The colored signs with candidate names and VOTE are part of the street decorations these days along with cherry and dogwood trees. If you wonder why all the partisan activity, it is because early voting in the May 8 party primaries will begin soon.
You can vote early from April 19 through May 5 at the Wake County Board of Elections at 337 South Salisbury Street in Raleigh, but early voting in other locations will last from Thursday, April 26, through Saturday, May 5.
In Wake Forest the Northern Wake Regional Center at 350 East Holding Avenue will be open for voting those days from noon to 7 p.m. every weekday; from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday, April 28; from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, April 29; and from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday, May 5.
At the top of the ballots will be the contests for the U.S. House of Representatives District 2, a seat now held by Representative George E.B. Holding of Raleigh. He is being challenged by Gregory A. Chesser II of Louisburg.
On the Democratic side, three people are vying for the party’s nomination to face Holding in November: Wendy E. May of Selma, Kenneth M. Romley of Raleigh and Linda D. Coleman of Knightdale.
In the contest over the North Carolina House District 35 seat now held by Representative Chris Malone there are Democratic and Republican primaries, and all the candidates live in Wake Forest. Isaac Burke is challenging Malone on the Republican ballot while Terence Everitt and Adam Wright are on the Democratic ballot, each man wanting to face the Republican winner in November.
Wake Forest Democratic voters will also be able to cast ballots in five contests for seats on the Wake County Board of Commissioners. Incumbent Sig Hutchinson is facing opposition from Jeremiah F.L. Pierce in District 1; Lindy M. Brown is challenging incumbent Matthew M. Calabria in District 2; in District 4 incumbent Ervin Portman has a challenger in Susan Evans; Incumbent James West is facing challenger Robert Finch Sr. in District 5; and Vickie Adamson is challenging incumbent John Burns in District 7.
There are no contests in county commissioner districts 3 and 6 where Jessica Holmes and Greg Ford are the incumbents, respectively.
There are 719,232 registered voters in Wake County, which does use paper ballots. Of that number, 267,233 are Democrats, 188,407 are Republicans, 4,644 are Libertarians, one is Green and 258,947 are unaffiliated.
You can find much more detailed information about the primary elections, including maps of the districts in Wake County and your sample, at www.wakegov.com, select Board of Elections.
There is also still time to ask for an absentee ballot and avoid standing in line. At the elections board website just choose the Absentee button on the first page and print out the request form. The deadline for mailing an absentee ballot request is May 1.
One Response
Find it ironic that politicians can have signs along our roadways yet if small businesses use signs along roadways fines are issued and signs removed. After the election, many of the signs are still along the roadways. This is True….all across Wake County,