North Carolina judicial election, 2006
Elections in North Carolina |
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Presidential elections
United States Senate elections |
State legislature General Assembly elections
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Justices of the North Carolina Supreme Court and judges of the North Carolina Court of Appeals are elected to eight-year terms in statewide judicial elections. In 2006, all these races were non-partisan. The 2006 congressional elections and the 2006 North Carolina legislative elections were held on the same day, November 7, 2006.
The result was that all incumbents except Linda Stephens were elected (if they had been appointed) or re-elected. All the candidates supported by FairJudges.net,[1] the first independent group to get involved in North Carolina's non-partisan judicial elections, won.
Supreme Court (Chief Justice)
Candidate | Popular Vote | Pct |
---|---|---|
Sarah Parker | 1,138,346 | 67% |
Rusty Duke | 568,980 | 33% |
Supreme Court (Timmons-Goodson seat)
Candidate | Popular Vote | Pct |
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Patricia Timmons-Goodson | 953,976 | 58% |
Eric Levinson | 682,641 | 41% |
Supreme Court (Martin seat)
Candidate | Popular Vote | Pct |
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Mark Martin | 1,000,792 | 62% |
Rachel Lea Hunter | 601,676 | 38% |
Supreme Court (Wainwright seat)
Candidate | Popular Vote | Pct |
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Robin E. Hudson | 806,861 | 51% |
Ann Marie Calabria | 786,310 | 49% |
Justice George L. Wainwright, Jr. retired, making this an open seat. Candidates Bill Gore, Jill Cheek, and Beecher "Gus" Gray were eliminated in a May primary election.
Court of Appeals (Hunter seat)
Candidate | Popular Vote | Pct |
---|---|---|
Robert C. Hunter | 903,691 | 58% |
Kris Bailey | 652,733 | 42% |
Candidate Bill Constangy was eliminated in a May primary election.
Court of Appeals (Stephens seat)
Candidate | Popular Vote | Pct |
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Donna Stroud | 774,819 | 50.1% |
Linda Stephens | 771,353 | 49.9% |
Candidate Christopher L. (Chris) Parrish was eliminated in a May primary election.