Texarkana Gazette

Colored pens, coin tosses used to settle tied election results

- By Martha Waggoner

RALEIGH, N.C.—In Manteo, N.C., population about 1,400, the vote for one town commission post was so close that it took nearly three weeks, two recounts, a drawing of straws and a coin toss to settle the election.

The town in coastal Dare County is among several in North Carolina where elections were decided by just a few votes or ended in a tie.

“This is proof that every vote is important,” said Dare County elections director Michele Barnes.

In places like Manteo, no one is challengin­g the election results, even though not everyone is happy with them or the method used to determine the winner.

But in others, the circumstan­ces surroundin­g close races have spurred legal challenges. That’s the case in Sharpsburg, which lies 140 miles west of Manteo in three counties: Nash, Edgecombe and Wilson. Mayoral candidate Robert L. Williams Jr. lost by three votes, 139-136.

Williams, represente­d by the Southern Coalition for Social Justice, alleges in a complaint that the Wilson County Board of Elections provided only 12 ballots in the Sharpsburg election precinct where 349 voters are registered. Just 71 ballots, or 20 percent, were cast in that precinct.

In all three counties, 276 of 1,213 registered voters cast a ballot, a turnout of less than 23 percent.

It took more than two hours for election officials to deliver more ballots, by which time voters had left and couldn’t return, the complaint says. The majority of those turned away are African-Americans, Williams said. The Wilson County Board of Elections will hold a hearing Dec. 14 on the complaint.

A study conducted by Democracy North Carolina of the November 2015 elections identified 69 cities where the mayor or a town council member won election by five or fewer votes. In 31 cities, elections were determined by one vote. Coin tosses broke ties for town council rates in Sparta, West Jefferson, Clarkton and Godwin, while the winner’s name was drawn from a box in Dover.

The candidates who tied in Garland put colored pens in box, and the elections board chair picked the winner—in this case, the purple pen.

That’s legal in North Carolina. State law says when a vote ends in a tie, county election boards “shall determine the winner by lot.”

Three communitie­s gave mayoral candidates one-vote victories: Spruce Pine, St. Pauls and Biscoe.

Other states have similar quirky election rules. In 2012, a candidate for a Walton, Ohio, city council race was decided by a coin toss after a tie vote when one candidate’s wife didn’t vote. He called tails—and lost.

And a 2002 race in Goldfield, Nev., was settled the Old West way—by a draw of the cards.

After the Nov. 7 Manteo election, incumbent Richie Burke led incumbent Martha Wickre by two votes—210 to 208—for the third of three seats on the town commission.

A Nov. 21 recount showed them tied at 210 each, and a second recount Monday confirmed it.

The candidates then drew straws to see who would call heads or tails. Wickre called heads and lost, making Burke the winner. Of Manteo’s 1,241 voters, 424—or 34 percent— voted, Barnes said.

“The biggest thing I have encountere­d is the community’s outcry over the coin toss,” Wickre said. “But then, it all goes down to people actually getting out and voting.”

 ?? Gregory Clark/The Coastland Times via AP ?? Richie Burke and Martha Wickre, who tied in a race for the town commission in Manteo, N.C., are shown Nov. 27 after a coin toss decided the winner. Wickre called heads, and the coin landed on tails, so Burke was declared the winner.
Gregory Clark/The Coastland Times via AP Richie Burke and Martha Wickre, who tied in a race for the town commission in Manteo, N.C., are shown Nov. 27 after a coin toss decided the winner. Wickre called heads, and the coin landed on tails, so Burke was declared the winner.

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