Republicans are on the verge of a historic breakthrough in North Carolina, where the Democratic Party’s decades-long voter advantage has collapsed to just over 1,000 registered voters.
Ten years ago, Democrats held a commanding lead of nearly 750,000 more registered voters than Republicans in the crucial swing state.
As of the latest count by the North Carolina State Board of Elections, that advantage has evaporated to a razor-thin margin of 1,216 voters.
“Voters across North Carolina are rejecting the Democrats’ failed agenda and choosing Republican leadership,” Rep. Richard Hudson, R-N.C., said. “This shift didn’t happen overnight, it’s the result of years of good common sense Republican governance and our focus on offering serious solutions on the issues that matter to the people.”
The transformation is a stunning reversal for Democrats, who have watched their voter registration dominance steadily erode since 2015. Between 2005 and 2015, the Democratic advantage remained relatively stable at around 670,000 registered voters. But beginning in 2015, that gap began shrinking rapidly.
By 2020, the Democratic lead had narrowed to just under 380,000 registered voters. Five years later, Republicans in North Carolina stand on the brink of overtaking Democrats for the first time in decades.
“The reality is that bad Democrat policies coming out of Washington are driving voters away from the party here at home,” former Republican National Committee chairman and North Carolina Republican Senate candidate Michael Whatley said.
“Insane policies supported by Roy Cooper and pushed by DC Democrats like Bernie Sanders and Kamala Harris are completely out of step with North Carolinians,” Whatley said. “Democrats couldn’t win Senate races here even when they had a cash advantage and a huge voter-registration edge. Now they’ve lost that registration advantage too, and voters are making it clear they’re done with failed Democrat leadership.”
The North Carolina trend mirrors a broader national pattern of declining Democratic voter registration.
A New York Times analysis earlier this year found that between 2020 and 2024, Democrats lost approximately 2.1 million registered voters across 30 states that track voter registration data, while Republicans gained about 2.4 million voters during the same period. The total deficit for the Democratic Party amounted to 4.5 million registered voters over just four years.
Republican National Committee Chairman Joe Gruters said North Carolina “is undergoing a historic shift” and Democrats’ advantage has “crumbled.”
“Voters rejected Kamala Harris last year, and they’re continuing that trend as they turn away from the failed policies of Roy Cooper and Josh Stein,” Gruters said.
North Carolina has been a key battleground state in recent presidential elections, with President Donald Trump winning the state in both 2024 and 2020.