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2019 North Carolina's 3rd congressional district special election

A special election was held on September 10, 2019, to fill the vacancy in in the United States House of Representatives for the remainder of the 116th United States Congress. Walter B. Jones Jr., the incumbent representative, died on February 10, 2019.

Parties held primaries to decide their nominees. In order to win a party nomination outright, under current state law, a candidate must exceed 30% of the vote to avoid a runoff (presuming that the second-place finisher calls for that runoff). There must be 30 days of absentee voting prior to each election, according to state law. Filing began on March 4 and ended March 8, as set by Governor Roy Cooper. Twenty-six candidates filed with the State Board of Elections by the filing deadline: 17 Republicans, 6 Democrats, 2 Libertarians, and 1 Constitution Party candidate. All candidates filed are affiliated with a political party. Five candidates advanced after the first primary elections: two Republicans, one Democrat, one Libertarian, and one Constitution Party candidate.

Cooper set the primary date of April 30, in which the Democrats selected Allen Thomas, Libertarians selected Tim Harris, and in the Constitution Party primary businessman Greg Holt won by default, but no Republican achieved 30% of the vote. Voting for the Republican primary runoff occurred on Tuesday, July 9, between two candidates that are both physicians, Greg Murphy and Joan Perry. Approximately 70 minutes after polls closed, Murphy was declared the winner by the Associated Press.

The general election was held on September 10, 2019. Murphy won the seat.

With the decision by the State Board of Elections to hold a new election to redo the 2018 U.S. House election in North Carolina's 9th district, this became one of two congressional district special elections in North Carolina in 2019, the other being the 9th district's special election held on the same day. This was the first time two U.S. House special elections were held in the same state on the same day (not on Election Day) since the May 3, 2008, elections in Louisiana's 1st district and 6th district.

Republican primary

Candidates

Nominee

Eliminated in runoff

  • Joan Perry, pediatrician

Eliminated in primary

Declined

Endorsements

First round

Polling

Results

Runoff

Results

Democratic primary

Candidates

Nominee

Eliminated

  • Richard Bew, former U.S. Marine Corps colonel
  • Gregory Humphrey, former journalist
  • Ike Johnson, Democratic nominee for State House district 14 in 2018
  • Dana Outlaw, mayor of New Bern
  • Ernest T. Reeves, Democratic nominee for North Carolina's 3rd congressional district in 2016

Declined

  • Ollie Nelson, retired U.S. Marine, educator, and pastor
  • George Parrott, businessman
  • Scott Thomas, District Attorney for North Carolina's 4th prosecutorial district

Endorsements

Results

Libertarian primary

Candidates

Declared

  • Shannon Bray, U.S. Navy veteran, author, cybersecurity expert
  • Tim Harris, U.S. Marine Corps veteran, IT engineer, candidate for North Carolina Senate for the 2nd district in 2018

Results

Constitution primary

Candidates

Nominee (by default)

  • Greg Holt, businessman

General election

During the early voting period for this election, Hurricane Dorian battered the eastern coast of the United States, necessitating early voting to be halted in several counties on the Outer Banks until the storm had passed. This also happened in the election for North Carolina's 9th congressional district.

Predictions

Endorsements

Polling

with generic Republican and generic Democrat<br />

Fundraising

Results

Despite the clear victory, 61.7% is the lowest Republican vote share in this district since 2012.

See also

Notes

Partisan clients<br />

Additional candidates<br />

References

External links

Official campaign websites