News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
TST Soccer Tournament set to kick off next week: Full Interview
SUMMARY: The TST Soccer Tournament kicks off next week with major growth since its 2023 debut. This year features 48 men’s teams and 16 women’s teams, doubling the women’s field since last year. The event attracts global soccer stars, including World Cup champions, Premier League winners, and MLS MVPs like Hope Solo and Sergio Aguero. Clubs such as Borussia Dortmund, Atletico Madrid, and Club America will participate at Wake Soccer Park. FanFest offers international cuisine, live ESPN’s Pat McAfee Show, autograph signings, kids’ clinics by Villa Royale, and a youth 7v7 tournament called the Carry Cup with over 100 teams. Tickets remain available at tstv7.com/tick.
Freddy Stanley with the tournament stopped by the ABC11 studio to talk logistics.
Download: https://abc11.com/apps/
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ABC11/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/abc11_wtvd/
Threads: https://www.threads.net/@abc11_wtvd
TIKTOK: https://www.tiktok.com/@abc11_eyewitnessnews
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Missing voter information the objection of NC search
North Carolina State Board of Elections Executive Director Sam Hayes is setting off on a mission to correct 103,000 North Carolinians’ voting records from which some information is missing.
He maintains that the process, dubbed the Registration Repair Project, will not remove any eligible voters from the state’s voter rolls.
According to the state elections board, 103,270 North Carolina registered voters have records that lack either their driver’s license number, the last four digits of their Social Security number or an indication that they have neither.
[Subscribe for FREE to Carolina Public Press’ alerts and weekend roundup newsletters]
Last year, this missing information became the stuff of headlines, lawsuits and the high-profile election protest of Republican Court of Appeals Judge Jefferson Griffin, who lost his bid for state Supreme Court to the incumbent justice, Democrat Allison Riggs, by 734 votes.
In April, the North Carolina Supreme Court declined to remove ballots from the count based on missing identification numbers; they said the state elections board, not voters, was responsible for a faulty voter registration form that didn’t make it abundantly clear that this information was required.
While Griffin lost, the issue he raised remains salient for a newly Republican elections board and the U.S. Department of Justice, which promptly sued the state board over alleged violations of the federal Help America Vote Act’s voter registration provisions.
Thursday, Hayes told reporters that a process he unveiled in late June to gather these missing identification numbers had begun in earnest.
“We must put this issue behind us so we can focus our attention squarely on preparations for accurate and secure municipal elections this fall,” he said.
The plan to collect missing information
There are two groups of voters under Hayes’ plan.
The first group includes registered voters who have never provided a driver’s license, the last four digits of their Social Security number or an affirmation that they lack both. The state elections board has asked county election boards to check their records for these numbers, in case they were provided but not correctly entered into the voting system.
In early August, the state elections board will send letters to the remaining voters in this group requesting the missing information. If affected voters do not comply, they will vote provisionally in future elections. The elections board will create a flag on these voters’ records for poll workers.
The second group includes registered voters whose records do not show that they’ve provided an identification number, but have shown additional documentation at the polls proving their identity and eligibility under HAVA. These voters may vote a regular ballot.
However, the elections board will still send them a letter in a second mailing asking for the missing identification number to bolster the state’s voter records. Even so, if they do not oblige, they still will not be at risk of being disenfranchised, NCSBE General Counsel Paul Cox said.
County election boards have already made progress, and their work will continue as the mailings go out, Hayes said.
Voters can check to see whether they’re on the list of those with missing information by using the Registration Repair Search Tool. If voters don’t want to wait for the August mailing, they can submit an updated voter registration form using their driver’s license through the online DMV portal or visit their county elections board in person with their driver’s license or Social Security card.
“We anticipate the number of voters on the list will decrease quickly as word spreads about this important effort,” Hayes said.
The State Board of Elections unanimously approved the plan last month, despite some concerns from Democrat Jeff Carmon about putting up an extra obstacle for voters because of a problem with missing information that the voters didn’t cause.
“It’s hard to understand starvation if you’ve never felt the pangs of hunger,” Carmon said. “It’s the same situation with voting obstacles. Your perspective of an obstacle may not be the same as someone who’s consistently had their identity and their validity questioned.”
Nonetheless, Carmon and fellow Democrat board member Siobhan Millen ultimately voted in support of the plan.
Same ballot, different rules
Normally, when a voter casts a provisional ballot, the county elections board determines whether their ballot counts by the post-election canvass, held nine days after an election.
Voters may have to provide documentation or information to prove their eligibility to vote in order to be accepted.
The same process applies to the 103,000 affected voters, with a catch. Their vote may be accepted for federal contests, but not state contests, due to a difference in law.
According to the DOJ’s interpretation, the National Voter Registration Act requires all provisional votes of “duly registered voters” to count, Cox said.
But the state elections board has interpreted the state Supreme Court and North Carolina Court of Appeals’ decisions in the Griffin case as requiring a driver’s license, the last four digits of a Social Security number or an affirmation that a voter has neither before accepting their votes in state and local contests.
Under a recent election law change, county election boards have three days to validate and count or reject provisional ballots.
