2019 North Carolina's 3rd congressional district special election

http://dbpedia.org/resource/2019_North_Carolina's_3rd_congressional_district_special_election an entity of type: Thing

A special election was held on September 10, 2019 to fill the vacancy in North Carolina's 3rd congressional district in the United States House of Representatives for the remainder of the 116th United States Congress. Walter B. Jones Jr., the incumbent representative, died on February 10, 2019. The general election was held on September 10, 2019. Murphy won the seat. rdf:langString
rdf:langString 2019 North Carolina's 3rd congressional district special election
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rdf:langString Greg Murphy
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rdf:langString Paul Beaumont
rdf:langString Don Cox
rdf:langString Ernest T. Reeves
rdf:langString Michael Speciale
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rdf:langString Allen Thomas
rdf:langString Celeste Cairns
rdf:langString Chimer Davis Clark Jr.
rdf:langString Dana Outlaw
rdf:langString Eric Rouse
rdf:langString Francis De Luca
rdf:langString Gary Ceres
rdf:langString Graham Boyd
rdf:langString Greg Holt
rdf:langString Gregory Humphrey
rdf:langString Ike Johnson
rdf:langString Joan Perry
rdf:langString Kevin Baiko
rdf:langString Michele Nix
rdf:langString Mike Payment
rdf:langString Phil Shepard
rdf:langString Richard Bew
rdf:langString Shannon Bray
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xsd:date 2019-04-23
xsd:date 2019-09-10
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rdf:langString ; Organizations * Women for Trump ; Politicians * Rudy Giuliani, former mayor of New York City * Rick Santorum, former U.S. senator * Mark Meadows, U.S. representative * Jim Jordan, U.S. representative
rdf:langString ; Federal politicians * Alma Adams, U.S. representative * G. K. Butterfield, U.S. representative * Bob Etheridge, former U.S. representative * Julian Castro, former U.S. secretary of housing and urban development ; Statewide, and local politicians * Toby Fitch, state senator * Jim Hunt, former governor of North Carolina * Erica D. Smith, state senator ;Organizations * AFL–CIO * Equality North Carolina * Sierra Club North Carolina Chapter *National Education Association
rdf:langString ; Organizations * Susan B. Anthony List * Winning for Women * FreedomWorks * Maggie's List ; Politicians * Liz Cheney, U.S. representative * George Holding, U.S. representative * Paul Stam, former member of the North Carolina House of Representatives from the 37th district * Elise Stefanik, U.S. representative
rdf:langString ; Politicians * Rand Paul, U.S. senator from Kentucky
rdf:langString ; Federal politicians * Donald Trump, 45th president of the United States * Mike Pence, 48th vice president of the United States * Thom Tillis, U.S. senator * Mark Meadows, U.S. Representative * Jim Jordan, U.S. Representative ; Individuals * Donald Trump Jr., businessman * Kayleigh McEnany, political commentator ; Organizations * Women for Trump * National Right to Life * National Federation of Independent Business
rdf:langString ; Politicians * Seth Moulton, U.S. Representative ; Individuals * Amy McGrath, retired marine fighter pilot and nominee for KY-6 in 2018 * Richard Ojeda, former West Virginia State Senator and nominee for WV-3 in 2018 ;Organizations * Equality North Carolina * Serve America * VoteVets.org
rdf:langString ; Politicians * G.K. Butterfield, U.S. Representative
rdf:langString Murphy:
rdf:langString Thomas:
rdf:langString Results by county
rdf:langString File:North Carolina's 3rd Congressional District Election Map Simple.svg
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rdf:langString Libertarian Party
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rdf:langString U.S. Representative
rdf:langString Greg Murphy
rdf:langString Jeff Moore
rdf:langString Allen Thomas
rdf:langString Joan Perry
rdf:langString Richard Bew
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rdf:langString A special election was held on September 10, 2019 to fill the vacancy in North Carolina's 3rd congressional district in the United States House of Representatives for the remainder of the 116th United States Congress. Walter B. Jones Jr., the incumbent representative, died on February 10, 2019. Parties held primaries to decide their nominees. In order to win a party nomination outright, under current state law, a candidate must exceed 30% of the vote to avoid a runoff (presuming that the second-place finisher calls for that runoff). There must be 30 days of absentee voting prior to each election, according to state law. Filing began on March 4 and ended March 8, as set by Governor Roy Cooper. Twenty-six candidates filed with the State Board of Elections by the filing deadline: 17 Republicans, 6 Democrats, 2 Libertarians, and 1 Constitution Party candidate. All candidates filed are affiliated with a political party. Five candidates advanced after the first primary elections: two Republicans, one Democrat, one Libertarian, and one Constitution Party candidate. Cooper set the primary date of April 30, in which the Democrats selected Allen M. Thomas, Libertarians selected Tim Harris, and in the Constitution Party primary businessman Greg Holt won by default, but no Republican achieved 30% of the vote. Voting for the Republican primary runoff occurred on Tuesday, July 9, between two candidates that are both physicians, Greg Murphy and Joan Perry. Approximately 70 minutes after polls closed, Murphy was declared the winner by the Associated Press. The general election was held on September 10, 2019. Murphy won the seat. With the decision by the State Board of Elections to hold a new election to redo the 2018 U.S. House election in North Carolina's 9th district, this became one of two congressional district special elections in North Carolina in 2019, the other being the 9th district's special election held on the same day. This was the first time two U.S. House special elections were held in the same state on the same day (not on Election Day) since the May 3, 2008, elections in Louisiana's 1st district and 6th district.
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xsd:date 2019-09-10
rdf:langString 2019 North Carolina's 3rd congressional district special election

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