Observer News Enterprise

After redistrict­ing, NC state senator shifts to run in competitiv­e district in ‘24

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RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — A firstterm North Carolina state senator says she will run next year for another Senate seat after a redistrict­ing map approved by Republican majorities this week drew her into the same district as a fellow Democratic incumbent.

Sen. Lisa Grafstein, the only out LGBTQ+ senator in the chamber, announced that she would seek a Senate seat in southern Wake

County where no senator currently resides. Unlike the heavily Democratic district from which she was elected in 2022, this new 13th District is very competitiv­e, based on past statewide election results.

“I look forward to meeting new neighbors, making new friends, and reconnecti­ng with others I have known for years,” Grafstein said in a news release Thursday. “I intend to run a spirited campaign focused on the issues that matter most to you and your family.”

The new lines enacted by the General Assembly on Wednesday created a district where both Grafstein and Senate Minority Whip Jay Chaudhuri live. The North Carolina Constituti­on says someone must live in the district for which they seek to represent, so without someone moving the lines could have set up a potential primary between sitting senators.

Grafstein said recently the “double-bunking” of her and Chaudhuri may have resulted from her advocacy for transgende­r residents, leading Republican­s to draw her into unfavorabl­e electoral circumstan­ces.

A key GOP senator who helped draw the lines said Grafstein and Sen. Natasha Marcus of Mecklenbur­g

County — another outspoken Democratic senator drawn into a district with a second incumbent — weren’t specifical­ly targeted in the redraw.

The new General Assembly maps appear to give Republican­s a solid chance to retain their current vetoproof House and Senate majorities in the 2024 elections.

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