© 2024 Blue Ridge Public Radio
Blue Ridge Mountains banner background
Your source for information and inspiration in Western North Carolina.
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Judge Sides With NAACP; Orders Reinstatement of Canceled Voter Registrations

Federal courthouse in Winston-Salem.
Google Earth
Federal courthouse in Winston-Salem.

A federal judge has ordered North Carolina to reinstate roughly 3,500 voter registrations that were canceled within the past three months. The North Carolina chapter of the NAACP sued over the cancellations in three counties in the eastern half of the state.

A handful of private citizens challenged huge numbers of voter registrations, relying mainly on undeliverable mail. Almost all the cancellations were tied to one person in Cumberland County who’s affiliated with the Voter Integrity Project, a small group in Raleigh.

In her ruling, U.S. District Court Judge Loretta Biggs wrote, "There is little question that the county boards’ process of allowing third parties to challenge hundreds and, in Cumberland County, thousands of voters within 90 days before the 2016 General Election constitutes the type of 'systematic' removal prohibited by the National Voter Registration Act."

She granted the North Carolina NAACP’s request for a preliminary injunction that will restore those voter registrations and forbid counties from allowing similar challenges.

"Voter enfranchisement cannot be sacrificed when citizens through no fault of their own have been removed from the voter rolls," Biggs wrote.

Copyright 2016 WFAE

Michael Tomsic became a full-time reporter for WFAE in August 2012. Before that, he reported for the station as a freelancer and intern while he finished his senior year at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Heââ
Michael Tomsic
Michael Tomsic covers health care, voting rights, NASCAR, peach-shaped water towers and everything in between. He drivesWFAE'shealth care coverage through a partnership with NPR and Kaiser Health News. He became a full-time reporter forWFAEin August 2012. Before that, he reported for the station as a freelancer and intern while he finished his senior year at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He interned with Weekends on All Things Considered in Washington, D.C., where he contributed to the show’s cover stories, produced interviews withNasand BranfordMarsalis, and reported a story about a surge of college graduates joining the military. AtUNC, he was the managing editor of the student radio newscast, Carolina Connection. He got his start in public radio as an intern withWHQRin Wilmington, N.C., where he grew up.
Related Content