Daily Press

13 North Carolina House Districts have primaries today

- By Gary D. Robertson

RALEIGH, N.C. — This year’s retirement­s of two veteran Democratic congressme­nhave opened the way for robust primaries within their party as Democrats, Republican­s or both hold contests today in all but one of North Carolina’s 14 U.S. House districts.

At stake is a shot at the November general election and, ultimately, Capitol Hill. With this election cycle, North Carolina picks up another House seat in January — its 14th — because of U.S. Census-documented population growth.

ln the 4th Congressio­nal District, where Rep. David Price is off the ballot for the first time since 1986, eight Democrats are seeking his Triangle-area seat. And four Democrats are running for the rural northeast 1st District seat held since 2004 by Rep. G.K. Butterfiel­d, who chose not to seek reelection.

Top competitor­s in the 4th are state Sen. Valerie Foushee of Chapel Hill, Durham County Commission­er Nida Allam and former “American Idol” runner-up Clay Aiken. State Sen. Don Davis and former Sen. Erica Smith are leading candidates in the 1st District.

Seven of the 11 incumbents seeking reelection have primaries Tuesday.

The sitting member facing the strongest in-party challenge — with seven other GOP rivals — is first-term Rep. Madison Cawthorn in the mountainou­s 11th District. Unforced political errors have threatened Cawthorn’s return to Congress, where the outspoken 26-year-old is a fierce backer of former President Donald Trump.

Other Republican incumbents facing primary challenges: Reps. Greg Murphy in the 3rd District; Virginia Foxx in the 5th; the 7th’s David Rouzer; Richard Hudson in the 9th; and Patrick McHenry in the 10th. Democratic Rep. Alma Adams in the 12th also has a primary.

In primaries with large fields, the top vote-getter must receive more than 30% of the ballot to avoid a July 26 runoff with the secondplac­e finisher.

The 1st District, considered reliably Democratic for decades, has become less so, and could be highly competitiv­e in a strong Republican year.

GOP primary candidates include 2020 nominee Sandy Smith and Rocky Mount Mayor Sandy Roberson. The 4th and 1st Democratic primaries have featured competitio­ns between the party establishm­ent and its more liberal wing. The establishm­ent-favored candidates — Foushee and Davis — have benefited from big TV ad spending and mailers from super PACs.

Protect Our Future, a super PAC backed by a cryptocurr­ency billionair­e, has spent $1 million supporting Foushee, according to campaign filings.

The United Democracy Project, an independen­t expenditur­e group linked to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, has spent nearly $2.4 million to aid Davis and almost $2.1 million to back Foushee, campaign finance reports show. And AIPAC’s political action committee has sent over $430,000 in bundled contributi­ons to Foushee’s campaign, The News & Observer of Raleigh reported.

Some Democrats have been angry about AIPAC’s involvemen­t in both races because the group also supports Republican candidates, with the state Democratic Party’s Progressiv­e Caucus revoking its endorsemen­t of Foushee.

Allam, the first Muslim woman elected to a North Carolina office, is pro-Palestinia­n. She’s endorsed by U.S. Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders.

In the campaign’s final days, Aiken lamented the outside money in the race and said he had “lost respect” for Foushee. Her campaign defended the AIPAC support.

Though prominent in music, theater and television, Aiken is no stranger to politics, having won a 2014 Democratic primary for Congress in another central North Carolina district before losing to Republican incumbent Renee Ellmers. A November victory would make Aiken the South’s first openly LGBTQ person elected to Congress.

Davis, a former Air Force officer and small-town mayor, won Butterfiel­d’s endorsemen­t last month. Butterfiel­d cited Davis’ legislativ­e experience and said he is “prepared to fight for the Democratic agenda of empowering America’s families and communitie­s.”

Smith, who has Warren’s endorsemen­t, ran unsuccessf­ully for the 2020 U.S. Senate nomination. Smith’s campaign has said Davis’ voting record in the General Assembly has been too moderate, particular­ly on abortion rights.

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