Republicans spurn North Carolina board
investigating election fraud
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[January 03, 2019]
(Reuters) - Republicans in North
Carolina refused on Wednesday to participate in the creation of an
interim elections board, forcing election officials to postpone a
hearing in its investigation of election fraud in a congressional
contest.
The State Board of Elections was to hold a hearing on Jan. 11 as part of
its probe into possible election fraud involving the collection of
absentee ballots in the run-up to the November elections that has left
the race for the Ninth Congressional District in limbo.
Republican Mark Harris has claimed victory over Democrat Dan McCready
after initial results showed he won the race by 905 votes.
North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper, a Democrat, said he would appoint an
interim elections board which was disbanded on Friday after a state
court declined to extend a stay on a previous order declaring the
composition of the board unconstitutional.
Under state law, Cooper is to seat the five-person board from a list of
names provided by the two political parties. But the state's Republican
party said on Wednesday it would not submit names to the governor.
"Our unwillingness to participate in the creation of an unlawful
'interim' State Board of Elections results from a desire to ensure that
any future investigation surrounding the Ninth Congressional District
election is open, fair, and transparent, and not tainted by actions
taken by an illegal board," North Carolina Republican Party Chairman
Robin Hayes said in a statement.
Election board officials said in a statement that, as a result, the
hearing was postponed but staff would continue to interview witnesses
and pursue leads.
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Mark Harris attends a debate between the four top-polling Republican
candidates in North Carolina for the U.S. Senate, at Davidson
College in Davidson, North Carolina April 22, 2014. REUTERS/Davis
Turner/File Photo
"Quickly rooting out real election fraud should be a bipartisan
effort. Today in North Carolina, we have a Board of Elections with
five empty chairs because Republicans are blocking the way," Cooper
said.
Since the November election, residents of rural Bladen County have
stated in affidavits that people came to their homes and collected
incomplete absentee ballots. It is illegal in North Carolina for a
third party to turn in absentee ballots.
The campaign for Harris said in a statement that he will file a
petition on Thursday with a state court to certify the results of
the election.
North Carolina's board of elections could order a new vote. The U.S.
House of Representatives could also rule on the election outcome.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee; editing by Grant McCool)
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