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North Carolina House of Representatives elections, 2004
Elections for the office of North Carolina's State House of Representatives consisted of a primary Election Day on July 20, 2004, and a general election on November 2, 2004.
Campaign contributions
This chart shows how many candidates ran for state senate in North Carolina in past years and the cumulative amount of campaign contributions in state senate races, including contributions in both primary and general election contests. All figures come from Follow The Money.[1]
Year | Number of candidates | Total contributions |
---|---|---|
2012 | 290 | $18,937,780 |
2010 | 268 | $17,390,203 |
2008 | 233 | $14,037,756 |
2006 | 220 | $15,381,190 |
2004 | 263 | $14,234,075 |
2002 | 322 | $11,732,634 |
2000 | 265 | $12,530,685 |
During the 2004 election, the total contributions to the 263 House candidates was $14,234,075. The top 10 contributors were:[2]
2004 Donors, North Carolina State House of Representatives | |
---|---|
Donor | Amount |
North Carolina Democratic House Cmte | $984,339 |
North Carolina Democratic Party | $838,353 |
North Carolina Medical Society | $218,500 |
Edwards, Kathleen Bryan | $200,404 |
Richard Morgan Campaign Cmte | $198,099 |
Citizens for Higher Education | $194,600 |
North Carolina Association of Realtors | $173,130 |
North Carolina House Democratic Cmte | $168,995 |
Martin, Grier | $162,021 |
Jim Black Campaign Fund | $157,900 |
Footnotes