RALEIGH, N.C. — North Carolina General Assembly elections were finalized Monday as officials issued certificates to the winners in three close legislative races from November that later became subject to recounts and formal protests.
This ministerial action by election administrators also confirms that Republicans have lost their veto-proof control of the legislature — the result of outgoing state Rep. Frank Sossamon losing to Democrat Bryan Cohn by 228 votes.
The certificates issued for Cohn and other Democrats — Terence Everitt and Woodson Bradley for contests for the Senate — mean they shouldn't have trouble getting seated with others elected to the 2025-26 General Assembly session on Wednesday's opening day. Certificates for the others were issued weeks ago.
With Sossamon's defeat, Republicans will retain 71 of the 120 House seats. That's one seat short of the necessary three-fifths supermajority for veto-proof control. The GOP had held 72 seats since April 2023, which allowed Republicans to override then-Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper's vetoes at will as long as they remained united.
Now that the Democrats have 49 House seats, the veto stamp of new Democratic Gov. Josh Stein could be more effective during the next two years in blocking GOP measures that he opposes.
The victories for Everitt and Bradley confirm that Republicans will keep 30 Senate seats and Democrats, 20. That's the same partisan composition during the past two years that gave the GOP a three-fifths majority in that chamber. Everitt defeated Ashlee Adams by 128 votes and Bradley defeated Stacie McGinn by 209.
The Associated Press had not called the races won by Cohn and Everitt until Monday.
Recounts were held in each of these three legislative races. Sossamon, McGinn and Adams also joined with GOP state Supreme Court candidate Jefferson Griffin in filing a series of written protests to election officials. The protests challenged whether certain votes cast in their races should have been counted.