Observer News Enterprise

No reelection campaign for Democratic representa­tive after NC GOP redrew U.S. House map

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A second-term Democratic congresswo­man will not seek reelection to the U.S. House under the North Carolina General Assembly’s new redistrict­ing maps.

U.S. Rep. Kathy Manning announced Thursday that she will not file under lines that state election data suggests could net Republican­s at least three more seats. Manning’s district is now considered a GOP-leaning district. It’s one of four challenged earlier this week by Black and Latino voters in a federal lawsuit alleging the new map weakens minority voting power to strengthen “the state’s white majority.”

“Unfortunat­ely, the egregiousl­y gerrymande­red maps do not make this race competitiv­e,” Manning said in a statement. “I cannot in good conscience ask people to invest their time, resources and efforts in a campaign that is rigged against us.”

If the lawsuit successful­ly overturns the latest iteration, Manning said she will run. The candidate filing period ends Dec. 15 for a spot on the March 5 primary ballot.

Delanie Bomar, a spokespers­on for the National

Republican Congressio­nal Committee, celebrated the Thursday announceme­nt that she said gives House Republican­s another seat in their slim majority. Manning won re-election by nearly 8% in 2022. But Bomar said in a statement that North Carolina’s new 6th Congressio­nal District would have swung for Republican Donald Trump by 16% in the 2020 presidenti­al election.

Manning represents the north-central part of the state that covers Guilford, Rockingham and Caswell counties and part of Forsyth County. The new lines split voters from the city of Greensboro across the surroundin­g districts.

North Carolina voters sent seven Democrats and seven Republican­s to the nation’s capital under the previous boundaries. But the Republican majority on North Carolina’s highest court tossed a 2022 ruling against partisan gerrymande­ring. That decision paved the way for the new Republican majorities in the North Carolina General Assembly to pass maps along party lines that are poised to fortify the GOP’s growing grip on the ninth-largest U.S. state.

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