November 3, 2020 | ||||||||||||||||
| Turnout | 75.35% | |||||||||||||||
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| Elections in North Carolina |
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The 2020 North Carolina Secretary of State election was held on November 3, 2020, to elect the North Carolina Secretary of State, concurrently with elections for president of the United States, the United States Senate, U.S. House of Representatives, governor, Council of State, and other state, local and judicial elections.
Incumbent Democratic secretary of state Elaine Marshall won re-election to a seventh term in office, defeating businessman E.C. Sykes. [1]
The Democratic primary for Secretary of State was cancelled. No votes were tallied, and incumbent Elaine Marshall became the Democratic nominee automatically. [2]
U.S. senators
Individuals
Newspapers and other media
| Poll source | Date(s) administered | Sample size [a] | Margin of error | Chad Brown | Michael LaPaglia | E.C. Sykes | Undecided |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Harper Polling/Civitas Institute [8] | December 2–4, 2019 | 500 (LV) | ± 4.38% | 20% | 4% | 5% | 71% |
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | E.C. Sykes | 296,457 | 42.91% | |
| Republican | Chad Brown | 262,595 | 38.01% | |
| Republican | Michael LaPaglia | 131,832 | 19.08% | |
| Total votes | 690,884 | 100.00% | ||
Newspapers and other media
Organizations
| Source | Ranking | As of |
|---|---|---|
| The Cook Political Report [13] | Likely D | October 28, 2020 |
| Elections Daily [14] | Lean D | September 15, 2020 |
| Poll source | Date(s) administered | Sample size [a] | Margin of error | Elaine Marshall (D) | E.C. Sykes (R) | Undecided |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cardinal Point Analytics [15] | July 13–15, 2020 | 547 (LV) | ± 4.2% | 47% | 39% | 14% |
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Democratic | Elaine Marshall (incumbent) | 2,755,571 | 51.16% | ||
| Republican | E.C. Sykes | 2,630,559 | 48.84% | ||
| Total votes | 5,386,130 | 100.00% | |||
| Democratic hold | |||||
Despite losing the state, Sykes won 8 of 13 congressional districts. [17]
| District | Marshall | Sykes | Representative |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | 58% | 42% | G. K. Butterfield |
| 2nd | 66% | 34% | Deborah Ross |
| 3rd | 41% | 59% | Greg Murphy |
| 4th | 68% | 32% | David Price |
| 5th | 35% | 65% | Virginia Foxx |
| 6th | 63% | 37% | Kathy Manning |
| 7th | 44% | 56% | David Rouzer |
| 8th | 49% | 51% | Richard Hudson |
| 9th | 47% | 53% | Dan Bishop |
| 10th | 34% | 66% | Patrick McHenry |
| 11th | 44% | 56% | Madison Cawthorn |
| 12th | 71% | 29% | Alma Adams |
| 13th | 35% | 65% | Ted Budd |
Gaston County Commissioner Chad Brown originally ran in the 2020 primary in an attempt to become the Republican candidate that would face Democrat Elaine F. Marshall, who has been secretary of state since 1997.