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2012 North Carolina gubernatorial election

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2012 North Carolina gubernatorial election
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The 2012 North Carolina gubernatorial election took place on November 6, 2012, concurrently with the 2012 United States presidential election, U.S. House election, statewide judicial election, Council of State election and various local elections.

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Incumbent Democratic governor Bev Perdue was eligible to run for re-election, but announced on January 26, 2012 that she would not seek a second term. Incumbent lieutenant governor Walter H. Dalton won the Democratic nomination, while former mayor of Charlotte and 2008 gubernatorial nominee Pat McCrory won the Republican nomination. McCrory won the election with almost 55 percent of the vote to Dalton's 43 percent, the largest margin of victory for a Republican in a race for governor in history, surpassing the previous record set in 1868.

Libertarian nominee Barbara Howe took 2% of the vote. When McCrory was inaugurated as the 74th governor of North Carolina on January 5, 2013, [1] he became North Carolina's first Republican governor since 1993 and the Republicans held complete control of state government for the first time since 1871. As of 2025, this is the last time a Republican was elected Governor of North Carolina, and the only time since 1988. It was also the last time the state concurrently voted for a gubernatorial and presidential candidate of the same party, and the last time a Republican candidate won Mecklenburg County in a statewide election.

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Democratic primary

Candidates

Declined

Polling

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Debates

A series of televised debates between candidates Dalton, Etheridge and Faison, held April 16–18, was considered potentially pivotal, since "the governor’s race has so far attracted little attention, created little buzz and produced few political commercials" and "polls suggest there is still a large swath of Democratic voters who have yet to decide" for whom to vote.[30] The first debate, conducted by WRAL-TV and broadcast statewide, featured few differences between the candidates, but Faison was seen as the aggressor.[31] The second debate (conducted by UNC-TV) was more contentious, with Dalton criticizing Etheridge's support of a free trade agreement while he was in Congress, and Etheridge attacking Dalton over his attendance record on boards and commissions and his alleged failure to speak out against the actions of the majority-Republican legislature.[32] In the final debate of the series, this one conducted by WNCN-TV and the North Carolina League of Women Voters, candidates were considered to be more "muted" in their criticisms of each other. All three spoke out strongly against a voter ID bill proposed by Republicans in the state legislature. Dalton emphasized modernizing the state's economy, Etheridge continued his themes of leadership and education, and Faison most sharply attacked Republicans and called for action on the state's unemployment problem.[33]

Results

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Primary results by county:
Dalton
  •   Dalton—81–90%
  •   Dalton—71–80%
  •   Dalton—61–70%
  •   Dalton—51–60%
  •   Dalton—41–50%
  •   Dalton—31–40%
Etheridge
  •   Etheridge—61–70%
  •   Etheridge—51–60%
  •   Etheridge—41–50%
  •   Etheridge—31–40%
Faison
  •   Faison—41–50%
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Republican primary

Candidates

  • Jim Harney, businessman[35]
  • Scott Jones, businessman[36]
  • Jim Mahan, small businessman and former teacher[37]
  • Pat McCrory, former mayor of Charlotte and nominee for governor in 2008[38]
  • Charles Kenneth Moss, businessman and preacher[39][40]
  • Paul Wright, attorney and former District Court and Superior Court judge[39]

Declined

Polling

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Results

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General election

Summarize
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Candidates

Predictions

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Debates

Dalton and McCrory met for their first televised debate at the studios of UNC-TV on October 3, 2012. Two debates were sponsored by the North Carolina Association of Broadcasters Educational Foundation, with the third and final debate sponsored by WRAL-TV and the Rocky Mount Chamber of Commerce. Howe was not invited to participate in any of the scheduled debates. The Associated Press characterized Dalton as going "on the offensive" against McCrory in the first debate.[56] The final encounter between the two candidates, held Oct. 24 on the campus of North Carolina Wesleyan College, featured "more subdued disagreements over taxes, education, health care and mental health."[57]

Polling

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Hypothetical polling

Democratic primary polling with Perdue

Republican primary with Ellmers, Troxler

General election polling
With Blue

With Blackmon

With Bowles

With Cooper

With Foxx

With Etheridge

With Faison

With Henley

With Hagan

With Joines

With McIntyre

With Meeker

With Miller

With Moore

With Perdue

With Shuler

Results

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Pat McCrory celebrating his election victory
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Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

By congressional district

McCrory won ten of the state's 13 congressional districts, including one held by a Democrat.[106]

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See also

References

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