North Carolina 2026 primary election: Votes are in, next steps ahead

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Last updated: Friday, March 6, 2026 4:12PM GMT
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RALEIGH, N.C. (WTVD) -- Election Day for North Carolina's 2026 primary race was Tuesday.

The highest-profile race on North Carolina ballots this cycle is the U.S. Senate race to succeed retiring Republican Sen. Thom Tillis, who announced in June he would not seek reelection. It is expected to become one of the most expensive races on the map this year as Republicans aim to protect their majority in the Senate and Democrats hope to flip several seats.

Former North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper will face former Republican National Committee Chair Michael Whatley in the general election.

North Carolina's 2026 primary is the first election under the state's new congressional map, which was redrawn in October as part of the nationwide Republican-led redistricting push. The new map takes aim at flipping North Carolina's previously competitive 1st Congressional District, which is currently represented by Democratic Rep. Don Davis.

See live election results below

ABC News contributed.

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Mar 03, 2026, 4:57 PM GMT

High voter turnout reported on Election Day

State Board of Elections officials provided an update Tuesday morning as voters headed to the polls on Election Day. Officials report high voter turnout already, driven by strong early voting numbers.

During a press conference, officials announced that early voting is up more than 25 percent compared to the 2022 midterm primary, with over 714,000 North Carolinians casting early ballots either in person or absentee.

They also clarified that the potential voting count delays in Cumberland County -- due to recent updates to its tabulation software -- is not a widespread issue. .

In Wake County, more than 70,000 people voted early. A reminder that polls are open until 7:30 p.m., and anyone in line by that time is allowed to cast a vote

Watch full media briefing below:

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Mar 03, 2026, 2:53 PM GMT

Cumberland County early voting results may be delayed on election night

Cumberland County Board of Elections said that early voting results on primary Election Day may be delayed one to four hours due to a state-required software update.

Tabulator machines will print results tapes more slowly, and early voting totals cannot be uploaded until all tapes from seven locations are verified.

This delay affects only early voting results; Election Day results remain unaffected.

ByArit John, CNN CNNWire logo
Mar 03, 2026, 2:33 PM GMT

Democratic challengers say incumbents aren't fighting hard enough. This NC primary will test that

At a time when the Democratic Party is calling for fighters, Rep. Valerie Foushee of North Carolina takes a quieter approach. Her work, she said, should speak for itself.

"I don't care a whole lot about the limelight. I care even less about attention," she said. "What I care most about is getting the job done."

In 2022, Foushee beat Durham County Commissioner Nida Allam and six other Democrats to win the party's nomination for the district after former Rep. David Price retired. This time around, in a rematch with Allam, the incumbent has the backing of dozens of local leaders, as well as the current and former Democratic governors, Josh Stein and Roy Cooper.

Despite that support - and the power of incumbency - the race is seen as competitive.

Tuesday's primary in North Carolina's 4th District offers one of the first national tests of what kind of leaders Democrats want to send to Washington. Voters will choose between an incumbent who keeps a low profile and a younger challenger pushing to change everything about the party, from how it raises money to how its leaders get their message out.

"We need our members of Congress to not just be quiet," Allam said. "We need our members of Congress, our elected officials at all levels, to be using their platform, using their resources, to call out injustices."

Both candidates identify as progressives but take different approaches on the key issues shaping the race.

Allam wants to abolish Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Foushee doesn't go that far - she has backed a bill to defund the agency's ability to detain or monitor immigrants. The challenger has called for a federal moratorium on new data centers, including a facility being considered for the district that both candidates oppose. The incumbent has said that power should be left to local communities, which should issue moratoriums until the federal government releases guidelines on data centers.

Allam calls Israel's war in Gaza a genocide. Foushee has not used the same term, but said she refuses to continue funding what she called the "indiscriminate killing of people in Gaza" and backed legislation to stop the transfer of offensive weapons to Israel. (A UN commission found last year that Israel committed genocide in the Gaza Strip in its war following Hamas' October 7, 2023, attack, a finding Israel rejects.)

