Electoral reform in North Carolina

Electoral reform in North Carolina refers to efforts to change the voting and election laws in the Tar Heel State.

Instant runoff voting

Cary, North Carolina was scheduled to hold its first instant runoff voting election on October 9, 2007, and Hendersonville, North Carolina was scheduled to use IRV for the first time on November 6, 2007. Wake County, North Carolina had chosen Cary as a test site for the system.[1]

Electoral College

In 2007, bills were introduced to join the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact and award the state's 15 electoral votes to the winner of the nationwide popular vote, but these bills did not become law.

Ballot access reform

2009

In 2009 a bill was introduced by North Carolina State Senator Jim Jacumin on March 19, 2009 as SB731, the Electoral Freedom Act of 2009. Soon after North Carolina State Senator Andrew C. Brock[2] signed on as a Co-Sponsor of the Electoral Freedom Act. On March 24, 2009 the bill was referred to the Senate Committee on the Judiciary I,[3] where was never brought back up and died in committee when it missed the legislative cross over deadline for non-appropriation/budget bills. The goal of the Electoral Freedom Act of 2009 was to amend NC Election Law in NCGS Chapter 163[4] to reduce the number of signatures needed for third political parties and unaffiliated candidates to obtain access to the NC election ballot.[5]

2011

In 2011 the Free the Vote North Carolina geared up for an electoral reform legislative project, which by and large was a reviving of the bill introduced in 2009 and with some new additions, the Electoral Freedom Act of 2011[6] (Bill Proposal PDF). The goal of the Electoral Freedom Act of 2011 was to amend NC Election Law in NCGS Chapter 163[4] to reduce the number of signatures needed for third political parties and unaffiliated candidates to obtain access to the NC election ballot as well as eliminating the current requirement for write-in candidates to obtain signatures to have votes cast for them counted. The bill had the support of many political parties in North Carolina including the American Centrist Party of North Carolina which issued a press release in support of the bill proposal.[7]

See also

References

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