RALEIGH, N.C. — Restoring Integrity and Trust in Elections (“RITE”) today announced a major victory for election integrity in North Carolina. A state court granted summary judgment in Kivett v. North Carolina State Board of Elections, ruling in favor of the plaintiffs and holding that North Carolina’s practice of allowing certain overseas individuals who have never resided in the state to vote in North Carolina federal, state, and local elections violates the state constitution.
The lawsuit was brought by RITE-supported individual voters, alongside the Republican National Committee (RNC) and the North Carolina Republican Party.
The court’s ruling rejects the theory that a state may extend the franchise to individuals who have never established residency within its borders. The challenged policy permitted certain overseas citizens born abroad to vote in North Carolina elections despite never having lived in the state. This ruling does nothing to impact the rights of military and overseas voters eligible to vote under the Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act.
“Residency requirements are a fundamental constitutional safeguard,” said RITE President & CEO Justin Riemer. “This ruling reaffirms a basic principle: North Carolina elections are for North Carolina residents. The state constitution’s residency requirement still means something, and states remain bound by their own constitutional limits when determining voter qualifications.”
RITE PAC, RITE’s affiliated political committee, is supporting similar pending suits alongside the RNC in Arizona and Virginia which challenge state statutes that unconstitutionally enfranchise individuals who have never resided in those respective states.