Help us improve in just 2 minutes—share your thoughts in our reader survey.

North Carolina Secretary of State election, 2016

From Ballotpedia
Revision as of 19:19, 24 June 2025 by Jaclyn Beran (contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search
Ballotpedia Election Coverage Badge-smaller use.png

Presidential • U.S. Senate • U.S. House • Governor • Lt. Gov • Attorney General • Secretary of State • State executive offices • State Senate • State House • State judges • Local judges • State ballot measures • School boards • Municipal • Recalls • Candidate ballot access
Flag of North Carolina.png
2020
2012
StateExecLogo.png
North Carolina Secretary of State Election

Primary Date:
March 15, 2016[1]
General Election Date:
November 8, 2016

November Election Winner:
Elaine Marshall (D)
Incumbent Prior to Election:
Elaine Marshall (D)

State Executive Elections
Top Ballot
GovernorLt. Governor
Secretary of StateAttorney General
Down Ballot
AuditorInsurance Commissioner
Agriculture Commissioner
Superintendent of SchoolsTreasurer
Labor Commissioner
Key election dates

Filing deadline (partisan):
December 21, 2015
Primary date:
March 15, 2016[2]
Filing deadline (independents):
June 9, 2016
Filing deadline (write-ins):
July 26, 2016
General election date:
November 8, 2016
Inauguration:
January 7, 2017

North Carolina held an election for secretary of state on November 8, 2016. Incumbent Elaine Marshall (D) won re-election to a sixth term.

HIGHLIGHTS
  • Incumbent Elaine Marshall (D) ran for re-election to her sixth term. She was unopposed in the March 15 Democratic primary.
  • Michael LaPaglia (R) defeated AJ Daoud (R) in the March 15 Republican primary. He competed with Marshall in the November 8 general election.
  • A Republican has not won election to the office of secretary of state in North Carolina since 1872.
  • Marshall won the general election on November 8, 2016.
  • Overview

    The North Carolina secretary of state heads the Department of the State, which oversees many of the economic and business-related operations of the state government. Unlike in many states, the secretary of state does not oversee state elections. North Carolina has been under Republican trifecta control since Governor Pat McCrory (R) assumed office in 2013. This represented a fairly rapid shift in partisan control for the state, which had been under Democratic trifecta control as recently as 2010. A Republican has not won election to the office of secretary of state in North Carolina since 1872.

    Incumbent Elaine Marshall (D) sought re-election to a sixth term in office. She was unopposed for the Democratic nomination. Consultant Michael LaPaglia (R) defeated former Lottery Commissioner AJ Daoud (R) in the March 15 Republican primary election. LaPaglia and Marshall competed in the November 8 general election. Marshall won the general election on November 8, 2016.

    Candidates

    General election candidates

    Elaine Marshall square.jpg

    Elaine Marshall (D)
    Incumbent secretary of state since 1996


    Michael LaPaglia square.jpg

    Michael LaPaglia (R)
    Consultant




    Results

    General election

    Incumbent Elaine Marshall defeated Michael LaPaglia in the North Carolina secretary of state election.

    North Carolina Secretary of State, 2016
    Party Candidate Vote % Votes
         Democratic Green check mark transparent.png Elaine Marshall Incumbent 52.22% 2,339,783
         Republican Michael LaPaglia 47.78% 2,141,132
    Total Votes 4,480,915
    Source: ABC11

    Primary elections

    Democratic primary election

    Elaine Marshall (D) was the only Democrat to file for the election; she automatically advanced to the general election.

    Republican primary election

    North Carolina Secretary of State Republican Primary, 2016
    Candidate Vote % Votes
    Green check mark transparent.pngMichael LaPaglia 61.6% 499,919
    A. J. Daoud 38.4% 312,067
    Total Votes 811,986
    Election results via North Carolina State Board of Elections.



    Context of the 2016 election

    Primary elections

    A primary election is an election in which voters select the candidate they believe should represent a political party in a general election. Primaries usually take place several months before a general election. North Carolina utilizes a hybrid primary system. Parties decide who may vote in their respective primaries. Voters may choose a primary ballot without impacting their unaffiliated status.[4]

    In North Carolina, when more than two candidates run in a primary election and one candidate does not receive more than 40 percent of the vote, the second-place candidate can request a runoff primary, sometimes referred to as a second primary. However, because of the redrawing of congressional and state legislative district boundaries, state executive elections in 2016 did not feature a runoff primary. This means the 2016 primary elections for state executives were unique and particularly competitive in that the winning candidate automatically received the party nomination regardless of the percentage of votes received.

