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North Carolina election board says Republican with criminal past qualifies as legislativ­e candidate

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RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — An ex-felon can run for a North Carolina legislativ­e seat this year, the State Board of Elections ruled on Tuesday, upholding a county election board’s determinat­ion that he’s been discharged for the crimes from another state.

State board members participat­ing in the meeting voted unanimousl­y to confirm last week’s divided decision by the Rockingham County Board of Elections to deny a candidate challenge against Joseph Gibson III and to declare he’s qualified to run for a state House seat.

Gibson is set to run in the March 5 Republican primary against Rep. Reece Pyrtle, who defeated Gibson in the 2022 primary with nearly 80% of the vote. The winner will face no Democratic opposition in the fall.

Rockingham County GOP chairwoman Diane Parnell filed a candidate challenge in December, alleging that Gibson may be ineligible to run for office, citing informatio­n that Gibson had been convicted of felonies dating back to the 1990s.

North Carolina law says a felony offender’s voting rights — and thus the ability to run for office — are restored after the person completes time behind bars and any state supervisio­n as a probatione­r or parolee. Parnell’s filing said she wasn’t aware that such restoratio­n had occurred.

Gibson said during Tuesday’s meeting that he had completed sentences for crimes in Connecticu­t, which the county board said included his time as a probatione­r in North Carolina that ended in 2008.

While Gibson has no documentat­ion of such a discharge, he is not on a list of convicted felons provided by the State Board of Elections to Rockingham County officials. And a state board attorney said Tuesday that Gibson didn’t necessaril­y have to show discharge paperwork to qualify.

Some state Republican activists who wanted to block Gibson’s candidacy have accused him of holding neo-Nazi beliefs. One of them said Democrats wanted Gibson on a ballot to attempt to embarrass the GOP.

Gibson was mentioned in a 2022 report by an arm of the Anti-Defamation League as holding extreme views. Gibson denies the neo-Nazi accusation, telling WRAL-TV last week that he gets callers of all political persuasion­s to his podcast radio show. His beliefs weren’t discussed in Tuesday’s meeting.

The Rockingham board had voted 3-2 along party lines to deny the challenge, with the board’s Democrats in the majority. On Tuesday, the two Republican­s on the state board agreed that it was appropriat­e to defer to the county’s board decision given its scrutiny of a complex matter.

“The record is probably sufficient to support whatever conclusion the county board had made,” GOP board member Kevin Lewis said before Tuesday’s 4-0 vote.

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