.
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Tens of thousands of voters part of the civically-engaged Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina stand to make a difference in the election.
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Cary is among the local governments asking voters to approve bonds this November. The town wants $590 million for parks and recreation, and affordable housing.
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In North Carolina, litigation and elections tend to go hand in hand.
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The North Carolina State Board of Elections has unanimously passed an emergency resolution to make several voting changes in western North Carolina after Hurricane Helene devastated the region.
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North Carolina's first absentee ballots for the November election will now be distributed starting late next week.
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Ordered by the North Carolina Supreme Court to reprint absentee ballots, the state elections board said it's unsure when it can start sending ballots to voters who have requested them.
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The highest courts in two states have ruled differently on efforts by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to be removed from their presidential ballots. A divided North Carolina Supreme Court affirmed late Monday that he should be omitted from that state's ballots.
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A last-minute order from the North Carolina Court of Appeals blocked state elections officials from proceeding with the statutory start of mailing out absentee ballots.