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As President Trump Prepares Legal Challenges, Progressive NC Groups Demand Every Vote Is Counted

Hundreds of marchers moved through downtown Durham, NC Wednesday less than 24 hours after polls closed, demanding the state count every vote.

Hundreds of marchers moved through Durham the afternoon after Election Day, calling for state officials to "count every vote." (Photo by Billy Ball)

Hundreds of marchers moved through downtown Durham Wednesday less than 24 hours after polls closed in NC, chanting, “Count every vote.”

One of Ricky Rodriguezโ€™ first memories is of 2000, when the presidential election came to a standstill in his home in Florida.

Separated by hundreds of votes out of millions cast, in a state with numerous reports of voter suppression against Black Floridians, the state recounted until the US Supreme Court ordered it to stop, an outcome that still leaves a sour taste in the mouths of Democrats and progressives.

All the results, as they come in. Cardinal & Pineโ€™s live election blog.

โ€œHere we are again,โ€ said Rodriguez, standing in downtown Durhamโ€™s CCB Plaza Wednesday, less than 24 hours after polls closed in NC. He was surrounded by hundreds demanding that North Carolina election officials and other uncalled states across the country count every vote.

โ€œWeโ€™re here to protect every vote because every vote is a dream,โ€ said Rodriguez. โ€œAnd there are dreams all across this country.โ€

The backdrop could not be more dramatic. Following one of the most bitterly divisive campaigns in modern history, North Carolina is one of several states in which most reputable media outlets have not declared winners in key races. 

In North Carolina, itโ€™s unclear who won the presidential and US Senate races, although itโ€™s likely the GOP candidates, President Donald Trump and Sen. Thom Tillis, will win given their existing leads in the unofficial results released Tuesday. 

But in other crucial states such as Michigan and Wisconsin, battleground states called in the last hours by multiple outlets, Trump is now expected to mount a legal case against the results or demand that states stop counting still outstanding ballots. In NC, that includes an estimated 117,000 absentee ballots, as well as an unknown number of election day provisional ballots, which have the potential to change the results in some races, particularly in a handful of close judicial races.

Hundreds of marchers moved through downtown Durham, chanting and singing, demanding state officials count every ballot in the 2020 election. (Photo by Cardinal & Pine)

Organizers of the rally, which included progressive advocacy organizations, members of the stateโ€™s Black Lives Matter movement, and labor rights groups said counting all ballots is crucial to democracy. 

They rallied in the center of downtown Durham, one of NCโ€™s most progressive-leaning cities, before marching to the countyโ€™s Board of Elections office to chant words of support for poll officials. 

โ€œNo one should be afraid of more people getting to vote,โ€ said Rabbi Salem Pearce, executive director of Carolina Jews for Justice, a progressive, faith-based organization that helped to organize Wednesday.

Pearce said NC should act to make voting easier in its counties, extending early voting hours and clearing automatic voter registration. Republicans in the state have been opposed to such measures, at least partially because they claim it could increase the frequency of voter fraud, an extraordinarily rare phenomenon. Democrats suspect the opposition is in reality a fear that greater access would mean fewer votes for GOP causes.

Pearce said she wanted to fight the presidentโ€™s attempts to stifle more ballot-counting, noting the state had achieved historic turnout this year just shy of 75%. โ€œWe want to honor that work,โ€ she said. 

Hundreds of marchers moved through downtown Durham, NC after Election Day demanding state officials count every vote. (Photo by Billy Ball)

Whatโ€™s at Stake?

In North Carolina, the margins are slim enough that the outstanding ballots could change things. Democratic candidate for president Joe Biden and Trump are separated by just 76,737 votes, according to Reuters, in a state where more than 5.4 million ballots were turned in.ย Tillis and Cunningham are just 96,689 votes apart.ย 

Several crucial judicial races, including the race for state Supreme Court chief justice, are even closer. Republican Paul Newby and Democrat Cheri Beasley are separated by 3,742 ballots to be exact.

Democrats have urged a methodical approach to the count. 

Sara Fearrington, a Waffle House server whoโ€™s helped to lead the labor rights group NC Raise Up/Fight for $15 and a Union, said this was her first time voting in a presidential election. She started a passionate chant of โ€œcount every voteโ€ with rally goers. 

โ€œThe fact that it is taking time means it is working,โ€ Fearrington said. 

Regardless of the outcome in NC and beyond, Hashim Benford, a Durham resident who participated in Wednesdayโ€™s march, said heโ€™s focused on a long-term movement for affordable housing, education, and better wages. But first, he said, it starts with just making sure the election results are counted fairly and accurately.

โ€œA healthy democracy is necessary for these things,โ€ he said.


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  • Billy Ball is Cardinal & Pine’s senior newsletter editor. Heโ€™s covered local, state, and national politics, government, education, criminal justice, the environment, and immigration in North Carolina for almost two decades. His reporting and commentary have earned state, regional, and national awards. He’s also the founder of The Living South, a journalism project about the most interesting people in the American South.

    Have a story tip? Reach Billy at billy@couriernewsroom.com. For local reporting that connects the dots, from policy to people, sign up for Billyโ€™s newsletter.