North Carolina’s elections board has ordered a new election in the last undecided congressional race from the 2018 midterms after reviewing evidence that the contest was tainted by absentee ballot fraud.
The North Carolina State Board of Elections voted 5-0 to hold a new ballot in the ninth congressional district. The board did not immediately set a schedule for the re-run.
The move came after the Republican candidate Mark Harris abruptly dropped his bid to be declared the winner and instead called for a new election, after investigators found evidence of ballot fraud by political operatives working for him.
Harris informed the board of his decision on the fourth day of a hearing on whether or not to certify the results of the November contest.
Harris led Democrat Dan McCready by 905 votes out of about 280,000 cast in a mostly rural district along the southern edge of the state. But the state refused to certify the election as allegations surfaced that Harris political operative Leslie McCrae Dowless may have tampered with mail-in ballots.
Harris said he was still struggling from health problems caused by a blood infection that landed him in a hospital and led to two strokes since the election. He said that he was suffering from confusion but that he could see there were substantial doubts about the election’s fairness and that a new election is necessary.
He made the surprising reversal after his lawyers argued in recent legal filings to the board that he should be certified the winner.
The North Carolina Republican party executive director Dallas Woodhouse said he learned of Harris’s decision only minutes before.
“There’s no way that anybody has contemplated what’s next,” Woodhouse said.
North Carolina’s elections director said this week that Dowless conducted an illegal “ballot-harvesting” operation while working for Harris.
Dowless’s workers in rural Bladen county testified they were directed to forge signatures, collect blank or incomplete ballots from voters, and even fill in votes for local candidates. It is against the law for anyone to handle someone’s ballot but the voter or a family member.