• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Digital News Updates
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business

Republicans score election litigation win in North Carolina

October 3, 2024

(The Center Square) – UNC Mobile One Card, a digital photo identification on the Chapel Hill campus of the University of North Carolina, will not be valid in North Carolina’s elections.

A temporary injunction was granted Friday afternoon by the North Carolina Court of Appeals, scoring a victory for Republicans at the state and national level against the State Board of Elections. The decision stays last week’s order by Judge Keith Gregory in Wake County Superior Court.

“Two battleground state wins for election integrity in one afternoon,” wrote Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Whatley on social media, referring also to a win in Michigan. “This is just common sense. We refuse to give an inch when it comes to protecting Voter ID!”

The lawsuit was the seventh against the state board in 52 days when filed, four of which were in a three-week blitz by the Grand Old Party. According to an affidavit filed in the case, a 22-year-old used two free apps from Apple – Superimpose+ and Walletsmith – to forge a digital ID for UNC Chapel Hill. While it took him less than an hour, he said now knowing how would make the process much quicker.

State law, says plaintiffs, only allows ID in physical form. Gregory in his ruling had said for Carolina students to get the mobile ID, a valid form of photo identification is needed.

The state’s voters have multiple options to include military or veterans photo ID card issued by the U.S. government; ID card with photo issued by the U.S. or North Carolina government for a public assistance program; tribal enrollment card with photo issued by a tribe recognized by the state or federal government, which include the Cherokee-Eastern Band, Coharie, Haliwa-Saponi, Lumbee, Meherrin, Occaneechi-Saponi, Sappony and Waccamaw Siouan.

Additionally, there are 95 entities with approved student or government-employee photo IDs, or both.

Creating digital items, including through use of artificial intelligence, has been a subject of many polls this election cycle. A national poll from Elon University released in May said more than 3 in 4 Americans fear abuses of artificial intelligence will affect the 2024 presidential election, and many are not confident they can detect faked photos, videos or audio.

The state board was split in its decision. Chairman Alan Hirsch, Jeff Carmon and Siobhan Millan, all Democrats, voted for the mobile ID use; Republicans Stacy Eggers and Kevin Lewis were opposed. The board was named as defendants, along with Executive Director Karen Brinson Bell; plaintiffs were the North Carolina Republican Party and the Republican National Committee.

Absentee voting by mail is underway. Early in-person voting begins Oct. 17 and Election Day is Nov. 5. The voter registration deadline is Oct. 11, though same-day registration is available. Absentee ballots can be requested through Oct. 29.

Whatley, on the litigation win in Michigan, wrote, “Clerks were counting mail ballots without proof of signature verification, opening the door to fraud. The @GOP sued. Result? Ballots will now only be counted after proof that signatures are verified – a key win.”

North Carolina has more than 7.6 million registered voters, according to State Board of Elections data through Saturday. It is among the seven consensus battleground states representing 93 electoral college votes. The breakdown is Pennsylvania 19, North Carolina 16, Georgia 16, Michigan 15, Arizona 11, Wisconsin 10 and Nevada six.

 

By Alan Wooten | The Center Square

Filed Under: Featured, Politics

Related Articles:

  • Canada looks to shift auto industry away from U.S.
  • White House Touts Cooling Inflation, Rising Real Wages in New CPI Report
  • Trump Nominates Katie Lane to Federal Bench in Montana
  • Stocks Edge Higher as Inflation Data Lifts Rate-Cut Hopes
  • Fed Officials Signal Patience on Rate Cuts
  • Medal of Honor Monday: Navy Lt. Carlton Hutchins

Primary Sidebar

— Advertisement —

Digital News Updates Logo

Recent News Posts

  • Seattle City Council votes to restrict sharing info with federal immigration authorities
  • Groups file brief in support of ending post-Election Day ballot counting
  • Riding High: Meet the Military’s Last Remaining Mounted Color Guard
  • Trump announces new tariffs with ‘certainty’ after Supreme Court ruling

Recent Politics Posts

  • Dalio backs bipartisan proposal to cap yearly U.S. budget deficits
  • Climate and energy experts praise Trump’s Endangerment Finding repeal
  • Western senators propose wastewater program renewal
  • Property Owners Sue Montana Revenue Department Over Assessments

Recent Business Posts

  • Energy Stocks Lag as Oil Prices Ease
  • Fed Officials Signal Patience on Rate Cuts
  • Stockman Bank Donates $15,000 to Support Student Field Trips to Heritage Center
  • Banks Navigate Slower Loan Growth as Rate Outlook Shifts

Copyright © 2026 Digital News Updates, All Rights Reserved.