RALEIGH, N.C. — A divided North Carolina election board decided Wednesday to scrutinize further the attempts by political organizations to become official state parties by collecting signatures, with the goals of their supporters to get Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Cornel West on this fall's presidential ballot in the battleground state.
The We The People party and Justice for All Party of North Carolina initiated petition drives to receive official party designations. That required a smaller fraction of the valid signatures from registered and qualified voters than Kennedy, an author and environmental lawyer, and West, a professor and progressive activist, would have needed if they sought to run statewide as independent candidates.
State elections officials confirmed to the board Wednesday that the groups had turned in more valid signatures than the 13,865 that were required. Based on those numbers, the two Republican board members backed motions to formally recognize the We The People party and Justice for All Party so they could field candidates.
But the three Democrats on the board voted against the motions. They agreed more examination was needed of the organization's operations, including how signatures were collected, how party volunteers presented the petition's goals to voters and what information was placed on petition lists.
Speaking about the We The People effort, Democratic board member Siobhan O'Duffy Millen said she was concerned whether volunteers misrepresented Kennedy as an independent candidate, rather than someone who could be the party's nominee. An independent candidate would have to collect at least 83,188 qualifying signatures.
The ''delay is not intended to deny your status as a party,'' Board Chair Alan Hirsch told We The People leaders participating in the 3 1/2-hour online meeting. ''It's just to do our job and to be sure that ... the people that signed the petition know the purpose and intent'' of the proposed party, he added.
The board tentatively set a July 9 board meeting to reconsider the groups' requests.
Adding presidential candidates further raise the stakes and uncertainty about who will win North Carolina's 16 electoral votes. Republican Donald Trump won the state in both 2016 and in 2020, but his margin over Democrat Joe Biden in 2020 was less than 1.4 percentage points.