But Allam's biggest criticism has been outside money pouring into the race to boost Foushee. In their first matchup, Foushee benefited from roughly $3 million in outside spending from super PACs aligned with the American Israel Public Affairs Committee and the cryptocurrency industry. Though Foushee has rejected AIPAC funding in this race, she's being boosted by a late surge in spending, includingfrom the Jobs and Democracy PAC, a super PAC aligned with the AI company Anthropic.

That spending has eclipsed Allam's fundraising advantage and the money spent backing her challenge from liberal groups including Justice Democrats, Leaders We Deserve and American Priorities, a super PAC aiming to counter AIPAC's influence.

Allam has also criticized Foushee's corporate PAC donations from defense contractors and pharmaceutical companies, arguing that a candidate can't advocate for ending the war in Gaza or "Medicare for All" while accepting those contributions. Foushee said the money comes from companies that create jobs in the district and challenged her opponent to point to a vote that was colored by her contributions.

"Look at my voting record and tell me if you can determine that ... I am beholden to any corporation and that those votes are not representative of the values of my district," she said.

An incumbent pushes back

Foushee, 69, has deep roots in the region. She attended segregated elementary schools growing up in Chapel Hill and began her political career nearly 30 years ago on her local school board to advocate for students of color. She became the first Black woman to chair the Orange County Board of Commissioners, where her hometown is located, then served in the state House and Senate.

Her allies have bristled at ads portraying her as tied to special interests, particularly a TV spot featuring Wake County Democratic Party Chair Wesley Knott in which he says Foushee "only works for the big guys."

Tyler Swanson, the chair of the Wake County school board, said the ad motivated him and more than 50 Black leaders in the district to sign an endorsement letter backing Foushee.

"There's a lot of misinformation that is around her record that is off-putting, and that is disheartening, and that is alarming," Swanson said. "That is why I stood up and organized with Black electeds to push back and change this narrative."

Foushee has pushed back on efforts to lump her in with other older incumbents who've spent decades in Congress while she has been in office for three years. Still, she pointed to her experience in Congress and her past elected positions, her subcommittee leadership position as a ranking member, and the funding she's delivered to the district as evidence of her effectiveness in Washington.

"I'm just trying to figure out what it really means to be progressive, that you would decide that a Black female who has worked her way up to this point, and being put in leadership positions, all of a sudden it's time for her to go?" she said. "Please help that make sense to me and what you believe is a progressive agenda."

Tired of the status quo

Allam said this race isn't about age but about pushing back on the Trump administration and the influence that corporations and dark money groups have on politics.

"I view myself as part of this wave of people who are sick and tired of the status quo," she told CNN. "I'm right there alongside the residents of this district, living through their lived experiences of balancing paying off student debt, balancing the fact that I have two children that we have to put through child care."

Allam got involved in politics after three of her close friends, all Muslim Americans, were shot and killed in 2015 by a neighbor in an incident viewed by many as a hate crime. Soon after she joined the 2016 political campaign of Sen. Bernie Sanders, who has endorsed her congressional bids and rallied with her in Durham in February. From there, she was elected to the state Democratic Party's executive council and, in 2020, won a seat on the Durham County Board of Commissioners, becoming the first Muslim woman elected to any political position in the state's history.

Her story is similar to many in the district - shewas born in Canada to Indian and Pakistani immigrants and moved to the region as a child.The Durham metro area has experienced population growth far outpacing the national average,fueled in part by immigration. The Wake County part of the seat, which was added after redistricting in 2023, includes asizable Asian American population.

Sue Mu, a council member in Apex, North Carolina, and an immigrant from China, said that though she respects Foushee and her contributions to the district, she endorsed Allam due to her ability to connect with younger voters.

"She's young and full of passion, and she reflects the diversity, energy and lived experience of North Carolina's 4th Congressional District today," Mu said.

