Halifax County extends early voting


Published/Last Modified on Friday, October 31, 2008 4:11 PM EDT

Herald Staff and Wire Service Reports
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Prompted by heavy turnout and following the lead of the State Board of Elections, Halifax County will keep the early voting polls open Saturday until 5 p.m.

Northampton County’s Board of Elections voted not to extend its hours on Saturday. Early voting in Northampton County will end at 1 p.m., Saturday. The two early voting sites in Northampton are located at 221 Craige St., in Gaston, and at 9495 NC Highway 305 (J.W. Faison Administration Building) in Jackson.

The three early voting sites in Halifax are located around the county, with one at the Board of Elections office in the Historic Halifax Courthouse at 10 North King Street, one at the Roanoke Rapids Sanitary District office building at 1000 Jackson Street in Roanoke Rapids and at St. Paul Baptist Church at 421 S. McDaniel St. in Enfield.

Thursday, the State Board of Elections ordered that all 100 counties in North Carolina must keep early voting sites open for an extra four hours this weekend unless local officials unanimously decide it’s unnecessary.

In an emergency meeting, the board unanimously agreed to extend Saturday early voting hours to 5 p.m. The meeting came after Mecklenburg and Guilford counties sought permission to keep the sites from closing at 1 p.m. as scheduled.

The decision to alter the early voting schedule highlights the remarkable turnout and long lines seen across the surprise swing state since early voting began two weeks ago.

More than 1.7 million people — or 30 percent of registered voters — cast a ballot at one-stop sites through Wednesday night.

In Northampton County, some 4,100 of the county’s 15,580 voters had already cast ballots through Thursday. In Halifax County, 10,348 voters of the 36,885 registered voters have already voted early.

Larry Leake, the Democratic chairman of the state board, at first proposed allowing counties to decide whether they wanted to stay open. But Charles Winfree, a Republican member of the board, questioned whether county boards controlled by Democrats could be manipulated by those seeking office.

“I’m concerned that some counties will and some counties won’t and that will be manipulated by the campaigns — they will hold them open later in Democratic counties and then will close them early in Republican counties,” Winfree said.

So the board agreed to extend the mandate to all 100 counties, allowing them to opt out only if all the Democratic and Republican members of county election boards agree.

Early voting has been a sensitive subject for the GOP this year. Registered Democrats are voting early at far higher rates, drawn in part by the party’s presidential nominee Barack Obama and his campaign’s extensive effort to turn voters out to the polls before Election Day.

In Mecklenburg and Guilford counties, the lone Republican member of the counties’ election boards halted plans to extend voting hours earlier this week. The two Democrats on each panel sought the change.

“There are people who cannot vote on Saturday because they can’t get there by 1 p.m.,” said James Turner, a Democratic board member in Guilford County. “If we want to get a vote from any of these people, we need to extend the voting hours.”

The GOP has also been skeptical about altering early vote plans since the Cumberland County board agreed two weeks ago to add capacity to accommodate an expected crush of voters following an Obama campaign event.

State party chairwoman Linda Daves said at the time that the Republicans support more capacity, except when it comes in coordination with a partisan event.

Prompted by heavy turnout and following the lead of the State Board of Elections, Halifax County will keep the early voting polls open Saturday until 5 p.m.

Northampton County’s Board of Elections voted not to extend its hours on Saturday. Early voting in Northampton County will end at 1 p.m., Saturday. The two early voting sites in Northampton are located at 221 Craige St., in Gaston, and at 9495 NC Highway 305 (J.W. Faison Administration Building) in Jackson.

The three early voting sites in Halifax are located around the county, with one at the Board of Elections office in the Historic Halifax Courthouse at 10 North King Street, one at the Roanoke Rapids Sanitary District office building at 1000 Jackson Street in Roanoke Rapids and at St. Paul Baptist Church at 421 S. McDaniel St. in Enfield.

Thursday, the State Board of Elections ordered that all 100 counties in North Carolina must keep early voting sites open for an extra four hours this weekend unless local officials unanimously decide it’s unnecessary.

In an emergency meeting, the board unanimously agreed to extend Saturday early voting hours to 5 p.m. The meeting came after Mecklenburg and Guilford counties sought permission to keep the sites from closing at 1 p.m. as scheduled.

The decision to alter the early voting schedule highlights the remarkable turnout and long lines seen across the surprise swing state since early voting began two weeks ago.

More than 1.7 million people — or 30 percent of registered voters — cast a ballot at one-stop sites through Wednesday night.

In Northampton County, some 4,100 of the county’s 15,580 voters had already cast ballots through Thursday. In Halifax County, 10,348 voters of the 36,885 registered voters have already voted early.

Larry Leake, the Democratic chairman of the state board, at first proposed allowing counties to decide whether they wanted to stay open. But Charles Winfree, a Republican member of the board, questioned whether county boards controlled by Democrats could be manipulated by those seeking office.

“I’m concerned that some counties will and some counties won’t and that will be manipulated by the campaigns — they will hold them open later in Democratic counties and then will close them early in Republican counties,” Winfree said.

So the board agreed to extend the mandate to all 100 counties, allowing them to opt out only if all the Democratic and Republican members of county election boards agree.

Early voting has been a sensitive subject for the GOP this year. Registered Democrats are voting early at far higher rates, drawn in part by the party’s presidential nominee Barack Obama and his campaign’s extensive effort to turn voters out to the polls before Election Day.

In Mecklenburg and Guilford counties, the lone Republican member of the counties’ election boards halted plans to extend voting hours earlier this week. The two Democrats on each panel sought the change.

“There are people who cannot vote on Saturday because they can’t get there by 1 p.m.,” said James Turner, a Democratic board member in Guilford County. “If we want to get a vote from any of these people, we need to extend the voting hours.”

The GOP has also been skeptical about altering early vote plans since the Cumberland County board agreed two weeks ago to add capacity to accommodate an expected crush of voters following an Obama campaign event.

State party chairwoman Linda Daves said at the time that the Republicans support more capacity, except when it comes in coordination with a partisan event.

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