But sometimes, mismatches happen during validation due to database trouble with reading hyphenated names or connecting maiden and married names, for example, Cox said. The board has designed a “fail safe” in case this comes up.
When there’s a mismatch during the validation process, state law allows voters to provide additional documentation — like a driver’s license, bank statement or government document with a voter’s name and address — to prove their eligibility.
“A big chunk of these voters will have already shown HAVA ID, and that’s because in the past, when this information was not supplied, the county boards would still require these voters to show that alternative form of HAVA ID when they voted for the first time,” Cox said.
Poll workers will ask provisional voters to provide this additional documentation so that they can mark it down for later, if validation doesn’t work, he added.
Democrats threaten countersuit
Last week, the Democratic National Committee threatened the state board with litigation if they went ahead with their plan regarding those with missing information.
The letter claimed that the plan would remove eligible voters from the rolls illegally.
Hayes disagrees. In his view, he’s just following the law.
“It’s not the fault of the voters,” he said. “But at the same time, we’re required by the law to go back and collect this information, which should have been done at the time, and it certainly should have been done in the intervening time.”
He also clarified that North Carolina’s photo voter ID requirement won’t suffice for the impacted voters. They still have to vote provisionally so that their identification numbers can go through the validation process, he said.
As for whether his fully fleshed out plan will appease the DNC?
“We hope so,” Hayes said.
This article first appeared on Carolina Public Press and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
The post Missing voter information the objection of NC search appeared first on carolinapublicpress.org
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Centrist
This article presents a balanced and factual report on North Carolina’s voter registration issue, focusing on the administrative process and legal context without overt editorializing. It includes perspectives from both Republican and Democratic figures, highlights legal rulings and procedural details, and covers concerns from Democrats alongside the state elections board’s explanations. The language is neutral, aiming to inform about the complexities of voter ID requirements and the Registration Repair Project without endorsing a particular political stance or framing the issue through a partisan lens.
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Trump Contiues To Last Out at MAGA Supporters Who Call for Release of Epstein FIles
SUMMARY: President Trump is criticizing some MAGA supporters demanding the release of Jeffrey Epstein investigation files, calling their efforts a Democratic hoax and labeling those involved as weak or foolish Republicans. This stance has sparked rare pushback within his base, with allies like podcaster Charlie Kirk urging calm and others challenging Trump’s dismissive attitude. The divide deepened after Trump previously hinted at supporting more transparency on Epstein-related matters during his 2024 campaign. Despite the controversy, Trump continues to back Attorney General Pam Bondi, who claims she has provided all credible information available on the case.
When Jeffrey Epstein died in prison, then-President Donald Trump speculated that authorities might be wrong in ruling it a suicide.
Many of his allies in the pro-Trump media went further, casting Epstein’s death as a murder meant to continue a decades-long coverup of pedophilia by elites.
WRAL App: https://www.wral.com/download-wral-apps/5787234/
The Latest Weather: https://www.wral.com/weather/page/1010362/
News Tips:
Online – https://www.wral.com/report-it/
Email – assignmentdesk@wral.com
Subscribe to WRAL:
https://youtube.com/c/wral5
Follow WRAL:
Facebook: https://facebook.com/WRALTV
X: https://twitter.com/WRAL
IG: https://instagram.com/wral
About WRAL-TV:
WRAL is your Raleigh, North Carolina news source. Check out our videos for the latest news in Raleigh, local sports, Raleigh weather, and more at https://WRAL.com
#localnews #northcarolina
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem hints at more TSA changes
SUMMARY: Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem indicates upcoming changes to TSA airport security, including potential new limits on the size of liquid containers passengers can carry. Current rules, dating to 2006, allow containers no larger than 3.4 ounces due to past threats. This follows the recent TSA update permitting travelers to keep their shoes on during screening. The TSA aims for a smoother process where passengers can walk through scanners with carry-ons directly to flights. Separately, Transportation Secretary Shawn Duffy revealed a \$31.5 billion cost to modernize the outdated U.S. air traffic control system, urging urgent funding discussions to avoid long delays.
The department recently announced people can keep their shoes on when going through security. More: abc11.com Download: …
-
News from the South - Tennessee News Feed5 days ago
Bread sold at Walmart, Kroger stores in TN, KY recalled over undeclared tree nut
-
News from the South - Arkansas News Feed6 days ago
Man shot and killed in Benton County, near Rogers
-
News from the South - Alabama News Feed5 days ago
Girls Hold Lemonade Stand for St. Jude Hospital | July 12, 2025 | News 19 at 10 p.m. – Weekend
-
News from the South - Louisiana News Feed6 days ago
‘Good Trouble’ comes to New Iberia – The Current
-
News from the South - Oklahoma News Feed6 days ago
Police say couple had 50+ animals living in home
-
News from the South - Georgia News Feed6 days ago
Anti-ICE demonstrators march to Beaufort County Sheriff's Office
-
Mississippi Today4 days ago
Coast judge upholds secrecy in politically charged case. Media appeals ruling.
-
News from the South - West Virginia News Feed7 days ago
Trump’s bill gives tax breaks to metallurgical coal, rolls back credits for wind and solar