Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Democrat rescinds concession in N.C.

GOP open to new election for House seat if fraud found to have swayed results

- GARY D. ROBERTSON AND JONATHAN DREW Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Lisa Mascaro of The Associated Press.

RALEIGH, N.C. — The Democrat trailing in a North Carolina congressio­nal race withdrew his concession Thursday as state election officials investigat­ed allegation­s of absentee ballot fraud.

Dan McCready’s reversal came as a top leader at the state’s Republican Party said it would support a new election in the unresolved 9th Congressio­nal District race if an investigat­ion shows that wrongdoing swayed its outcome.

Unofficial totals have Republican Mark Harris leading McCready by 905 votes. But the state elections board refused to certify the results last week because of allegation­s of “irregulari­ties and concerted fraudulent activities” involving mail-in ballots in the district.

The board is meeting later this month to hear evidence, but it’s unclear whether the race will be settled then. The board could order a new election.

McCready, an Iraq War veteran, initially conceded the day after the election, when Harris’ lead was less than 1,900 votes. He changed his mind with the arrival of the allegation­s.

“I didn’t serve overseas in the Marine Corps just to come back and watch politician­s and career criminals attack our democracy,” McCready said. “That’s why today I withdraw my concession to Mark Harris, who’s remained completely silent.”

At issue is who can handle completed ballots. North Carolina law allows only a family member or legal guardian to drop off absentee ballots for a voter.

In affidavits offered by the state Democratic Party, some Bladen County voters have described that people arrived at their homes to collect their absentee ballots, whether or not they had been fully completed or sealed in an envelope to keep them from being altered.

A state election board spokesman confirmed Thursday that subpoenas seeking documents had been sent to the Harris campaign, the firm serving as Harris’ chief strategist and the campaign committee of the sitting Bladen sheriff. The board released documents showing that McCrae Dowless, a contractor hired by the firm, seems to have collected the most absentee ballot forms in Bladen County this fall.

Earlier Thursday, state GOP Executive Director Dallas Woodhouse texted a statement to The Associated Press saying that the GOP would back a new election if the state’s elections board were to show that absentee ballot issues changed the outcome of the 9th Congressio­nal District race.

“If they can show a substantia­l likelihood it could have changed the race then we fully would support a new election,” he said.

However, he said that if the investigat­ion shows that the outcome would not have been changed, Republican candidate Harris should be certified the winner.

Entertaini­ng the idea of a new election represents a significan­t change from last Thursday, when state GOP Chairman Robin Hayes issued a statement saying: “Democrats are throwing everything, including the kitchen sink, at the wall to try and steal an election.” On Sunday, Hayes said there weren’t enough questioned ballots to change the race’s outcome, and the next day he accused a Democratic member of the state board of “score-settling.”

As the situation developed, U.S. House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi said the House “retains the right to decide who is seated” and could take the “extraordin­ary step” of calling for a new election if the winner isn’t clear.

Pelosi, who’s nominated to become House speaker when Democrats take control in January, said Thursday that “any member-elect can object to the seating and the swearing-in of another member elect.” She also noted the investigat­ive power of the House to determine race winners.

It’s “bigger than that one seat,” she said, pointing to the overall “integrity of elections.”

In North Carolina, several state Senate Republican­s whose districts overlap the 9th called for further scrutiny of voting irregulari­ties going back to 2010 and urged Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper to create a bipartisan task force — separate from the state elections board — to investigat­e irregulari­ties beyond this year’s election.

They point to unusual outcomes in the mail-in ballot totals in previous elections that appeared to benefit Democrats or Republican­s, depending on the race and the year. They said neither election boards appointed by governors from both parties, nor prosecutor­s, have adequately addressed recurring issues in Bladen.

“What we cannot have going forward from this point is an investigat­ive and enforcemen­t effort or process that has a partisan taint that could dramatical­ly worsen the situation,” said Sen. Dan Bishop, a Charlotte Republican.

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