❓WHAT HAPPENED: North Carolina’s elections board reached a settlement to allow 73,000 voters extra time to update their voter registrations.
👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: The North Carolina State Board of Elections, the Republican National Committee, the North Carolina GOP, and the Democratic National Committee.
📍WHEN & WHERE: The settlement was reached on Monday in North Carolina following a legal battle stemming from 2024.
💬KEY QUOTE: “This latest victory is a win for Americans and yet another blow to the Republicans’ scheme to disenfranchise voters ahead of the midterm elections,” gloated Democratic National Committee (DNC) Chairman Ken Martin.
🎯IMPACT: The agreement keeps 73,000 voters on the rolls, with their information to be updated when they vote, amid ongoing debates over voter ID laws.
The North Carolina State Board of Elections has approved a settlement that permits approximately 73,000 voters who failed to submit sufficient identifying information additional time to correct incomplete registration records before any removal from the voter rolls. The agreement resolves a 2024 lawsuit filed by the Republican National Committee (RNC) and the North Carolina Republican Party, which claimed that roughly 250,000 registrations lacked required identification information, such as the last four digits of a Social Security number or driver’s license number.
The Republican plaintiffs had sought immediate removal of these voters and invalidation of any votes they cast in the 2024 elections. The settlement instead keeps these voters on the rolls, with their information to be updated when they vote, consistent with North Carolina’s requirement to present identification at the polls. Democratic National Committee (DNC) Chairman Ken Martin claimed the outcome was a victory for American voters and a setback for Republican efforts to “disenfranchise voters ahead of the midterm elections.”
The board reported that about 100,000 voters lacked proper identification last summer, a figure that had dropped to 73,000 by December. The decision comes amid America First conservatives’ efforts to advance the Safeguarding American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act, which has passed the House and awaits a Senate vote. The legislation would require documentary proof of citizenship for voter registration, mandate state verification of voter rolls, and authorize the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to address noncitizen registrations.
Senate Democrats, led by Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), have pledged to block the bill, which Schumer called “Jim Crow 2.0,” despite the fact that Pew Research shows 71 percent of Democrats and 83 percent of Americans overall—including a substantial majority of black Americans—favor voter ID.
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