    North Carolina's primary elections took place on March 15, 2016.

    Incumbent Elaine Marshall (D)

    Incumbent Sec. of State Elaine Marshall (D) was first elected in 1996 and has easily won re-election every four years since. Prior to her tenure in the Department of State, Marshall served one term in the state Senate.

    Party control in North Carolina

    See also: Party control of North Carolina state government

    North Carolina had been under Republican trifecta control since Governor Pat McCrory (R) assumed office in 2013. This represented a fairly rapid shift in partisan control for the state, which had been under Democratic trifecta control as recently as 2010. North Carolina's electoral votes went to the Republican presidential candidate in every election cycle since 1980, with the exception of 2008 when the state voted to elect Barack Obama (D).[5] North Carolina began attracting significant attention as a presidential battleground state with Obama's unexpected 2008 win in the state—the first Democratic candidate to do so since Jimmy Carter (D) in 1976. For the past two presidential elections, the state's presidential preference influenced statewide elections. This influence, coupled with the recent trend of close elections in the state, promised competitive races in 2016.

    Both Republican and Democratic candidates gained success in recent elections. Democrat Bev Perdue won the gubernatorial election and Democrat Kay Hagan defeated incumbent Republican Senator Elizabeth Dole in 2008. The state swung back to Republicans in 2012 when Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney narrowly beat President Obama by a margin of 2 percentage points. McCrory defeated his Democratic rival by a small margin of victory that same year. The trend of close statewide elections in North Carolina continued into 2014: Republican Thom Tillis narrowly defeated incumbent Senator Kay Hagan (D) in a statewide race that year, earning 48.8 percent of the vote to Hagan's 47.3 percent.[6]

    A Republican has not won election to the office of secretary of state in North Carolina since William H. Howerton in 1872.[7] Only four people have held the office since 1926, all Democrats—Thad Eure from 1936 to 1989, Rufus Edmisten from 1989 to 1996, Janice Faulker in 1996, and Elaine Marshall from 1997 to present.[8][7]

    Race background

    Candidate field

    Incumbent Elaine Marshall (D) ran unopposed in the March 15 Democratic primary election. Marshall had pointed to the office's success under her purview, stating that she embraced new technologies, modernized the office, and advocated for government transparency.[9] The Department of State is charged with consumer and investor protection; Marshall's campaign website stated that her administration "has returned over one billion dollars to people who have been defrauded with bogus securities."[10]

    Republicans AJ Daoud and Michael LaPaglia competed for the Republican nomination; LaPaglia defeated Doaud in the primary election.

    Daoud is the chairman of the NCGOP 6th district and was a 2012 Republican candidate for secretary of state, losing his party's nomination to Ed Goodwin in the primary election. Daoud also served as lottery commissioner from 2013 to 2015; he was appointed to the post by Gov. Pat McCrory (R).[11] Daoud claimed that Marshall had not done enough to help small businesses in the state; the economy was a key issue in his campaign.[12] Daoud lost the March 15 primary to Michael LaPaglia.

    LaPaglia is a consultant and entrepreneur. LaPaglia had based his campaign on small government, describing himself as a "limited government free-enterprise advocate."[13] His campaign website asserted that less government intervention and fewer regulations would allow business to thrive in the state.[13]

    Marshall won the general election on November 8, 2016.

    Campaigns

    Campaign finance

    Endosements

    Key endorsements, Republican primary candidates
    AJ DaoudMichael LaPaglia
    Winston Salem JournalRepublican Liberty Caucus of North Carolina
    Charlotte Observer
    What is a key endorsement?

    Campaign media

    Note: If a candidate is not listed below, Ballotpedia staff were unable to locate any campaign media for that candidate. Do you know of any? Tell us!