Locally, Allam has received less support than Foushee. One of her most prominent endorsements has come from Knott, the Wake County Democratic Party chair. While party chairs are traditionally neutral, Knott said it was important to get involved because his party's reputation has plummeted with voters. Democrats need leaders who can fight effectively, he said, which requires having a platform.

"With all due respect to Rep. Foushee, the job is getting attention and communicating as much as it is voting 'yes' or 'no' on things that come to the floor of the House," he said.

The-CNN-Wire & 2026 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

Tom George Image
Mar 03, 2026, 12:02 PM GMT

GOP Senate primary challengers to Whatley hope to upset frontrunner

North Carolina's Senate race is shaping up at the top of the ticket to be one of the most important and expensive in the country, with control of the chamber at stake.

With Democrats landing their preferred candidate with former Gov. Roy Cooper jumping into the race, Republicans are fighting to maintain the seat after Sen. Thom Tillis decided he would not be seeking re-election.

I'm the only prosecutor. I know what it's like to be tough on crime
- Don Brown

Republicans haven't lost a U.S. Senate seat in the state since 2008. President Donald Trump and other top GOP leaders quickly rallied behind former RNC Chair Michael Whatley, who, because of his fundraising ability, is considered the frontrunner.

But his two main challengers argue this race isn't over, and say they would be a stronger choice.

Even before Tillis decided not to seek re-election, former Navy JAG Officer Don Brown was already challenging him, and now he says he believes voters are looking for an alternative to Whatley.

"I'm the only vet at the top of the race, No. 1, No. 2, I'm the only prosecutor. I know what it's like to be tough on crime, No. 3, I'm the only one who fought for medical freedom, and No. 4, our campaign has more endorsements than the other campaigns combined. Grassroots; this is we the people vs the establishment, and we the people will prevail," Brown said.

Brown is arguing he'd also be more supportive of the president's agenda.

And so is nurse and conservative activist Michele Morrow, jumping into the Senate race just two years after losing the State Superintendent race in 2024.

It's time for a wild card. I am a wild card.
- Michele Morrow

"Well, first of all, I'm connected to the people of North Carolina. And it is vitally important that someone that's going to represent them actually has a pulse on what Americans need, what North Carolinians need. And I think that crosses all party boundaries," Morrow said. "I think every person wants safe communities. We want more money in our pockets. We want our children to have opportunities."

Morrow upset a Republican incumbent two years ago. But for some, she has a controversial history, including her presence in Washington, D.C. on Jan. 6, 2021, and for social media posts suggesting former President Barack Obama should be executed.

Primary Election Day is March 3.

Morrow defended her record and argued it won't be a liability in November.

Both Morrow and Brown maintained that they could gain more enthusiasm among the Republican base and unaffiliated voters needed to challenge Cooper, who has never lost an election.

"I will say that Roy Cooper and the Democrat machine have beaten the typical male Republican candidate 13 times. It's time for a wild card. I am a wild card. Roy Cooper himself came after me harder than anyone else in 2024. And they over, they outspent me 18 to 1. And I came within two points," Morrow said.

Brown said, "I'm going to prosecute (Cooper) for his record all across the state, from Manteo to Murphy. I know how to do that. Cooper has never faced a Republican opponent like he will face when he faces me. I know how to hit him. I want to hit him hard. I will expose his record to the people of North Carolina in a way that no other Republican opponent that he has ever had has known how to expose it."

Our newsgathering partners at the News and Observer also endorsed Whatley in the primary, arguing he'd be the strongest candidate for Republicans.

But even that wasn't exactly a ringing endorsement. The N&O said, "Whatley has, thus far, been an uninspiring candidate for Republicans, and the decision to so quickly push him into the race may age poorly."

The newspaper argued that what Whatley does have is fundraising and institutional support, but in the end, Republican primary voters will decide whether to back the frontrunner, or if another option can pull out an upset.

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