    Democrats
    Elaine Marshall (D) Campaign website Facebook Twitter 

    Republicans
    AJ Daoud (R) Campaign website Facebook Twitter 
    Michael LaPaglia (R) Campaign website Facebook Twitter 

    About the office

    The secretary of state for North Carolina is a publicly elected official for the state of North Carolina who heads the Department of the State, which oversees many of the economic and business-related operations of the state government. Unlike in many states, the secretary of state does not oversee state elections.

    Incumbent

    The incumbent was Democrat Elaine Marshall. Marshall, first elected in 1996, is the first woman to be elected North Carolina Secretary of State and the first woman elected to statewide executive office in North Carolina. Her current term expires in 2017.

    Authority

    The state Constitution establishes the office of secretary of state in Article III, Section 7:

    (1) Officers. A Secretary of State, an Auditor, a Treasurer, a Superintendent of Public Instruction, an Attorney General, a Commissioner of Agriculture, a Commissioner of Labor, and a Commissioner of Insurance shall be elected by the qualified voters of the State in 1972 and every four years thereafter, at the same time and places as members of the General Assembly are elected. Their term of office shall be four years and shall commence on the first day of January next after their election and continue until their successors are elected and qualified. ...

    Qualifications

    Article VI, Section 6 of the North Carolina Constitution establishes the qualifications of the office:

    Every qualified voter in North Carolina who is 21 years of age, except as in this Constitution disqualified, shall be eligible for election by the people to office.
    • qualified North Carolina voter
    • 21 years of age

    Past elections

    2012

    See also: North Carolina secretary of state election, 2012

    Incumbent Elaine Marshall (D) successfully won re-election, defeating Ed Goodwin (R) in the November 6, 2012 general election.

    North Carolina Secretary of State General Election, 2012
    Party Candidate Vote % Votes
         Democratic Green check mark transparent.pngElaine Marshall Incumbent 53.8% 2,331,173
         Republican Ed Goodwin 46.2% 2,003,026
    Total Votes 4,334,199
    Election results via NC State Board of Elections



    Recent news

    The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms North Carolina secretary of state election. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.

    See also

    North Carolina government:

    Previous elections:

    Ballotpedia exclusives:

    State profile

    Demographic data for North Carolina
     North CarolinaU.S.
    Total population:10,035,186316,515,021
    Land area (sq mi):48,6183,531,905
    Race and ethnicity**
    White:69.5%73.6%
    Black/African American:21.5%12.6%
    Asian:2.5%5.1%
    Native American:1.2%0.8%
    Pacific Islander:0.1%0.2%
    Two or more:2.4%3%
    Hispanic/Latino:8.8%17.1%
    Education
    High school graduation rate:85.8%86.7%
    College graduation rate:28.4%29.8%
    Income
    Median household income:$46,868$53,889
    Persons below poverty level:20.5%11.3%
    Source: U.S. Census Bureau, "American Community Survey" (5-year estimates 2010-2015)
    Click here for more information on the 2020 census and here for more on its impact on the redistricting process in North Carolina.
    **Note: Percentages for race and ethnicity may add up to more than 100 percent because respondents may report more than one race and the Hispanic/Latino ethnicity may be selected in conjunction with any race. Read more about race and ethnicity in the census here.

    Presidential voting pattern

    See also: Presidential voting trends in North Carolina

    North Carolina voted Republican in six out of the seven presidential elections between 2000 and 2024.

    Pivot Counties (2016)

    Ballotpedia identified 206 counties that voted for Donald Trump (R) in 2016 after voting for Barack Obama (D) in 2008 and 2012. Collectively, Trump won these Pivot Counties by more than 580,000 votes. Of these 206 counties, six are located in North Carolina, accounting for 2.91 percent of the total pivot counties.[14]

    Pivot Counties (2020)

    In 2020, Ballotpedia re-examined the 206 Pivot Counties to view their voting patterns following that year's presidential election. Ballotpedia defined those won by Trump won as Retained Pivot Counties and those won by Joe Biden (D) as Boomerang Pivot Counties. Nationwide, there were 181 Retained Pivot Counties and 25 Boomerang Pivot Counties. North Carolina had six Retained Pivot Counties, 3.31 percent of all Retained Pivot Counties.

    More North Carolina coverage on Ballotpedia

    External links

    Footnotes